On Sunday October 29, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Actually I kind of fixed it last night. I found a posting by someone
> on an older Ubuntu release with a similar problem, and he resolved it
> by making loopback devices pointing at his constituent drives, and then
> assembled the array using those.
Actually I kind of fixed it last night. I found a posting by someone
on an older Ubuntu release with a similar problem, and he resolved it
by making loopback devices pointing at his constituent drives, and then
assembled the array using those. That works for me also, so the array
is running now..
On Fri, 2006-10-27 at 17:18 -0500, Daniel Korstad wrote:
> > leaving me one 5.25 left for the fan. In addition to the fan in the
> > item above, I have the exhaust fan on the Power Supply, another 12mm
> > exhaust fan and a 12mm intake that blows across the other HDs.
> Sorry, I too much of a hur
On Saturday October 28, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi.
>
> Last night, I upgraded from Ubuntu 6.06 to Ubuntu 6.10. I have a Linux
> sw raid0 running on two drives, just using the raw devices rather than
> any partitions on them. The Ubuntu 6.06 kernel would simply see the
> superblocks on boot a
On Sunday October 29, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have 2 arrays whose numbers get inverted, creating havoc, when booting
> under different kernels.
>
> I have md0 (raid1) made up of ide drives and md1 (raid5) made up of five
> sata drives, when booting with my current ubuntu 2.6.12-9 ker
Hi,
I have 2 arrays whose numbers get inverted, creating havoc, when booting
under different kernels.
I have md0 (raid1) made up of ide drives and md1 (raid5) made up of five
sata drives, when booting with my current ubuntu 2.6.12-9 kernel. When I
try to boot a more recent kernel (2.6.15-26 or 2.