sata raid
Alfred
alfred.s at nexicom.net
Fri May 4 11:27:42 UTC 2007
Hi:
I've been "Playing with Ubuntu since 4.04". I had many problems
configuring the hardware earlier on. I bought the book: Beginning Ubuntu
Linux From Novice to Professional, by Keir Thomas. Apress Books.
Copyright 2006. ISBN-13 (pbk): 978-1-59059-627-2 or
ISBN-10(pbk):1-59059-627-7
Distribution 1-800-SPRINGER, email ny at springer-sbm.com. Home Page
www.springeronline.com for orders. 573 pages about $34.00 in Canada.
With this book it became much easier to learn about Ubuntu Linux, and
the programs it makes use of. Now using 6.06-1 all on DVD, from
www.thelinuxstore.ca
Algonquin, I went there!
Alfred
On Wed, 2007-02-05 at 23:15 -0400, Chris Patten wrote:
> Wow Peter, great answer. I really appreciate the email. I am trying
> to learn more and more about linux/ubuntu specifically. I am a
> network admin for a medium size company, 100% windows, the whole linux
> world is new to me. I have been dabbling with ubuntu since version 5.
> I have often reverted back to windows, however I think I am ready to
> stick it out now. I find the learning blocks to be a real pain
> though, fun yes, but a pain as well. Do you have any suggestions for
> a quicker way to learn rather than me staying up later than I should
> each night hacking way my through conf samba files! and the sort...I
> haven't found any "windows professionals convert to linux" type
> weekend crash courses, know of any in the Toronto area? By the way, I
> went to school in Ottawa, Algonquin. Go sens!
>
> Chris Patten
>
> On 4/30/07, Peter Whittaker <pwwnow at gmail.com> wrote:
> On Sat, 2007-28-04 at 09:56 -0400, Chris Patten wrote:
> > I have a sata raid card and 2x500 gig sata drives, I want to
> disk
> > mirror or raid0/1. The raid is handled in the hardware of
> the card,
> > not software. It worked well under windows, windows showed
> 1x500 gig
> > drive. Now under ubuntu it shows 2x500 gig
> drives. Why? And what do
> > I need to change?
>
> Chris, in all likelihood, RAID was not actually handled in the
> card
> under Windows, but was faked out by a driver that shipped with
> Windows.
> In other words, Windows "saw" a RAID device, because it had
> been *told*
> to see one.
>
> There are at least two reasons for believing this: 1) "real"
> hardware
> RAID controllers are *very* expensive (not really consumer
> itema), and
> 2) if the card did the RAID, Linux - Ubuntu included - would
> see a
> single drive, not two.
>
> Real hardware RAID does NOT require software/OS drivers.
>
> All is not lost, however! Setting up RAID under Linux is very
> easy,
> thanks to the various utilities that come with the OS. Please
> refer to
> the "super simple md recipe" on [1]; if you need assistance,
> contact me
> directly, either by email or by phone [2].
>
> NOTE! The "recipe" assumes there is no data on the array, that
> is, that
> both disks are fresh and clean and ready to be formatted. If
> you have
> data on your Windows RAID array, and you want to preserve it
> under
> Linux, then you will either need to back the data up,
> performing the
> recipe (tailored to your needs), then restore the data to the
> array, or
> make the array available to your Linux boxes via a Windows
> file server.
>
> Neither alternative is all that attactive, so if someone has a
> Buzz
> Lightyear answer [3], post it here!
>
> The recipe I added to [1] is easy to tailor to your needs, if
> you know a
> little bit about Linux file systems.
>
> In "the recipe", /dev/hdc and /dev/hdd are what Linux sees the
> two
> identical drives as (the two 500Giggers, in your case), mke2fs
> creates
> ext2 filesystems on each drive, mdadm creates the RAID pair
> ("-l 1"
> means RAID Level 1), and the cat command adds the entry for
> the new disk
> to /etc/fstab. (Why ext2 instead of ext3? I figured with RAID
> the
> journalling was less important, and that the performance may
> be better
> with ext2. I could easily be wrong on both points, I'd
> appreciate
> comments... ...I can always reformat my array).
>
> The man pages are quite readable, please do plunge in if you
> need more
> information.
>
> Or call!
>
> pww
>
> [1] https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Raid
>
> [2] 613 294 6916
>
> [3] In Toy Story 2, Mr Potato Head offers Woody a choice of
> deaths: By
> monkeys or by shark. Woody chooses Buzz Lightyear. "Buzz
> Lightyear?
> That's a not a choice", screams Potato Head. Presto, Buzz
> appears and
> saves the day. I *always* choose Buzz Lightyear. Just like
> Kirk did on
> the Kobayashi Maru [4]. It just sometimes takes three tries
> and little
> hacking to get there.
>
> [4] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kobayashi_Maru
>
>
>
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> ubuntu-ca at lists.ubuntu.com
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>
>
>
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