So far everything I've read beyond the original description shows mdadm
working as it is intended.

The question on whether or not to boot degraded is not just about the
root filesystem. The idea is to be very careful and not boot with *any*
disks in a degraded array, as we want to avoid the corruption problem
possible because of bug #557429. If you were to accidentally boot w/o
one of your disks, we want to confirm with you that this was your
intention. We are favoring safety of data over convenience.

You can set your system to boot degraded permanently with

sudo dpkg-reconfigure mdadm

And answer yes to the question.

As to the original complaint, I do see merit in explaining *what* you
might do if you say "N". However, we don't have a friendly way to help
the user recover their arrays, so directing them to mdadm may also be
fairly scary. I'm open to suggestions as to what we might want to
display there, but I don't think this is a bug in behavior, just a
usability problem.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/872220

Title:
  Fails to boot when there's problems with softraid

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