Max Waterman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Daniel Pittman wrote:
>> Sebastian Kuzminsky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>> Mitchell Laks <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>>> What does doing
>>>>
>>>> mdadm -Cv -n2 -l1 /dev/md0 /dev/sda /dev/sdb
>>>>
>>>> do to the partition tables??? (And why can I still access the data
>>>> if I messed up the partitions??? very odd).
>>>> Can you point me at an explanation of the effects of what I did?
>>> I'd expect that command to overwrite the partition table with the
>>> MD metadata, or at least put the partition table at risk of being
>>> overwritten later.
>> Nope: the MD metadata lives at the end of the disk, not the start, so
>> your partition table would still be there when the filesystem wrote over
>> the first block of the disk...
>> ....and, if the partition table lived through that, I guess the
>> filesystem doesn't use (or respects) that block itself.
>
> ...but, just so as I understand, by using the whole disk (ie /dev/sda
> and not /dev/sda1, etc), you're telling md to make the whole disk
> available to your filesystem (or whatever), including the space normally
> used to store the partition table, and so any partition table that
> happens to be on the disk(s) is likely to be over-written.
>
> right?

Yeah, pretty much.  You lose around 128KB from the end of the disk, but
the MD device should start the data at sector zero, right where the
partition table is.

          Daniel

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