On Sat, 2009-02-21 at 18:09 -0600, Les Mikesell wrote: > Yes, but raid1 in software has none of those problems, since as far as > the boot loader is concerned, you are booting from a single drive. And > there is a trade-off in complexity, since sw raid works the same on > Linux across different hardware and you need to round up different > vendors instructions and utilities for hardware raid - and have a backup > controller around for recovery. RAID in software, whether RAID1 or RAID5/6, always has manual steps involved in recovery. If one is using standardized hardware, such as HP DL-x80 hardware or Dell x950 boxes, HW RAID obviates the need for a "recovery procedure". It's just easier. You can still boot from a single drive, since that's what the bootloader sees. There are no vendor instructions or utilities needed for recovery. Nor is there a backup controller needed. The *only* time I'd use software RAID on Linux is if I didn't have a standard hardware base that supported hotswap and commandless recovery, which in any enterprise within which I were to be employed, I'd insist upon (and deploy)... -I _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos