Anup Shukla wrote: > James A. Peltier wrote: >> James A. Peltier wrote: >>> Anup Shukla wrote: >>>> Hi All, >>>> >>>> Sorry if this has been answered many times. >>>> But i have been going through a lot of pages (via google search). >>>> The more i search, the more its confusing me. >>>> >>>> I have a server with 6 (750G each) SATA disks with H/W Raid 5. >>>> >>>> I plan to allocate the space as follows >>>> >>>> swap 8G >>>> /boot 100M >>>> / 20G >>>> -- and remaining space to /data{1,2,3,N} (equal sizes) >>>> >>>> However after the installation and reboot, i got an error about bad >>>> partition for /data8 >>>> >>>> I had hit the 2T limit. >>>> >>>> Then i found this page at >>>> http://www.knowplace.org/pages/howtos/linux_large_filesystems_support.php >>>> >>>> >>>> which speaks of using Parted/LVM2 and XFS. >>>> >>>> If i understand this correctly, >>>> I need to have 1 disk to host the CentOS installation. >>>> And i can use the other 5 disks in a RAID array >>>> (label type gpt...) >>>> >>>> Is it not possible to partition and use the existing RAID 5 volume? >>>> >>>> I really am not sure about how to proceed for this big disk problem. >>>> >>>> Any ideas/links will really help. >>>> >>>> Thank you. >>>> >>>> Regards, >>>> A.S >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> CentOS mailing list >>>> CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx >>>> http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >>> >>> My understanding is that grub and lilo are not able to boot off of >>> GPT labeled disks currently. Given the size of currently available >>> disks, this will probably change soon, however, for now you need a >>> small partition to boot a large disk. >>> >> >> sorry, a bit quick off the trigger, but essentially, if you wanted to >> use a single RAID-5 volume of this size (even if you configured it as >> you said) the GPT label for the volume would be what gets you cuz of >> the boot loader. >> >> The use of LVM and XFS, just have to do with the way they handle >> larger disks. With LVM you can lay out the disks in a bit more fine >> tuned manner that allows you go get around some limitations in certain >> file systems. XFS is just recommended because it is a very good >> performer and was meant to handle large file systems from its >> inception. Feel free to use JFS, ReiserFS or your local don-juan-ho >> file system you like >> > > I think its finally got into my head now. :) > > From what i understand (after your replies and some more googling) > GRUB cannot boot from gpt labeled drives. > So no matter how i partition them, it just wont boot. > > So finally, i am putting a 300G SATA to act as the "system" drive. > Then use the other 750G's to be the big RAID 5 Volume (XFS) > > Yes, i lose if the 300G fails, but i think i can do something about that > later. > > Thanks for the replies. I know that XFS gets all the press about being a great performing file system ... but if you want the best stability on CentOS, you should at least consider ext3 instead. I have worked very hard to get stable code for xfs in centos-4 and centos-5, and lots of people use it, but (IMHO) ext3 is still much more stable with the CentOS Kernels. That is my $0.02 ... I'm sure other people will tell you I am all hosed up :D Thanks, Johnny Hughes
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