On 11/28/2010 05:59 PM, Jude DaShiell wrote:
A sled drive puts an internal drive into a sled case. Then the user
slides the sled case along tracks installed for that purpose into the
computer and in order to use it must lock the drive with a key. You
can put operating systems on different hard drives that way and if one
gets compromised pull it out and replace disk to keep running.
On Sun, 28 Nov 2010, Damjan wrote:
Has anyone managed to get archlinux up and running on either a sled
drive or a full-sized usb drive yet. Another Linux system I have
couldn't even detect the disk drive was in the machine and I gave
it my
best hard drive too. Slackware has no problem with the drive, but
Debian
squeeze or an earlier edition of lenny squeeze had problems too.
What's a "sled drive"?
Anyway, when the LCD broke on my main laptop, and I sent it for a
repair, I took out the hard drive, put it in an external USB box and
hooked it up on an Asus EEEpc 701.
Except that I had to update the initramfs to include the usb drivers
(ehci_hcd, uhci_hcd, usb_storage, sd_mod) I don't remember doing
anything else special.
fstab was already configured to mount by uuid, grub2 too.
--
??????
Please do not top post.
It sounds as if you are describing a hot-swappable drive. Something like
this: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817994054
If that is the case then the kernel should just have to support your
SATA chipset. As with a USB drive you should just need to provide the
needed usb kernel modules as Damjan stated in yoru initrd file. Edit
/etc/mkinitcpio.conf and run mkinitcpio -p kernel26