On Wed, 2004-08-18 at 12:19, Philip Rowlands wrote: > On Wed, 18 Aug 2004, Blair Lowe wrote: > > >I tried to use the: > >#boot > >part raid.01 --asprimary --onpart hda1 > >part raid.02 --asprimary --onpart hdb1 > > I'm not sure --asprimary and --onpart make sense together; you've > already created the partition, so --asprimary is meaningless. Thanks - removed. > > >raid /boot --level=RAID1 --device md1 --fstype ext3 raid.01 raid.02 > > Is it --level=RAID1 ? The example in the kickstart docs is: > > raid / --level=1 --device=md0 raid.01 raid.02 raid.03 tried it: no luck. I only have two raid partitions as I am mirroring. We also need to describe the fstype here too (--fstype=ext3 is what I changed it to). > > >"Your root partition is less than 250 megabytes which is lower than is > >recommended for a redhat linux install" The root partition raid members are actually about 1GB. > > This might be a warning or a real error; why not make it >250MB just to > be safe? Looks like another kickstart bug then. Does anyone know how to do the last section: raid /boot --level=1 --device=md1 --fstype=ext3 raid.01 raid.02 raid /usr --level=1 --device=md4 --fstype=ext3 raid.03 raid.04 raid /var --level=1 --device=md3 --fstype=ext3 raid.05 raid.06 raid --level=1 --device=md6 --fstype=swap raid.07 raid.08 raid / --level=1 --device=md2 --fstype=ext3 raid.09 raid.10 raid /home --level=1 --device=md5 --fstype=ext3 raid.11 raid.12 using a %pre script that does a mkraid? Thanks.