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Date:      Fri, 7 Sep 2007 15:08:24 +0200
From:      "n j" <nino80@gmail.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Gstripe during install
Message-ID:  <92bcbda50709070608l4df502e6m543e78d7c635201e@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <200709070831.43988.lists@jnielsen.net>
References:  <92bcbda50709070443p796d075jc91fea5372420fc6@mail.gmail.com> <200709070831.43988.lists@jnielsen.net>

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John,

thank you very much for your detailed input.

> If it were me, I would a small (for some definition of small considering
> your disk space and software needs) partition on the first disk and install
> everything to that. After the system is up, create an identical partition
> on the second disk and set up gmirror between the two (see below). This
> volume would house either the entire OS or just the root partition at your
> option, but it needs to be large enough to house at least a minimal install
> of the OS temporarily. I'd then create additional partitions using the
> remaining space on each disk and turn those into a new, blank gstripe
> volume. If you don't want the whole OS on your mirror, you could then
> move /usr, etc over to the stripe volume (but you don't have to).

That's basically the answer I got in the meantime from a few of my
more experienced colleagues as well. So, I'll probably go with that
option and create a 512Mb root partition on the first disk, install
the OS, create a gmirror and add the second disk to the mirror, build
the RAID-1 array, then gstripe the rest and move /usr, /tmp, /var to
it etc.

On a side note, it would be nice if creating RAID arrays was included
in the FreeBSD install similar to Debian install (according to my
colleague, haven't seen it myself).

Regards,
-- 
Nino



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