one thing to investigate is data recovery in the case of hardware failure. TEST: remove a hard drive from your system, put it in some other system, and try to recover the data. it may be that LVM encodes the filesystem such that recovery must be through the LVM software that was managing the data input. On Thu, 2008-10-16 at 15:46 +0200, Joern Nettingsmeier wrote: > David Baron wrote: > > I am considering setting up an LVM. Does this cause a performance hit for real > > time audio file accesses? > > i've been using lvm-based partitioning for a long time now, and have > never had problems. but it never occurred to me to do a/b measurements > either. > in any case, i don't see how it could have an impact (and if it did, > that would probably be considered a bug by the kernel crowd and get > fixed real quick). > > > > _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user