Many Thanks for the very helpful reply, Reco!
--
Felix Natter
debian/rules!
Thanks Sven!
--
Felix Natter
debian/rules!
Many Thanks for the very helpful reply Andy!
--
Felix Natter
debian/rules!
Darac Marjal writes:
> On 11/09/2021 17:55, Felix Natter wrote:
>> hello fellow Debian users,
>>
>> I have an SSD for the root filesystem, and two HDDs using RAID1 for
>> /storage running Debian10. Now I need a plan B in case the upgrade
>> fails.
>
> Just want to check that you've not missed som
hi Andrei,
Andrei POPESCU writes:
thank you for your answer.
> On Sb, 11 sep 21, 18:55:56, Felix Natter wrote:
>> hello fellow Debian users,
>>
>> I have an SSD for the root filesystem, and two HDDs using RAID1 for
>> /storage running Debian10. Now I need a plan B in case the upgrade
>> fails.
On 11/09/2021 17:55, Felix Natter wrote:
> hello fellow Debian users,
>
> I have an SSD for the root filesystem, and two HDDs using RAID1 for
> /storage running Debian10. Now I need a plan B in case the upgrade
> fails.
Just want to check that you've not missed something obvious here. You
don't *
On 9/11/21 9:55 AM, Felix Natter wrote:
hello fellow Debian users,
I have an SSD for the root filesystem, and two HDDs using RAID1 for
/storage running Debian10. Now I need a plan B in case the upgrade
fails.
So I made an experiment with a VM and rougly the same setup (disk-wise),
and found out
On Sb, 11 sep 21, 18:55:56, Felix Natter wrote:
> hello fellow Debian users,
>
> I have an SSD for the root filesystem, and two HDDs using RAID1 for
> /storage running Debian10. Now I need a plan B in case the upgrade
> fails.
>
> So I made an experiment with a VM and rougly the same setup (disk-
Felix Natter wrote:
> My question is: How does d-i know how the individual HDDs were combined
> into a RAID1? For all that "sudo fdisk -l" shows, the disks are
> "Linux raid autodetect". For all I see, it could be a RAIDX, X!=1 or
> two different RAIDs Are there RAID headers on the partition
Hi.
On Sat, Sep 11, 2021 at 06:55:56PM +0200, Felix Natter wrote:
> My question is: How does d-i know how the individual HDDs were combined
> into a RAID1?
mdraid stores its metadata on each drive that belongs to the RAID.
Whenever it's the beginning of the drive, or the end of it - depen
Hello,
On Sat, Sep 11, 2021 at 06:55:56PM +0200, Felix Natter wrote:
> How does d-i know how the individual HDDs were combined into a
> RAID1?
d-i doesn't as such. In Linux MD, member devices contain metadata to
allow assembly by udev. You can examine the data on an MD member
device like this:
$
hello fellow Debian users,
I have an SSD for the root filesystem, and two HDDs using RAID1 for
/storage running Debian10. Now I need a plan B in case the upgrade
fails.
So I made an experiment with a VM and rougly the same setup (disk-wise),
and found out that when reinstalling Debian11, the d-i
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