On Mon, 11 Sep 2006, Przemyslaw Gawronski wrote:
> > You'll have to delete the array for that.
>
> OK, I managed to do that under windows, without a RAID controller. There
> is no way to do it under Linux without a hardware RAID controller?
Ok. You are being inconsistent. Either this is _hardware_ RAID (in which
case the OS has little to nothing to do with the issue - you need to go
into your BIOS interfaces and 'un'-RAID the drives) or it is _software_
RAID - in which case you just need to reformat the drives.
You said before it was _hardware_ RAID. Windows or Linux makes no
difference to hardware RAID. Now you are implying you don't have a RAID
controller - which implies you are using _software_ RAID. So which is it?
Software or Hardware?
You've implied that you are running RAID0 (2x40GB -> 1x80GB). If that is
true, you can probably break the RAID by simply physically *disconnecting*
one of the drives before you start installing. One way or another that
will disrupt a RAID0 array.
--
Benjamin Franz
"It is moronic to predict without first establishing an error rate
for a prediction and keeping track of one’s past record of accuracy."
-- Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Fooled By Randomness
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