Hi everyone,

I guess this problem would affect the entire chain of ubuntu versions, but I subscribe to this list, so here it goes.

I had some problems getting a server to work today with my RAID configuration.

I usually install servers with 2xRAID0 on the system disks, one partition /dev/md0 for swap, and one /dev/md1 for the root filesystem. I create two partitions on each disk before I configure the RAID. Usually, this works like a charm, but today this configuration failed. It seemingly created the raid arrays as it should, but after install and first boot, I got an errormessage saying that it was not able to mount root partition (/dev/disk/by-uuid/xxxxxxx) and was dropped to a rescue shell. I examined the RAID partitions, and saw that mdadm tried to assemble the swap array using /dev/sd[ab], not /dev/sd[ab]1 (notice the '1') which I had configured it to do. The same goes for the root array.

I tried running through the installer again (after zeroing superblocks and dd'ing about 400K from /dev/zero to both /dev/sd[ab]). I notised that after creating the RAID partitions and starting the RAID configuration tool, it would not recognize /dev/sd[ab][12], but could only recognize /dev/sd[ab] (the whole disk).

I could not get the installer to create partitions which could be recognized by the RAID configuration tool, so I had to use TTY2 to manually partition the disks using fdisk and creating the RAID arrays using mdadm. When I now ran the "Detect disks" step in the installer, the correct RAID arrays came up and I finished the installation. Now, booting was no problem and the server seems to behave like normal.

My question is; it this a known bug or is it my combination of hardware which didn't agree with the ubuntu installer?

This was during the installation of Ubuntu 10.04.1 Server amd64.



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Regards,
Tor Martin Slåen

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