--- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@gmail.com wrote:
On Fri, 2005-04-29 at 12:20, Lee Parmeter wrote:
I did not find any information on the web concerning
the
requirement of the mdadm.conf file and the relationship
to
the auto start of the raid. I had to work a bit in the
dark
to get it to work as I thought it should.
I think if you set the partition type to FD with fdisk, the system is supposed to figure everything out automatically at boot time. I have, however, had some trouble when moving pairs of disks built on one machine to a different one and would generally prefer to control it with a definition in a file if possible instead of having the system guess. If you have both, I'm not sure which wins. If you find documentation on the detection order or how to move devices, please post a link.
I did not mark the parition type to FD so apparently the kernel or mdadm just executes and looks in the ndadm.conf file.
When trying to start the raid manually, I found that the raid would fail unless I passed the partion assignments on the commandline to mdadm. However, when the DEVICE and ARRAY are defined in the mdadm.conf, the partion info was not required, just the device name, "/dev/md0". So, I think the raid failed to start at boot due to not enough information being available for it to startup, thus the mdadm.conf file being required.
Anyway, that's what my experince told me!
-- Les Mikesell les@futuresource.com
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-- Lee Parmeter Emperor, linXos - The Flying Penguin http://www.linXos.com Linux Registered User #337161
'It's free. It works. Duh.'" - Eric Harrison
The United States is NOT a democracy, it was founded as a Republic!
God is not a republican or a democrat nor is His government a democracy! - Lee Parmeter
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