I have no other machines than the said two servers. As soon as a machine
was dismissed, parts were recovered for the new machines. Does not matter,
I'll try. What I was also asking, however, was how to boot to the grub only:

I forgot asking naively how to boot safely to the grub menu.
>
> With both servers, the system boots straightforwardly to the linux prompt,
> then, if I need the X server and manager, I command "startx" and then
> "gnome-session"
>

thanks
francesco


On Sun, Oct 6, 2013 at 10:40 PM, Bob Proulx <[email protected]> wrote:

> Francesco Pietra wrote:
> > Thanks so much. I am also using raid1 since I met Debian, so many years
> > ago. However the poor way I described. I'll do what you suggest as soon
> > time permits, although the cables to the HDs in the old server are
> > difficultly accessible. And, in the meantime, I would be at a single
> > server, insecure as with a bad raid1.
>
> I wasn't suggesting that you hack around on your production server.  I
> was suggesting that you create a victim machine for testing on a
> workbench that is seperate from your production server.  And this
> victim machine does not need to be a rack mount server at all.  An old
> deskside machine is perfect.  Something that has two disk drives in it
> for testing the RAID1 installation.
>
> Do the test on this testing victim machine separate from your
> production machine.  When you have verified how everything works then
> do those actions on your production machine.  That way your production
> machine is safe from experiments.  And it is much easier to test and
> learn and experiment upon a machine that is targeted specifically for
> that purpose.
>
> > Failure that I described in adding grub to the other HD was in a single
> > trial and now the HDs are different, taken from a dismissed four-sockets
> > dual-core AMD server.
>
> The type of disk drive should not matter.
>
> Bob
>

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