Re: Startup recovery

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Roger Heflin <rogerheflin@xxxxxxxxx>
>> LVM is also used to make separate LV's such that critical
>> filesystems can have their own space and be protected against
>> another filesystem filling up (if you only had a single
>> filesystem).



Jonathan Billings:
> While you can do this with separate partitions with file systems on
> them, the advantage of LVM is that you can resize the volumes and not
> have to repartition.  Root volume running out of space?  Grow it and
> take the space from your Home volume.
> 
> I’ve also used the fact that LVM allows you to seamlessly transfer
> data to a new disk, live, when moving to new hardware.
> 


Other filing systems can do all of that, too (three simple large
partitions for boot, system root, and home does it very well).  But,
I'm certain that most people will not be able to manage changing any of
that after the fact.

*Most* users will not be of the super technical mindset, and most
wouldn't need to be, either.  The ordinary person will (these days)
have a ridiculously large hard drive, and not be a programmer. 
Computer literacy is not a prerequisite for using a computer any more,
as any tech support person will attest to.

Nor even is computer literacy a prerequisite for being a tech support
person, either:  I had to get my ISP to change their faulty router,
that was an exercise in stupidity.  You can't phone them, you had to do
it over the internet, in a little chat window through a website.  So,
beforehand, I swapped the failed one for a still working one, then
spent an hour trying to tell them, no I can't put the failed one back
in and continue chatting to you to test the failed one.  I even pointed
out that if I put the faulty one in-circuit I would not be able to talk
to them any more, but they just couldn't see it.  I did try offering to
speak to them over the phone, but they couldn't or wouldn't do that.

-- 
 
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