Scott Silva wrote on Thu, 18 Oct 2007 16:05:09 -0700: > As long as the partitions were raid-autostart (fd I believe) it should pick it up. Yeah, it wasn't a problem at all. > Having a CDrom on a channel shouldn't be a problem as long as the drive > supports UDMA, which I think the modern drives support. > And losing the CD along with the failed drive is not a big deal. No CDROM, anyway :-) > > You still need to reboot to replace the failed drive, but the system should > run until you get there. Think about also putting your swap on raid if the box > swaps occasionally. Yeah, I thought about that before partitioning and first wanted to exclude swap. Obviously, this wouldn't be a problem when a disk goes away on booting, but if it is in the middle of operation and there's just a few data that a program needs urgently .. I'm using a simple scheme now. There are only two partitions, one holds boot and one holds LVM with /, /tmp, /var and swap. I also installed grub to both drives and since I couldn't find my old information how to do that I googled again for it and found that the page with the information doesn't exist anymore. A *lot* of sites point to it, so this is a real pita. I found it finally via archive.org. I wonder if it shouldn't get included in original text in the wiki and the FAQ better point to that? (You can't link directly to the page at archive.org and one can't be sure that it will stay available there.) http://www.centos.org/modules/smartfaq/faq.php?faqid=47 (the last link) Kai -- Kai Schätzl, Berlin, Germany Get your web at Conactive Internet Services: http://www.conactive.com _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos