[ale] Looking for recommendations on LVM + soft Raid on home server

James Sumners james.sumners at gmail.com
Tue Mar 20 00:30:44 EDT 2012


Maybe I'm doing it wrong, but I have found having /boot on a non-LVM
partition and everything else managed by LVM to be quite useful. In fact, I
had to resize a root partition on a server I was setting up just today
(well, yesterday at this point) because I forgot to appease the great
Oracle client with way too much swap space (I gave 512MB and it wanted
twice RAM [60GB of swap?! Ridiculous]). It's also handy when you need to
add a new drive into the mix for more free space.

But I'm really just getting used to LVM myself.

On Monday, March 19, 2012, Neal Rhodes <neal at mnopltd.com> wrote:
> I'm getting ready for the 3rd time installing Centos 6.2 on new server
for home.   We usually figure we get to install at least twice on a new OS
and hardware.
>
> This time the re-install is to get the drive partitioning and soft RAID
right.    I didn't have the 2nd drive for the 2nd install.
>
> Normally our prior Fedora servers have been
>
> /dev/md1 on / type ext3 (rw)
> /dev/md0 on /boot type ext3 (rw)
> /dev/md2 on /u type ext3 (rw)
>
> This time around I was thinking on using LVM, I guess to just get more
experience with LVM.   However, since you wouldn't want to risk resizing
/boot or root filesystem,  I see no point in them being in LVM.
>
> Primary drive is 1.5TB, of which 220GB is occupied by Windows7 boot,
which I'd prefer to not disturb.
> 2nd drive is 1TB.
>
> So, I'm thinking of a layout like this:
>
> /dev/md0 on /boot type ext3 (rw)   (whatever boot takes)
> /dev/md1 on / type ext3 (rw)          (about 50GB)
> /dev/md2 on VolumeGroup00         (about 1TB)
>           And logical volumes for /home and /u, which can be resized as
needed between /home and /u
> /dev/sda? on /u2                              (remaining 300GB, not Raid
1, just on the one bigger drive)
>
> Is that going to work?   Other thoughts?
>
> Neal Rhodes
> MNOP Ltd

-- 
James Sumners
http://james.roomfullofmirrors.com/

"All governments suffer a recurring problem: Power attracts pathological
personalities. It is not that power corrupts but that it is magnetic to the
corruptible. Such people have a tendency to become drunk on violence, a
condition to which they are quickly addicted."

Missionaria Protectiva, Text QIV (decto)
CH:D 59
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