On Sat, 2009-12-05 at 19:30 -0500, Gene Heskett wrote: > On Saturday 05 December 2009, Matthew Saltzman wrote: > >On Sat, 2009-12-05 at 12:33 -0500, Gene Heskett wrote: > >> On Saturday 05 December 2009, Wayne Feick wrote: > >> >On Sat, 2009-12-05 at 11:30 -0500, Gene Heskett wrote: > >> >> Folderol even. My objection to LVM is two fold. > >> >> > >> >> 1. It won't allow one to save things in the /home tree when doing an > >> >> upgrade or re-install. I have an almost 10GB corpus of email, and > >> >> several scripts that are needed for my daily operations that need to > >> >> be preserved. LVM makes that impossible. > >> > > >> >Can you elaborate? I use LVM on all my systems, and whenever I move to a > >> >new Fedora release I carry the old /home tree forward to the new > >> >installation. > >> > > >> >Wayne. > >> > >> And just how do you do that? The last time I tried to save /home, > >> anaconda would not proceed until I checked the format it box. As I'm an > >> alpha test site for amanda, the recovery was doable and was done, but > >> what kind of twisted reasoning gives anaconda the right to demand I > >> destroy my data? > > > >Well, nothing (unless it's on a partition that has to be formatted for > >an install, like /). > > > >And I've never had that problem. If /home is a separate LV, in > >Anaconda, select the PV with the /home LV inside it. You'll have to > >reset the mount points for all the LVs (an annoyance, to be sure, that I > >wish could be fixed), but you don't have to format /home (or /opt, > >or /usr/local, etc.) if it is a separate LV (or if it's on a separate > >partition). > > I also tried that once, and convinced it I didn't want it formatted, about > FC6 I think. It bought it I thought, till I found it had made a /home > directory on /, the proceeded to write the new /home with its defaults. I > took a bit of detective work to ascertain that my /home partition still > existed, but wasn't ever used and was not in /etc/fstab as a separate entry. > Dumb was NOT my comment when I found that. > There's always a /home directory on the root filesystem. If you have a separate /home filesystem, the /home directory on the root filesystem is the mount point for the /home filesystem. If the instruction to mount your /home filesystem on the /home directory is not in /etc/fstab, it's because you didn't set the mount point for that filesystem (whether it's a partition or a LV) during installation. (Not that it's clear you need to do that during installation... If you know *nix filesystem structure, you know what's needed, but if not, it's not clear how you find out. I did a fair amount of reading when I first installed RHL 3.0.3!) -- Matthew Saltzman Clemson University Math Sciences mjs AT clemson DOT edu http://www.math.clemson.edu/~mjs -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines