James G. Sack (jim) wrote:
In the old days, boot had to be below the 1024-cylinder limit (or
something like that), but what is the advantage of a small boot
partition on current hardware and with today's bootloaders? Is there
really anything operational, or perhaps it might be just a convenience
-- say, for maintenance purposes?

grub doesn't speak LVM so if you put /boot inside LVM you will have problems.

--
Tracy R Reed                  Read my blog at http://ultraviolet.org
Key fingerprint = D4A8 4860 535C ABF8 BA97  25A6 F4F2 1829 9615 02AD
Non-GPG signed mail gets read only if I can find it among the spam.


--
[email protected]
http://www.kernel-panic.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/kplug-list

Reply via email to