thanks all,

I'm using 2.6 so I'm going to go down the LVM2 route. FWIW I'm wanting
to use LVM to allow creation (and snapshoting) on my primary machine
for disk/partition 'images' for a ten-machine cluster I'm starting
work on in mid-december.
I also thought the other benefits(resize my partitions) for it on my
own machine would be pleasing.

However I'm going to need a hand setting up an initrd.


On Wed, 10 Nov 2004 16:30:20 +1300, Matthew Gregan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> At 2004-11-10T16:00:30+1300, Isaac Devine wrote:
> > I have been looking at different LVM systems ( LVM1, LVM2 or EVMS
> > http://evms.sourceforge.net/) and am wondering if any anyone has had
> > any experience with them and specifically setting up a root partition
> > on them. What do you recommend? (Using gentoo)
> 
> It depends what kernel you're using.  LVM2 is part of the kernel.org
> tree now, so I recommend using that if you're running a 2.6 kernel.  If
> you're running something earlier, you'll probably need to apply patches
> to get either LVM or EVMS; in this case, I suggest using LVM just
> because it is fairly similar and compatible with LVM2, so you've got an
> upgrade path and you can continue using your existing LVM knowledge.
> 
> As nice as EVMS is, don't bother with it unless you have a very good
> reason to.  It didn't get accepted into the kernel.org tree when it was
> submitted, and now that LVM2 is in and well maintained, it certainly
> won't be going into the kernel.org tree in the near future.
> 
> And, as always, make sure you have good backups.
> 
> At 2004-11-10T16:10:43+1300, C. Falconer wrote:
> > And, if you're concatenating a bunch of disks, you're increasing
> > exponentially your risk to drive failure, which looses all data on all
> > drives in the array.
> 
> Agreed.  Concatenating drives is a foolish move for 99.999% of people.
> Don't do it.  Volume management does not require or encourage this sort
> of configuration, but it doesn't protect you from bad decisions either.
> 
> > Frankly, it's a waste of time IMO.
> 
> Volume management?  Have you used it for a significant period of time?
> It's incredibly useful, especially if your filesystem allows on-line
> resizing.
> 
> Cheers,
> -mjg
> --
> Matthew Gregan                     |/
>                                   /|                [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>

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