Peter,
I might give it a try since I have clean HDs. However, I was of the
understanding that /boot could not reside on a logical volume (ref. fedora 9
install notes on fedora.redhat.com. From your comments it appears that /boot
can reside on a logical volume without difficulty.
Thanks
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Bob, choose manual partioning with disk druid. Check the box: Allow
me to review and make changes or something like that. The you'll be
able to see a single VolumeGroup that includes the Logical Volumes.
Delete, first the Logical Volumes then the VolumeGroup. After that,
Hi all,
How do I install F9 without LVM? Even when selecting custom
install/partitioning, I cannot delete the LVM volume.
Tnx,
bob
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--- On Tue, 7/29/08, Bob Hartung [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: Bob Hartung [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: LVM - Install F9 without LVM
To: Fedora List fedora-list@redhat.com
Date: Tuesday, July 29, 2008, 7:34 PM
Hi all,
How do I install F9 without LVM? Even when selecting
custom
install
On Tue, 2008-07-29 at 21:34 -0500, Bob Hartung wrote:
How do I install F9 without LVM? Even when selecting custom
install/partitioning, I cannot delete the LVM volume.
Look around the partitioning tool, you'll see that some things sit on
top of others. Remove them in the right sequence.
On Tue, Jul 29, 2008 at 7:34 PM, Bob Hartung [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,
How do I install F9 without LVM? Even when selecting custom
install/partitioning, I cannot delete the LVM volume.
Hmm.. I installed F9 on my desktop using the graphical installer
(anaconda) without LVM without any
Bob, choose manual partioning with disk druid. Check the box: Allow
me to review and make changes or something like that. The you'll be
able to see a single VolumeGroup that includes the Logical Volumes.
Delete, first the Logical Volumes then the VolumeGroup. After that,
create at minimum the