I noticed that you had "noinitrd" in your parm line. To use LVM, you must
issue the vgscan and vgchange commands to get the system to recognized the
volume groups. To do this you use an initrd. On SuSE, you can use the
mkinitd command to create one. (Though I use my own so I'm not certain of
how well the SuSE one works.)
When the initrd finished its work it will change to the root you specified.
Leland
-----Original Message-----
From: Matt Lashley/SCO
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 7/21/2003 3:05 PM
Subject: Re: Root LVM - Two questions
I think you definitely have a point. I've spent most of the day trying
to
figure this one out and, in the words of George Costanza, -- "These
pretzels are making me thirsty!"
No more root LVM for me.
"Post, Mark K"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED] To:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
m> cc:
Sent by: Linux on Subject: Re: Root LVM -
Two questions
390 Port
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]
IST.EDU>
07/21/2003 01:49
PM
Please respond to
Linux on 390 Port
Matt,
No suggestions for a solution, but this points up why I am _really_ not
interested in having LVM manage my root file system. Ever. I would
much
rather deal with ext2/ext3/etc. in that regard.
Mark Post