> Even I manually inserted raid0 module or recompiled the kernel to have
> raid0 built-in, the same problem still happened.
>
> What else should I do?
You mean /proc/mdstat still shows no personalities registered after you insert
the raid0 module? Strange. As before, please tell us what kernel version, raid
patch and raidtools you are using, any relevant messages in the syslog (probably
something like /var/log/messages), and the output of dmesg.
The most likely explanation is that you do not have a kernel patched for the
latest raid support (the raid support included in stock kernels is for use with
the old mdtools), but we need the above info to confirm this.
Cheers,
Bruno Prior [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Ekasit
> Kijsipongse
> Sent: 03 September 1999 11:53
> To: Bruno Prior
> Cc: Linux-Raid; marco mille
> Subject: RE: Need help
>
>
> Even I manually inserted raid0 module or recompiled the kernel to have
> raid0 built-in, the same problem still happened.
>
> What else should I do?
>
> Ekasit K.
>
> On Thu, 2 Sep 1999, Bruno Prior wrote:
>
> > > Also, /proc/mdstat has no change:
> > >
> > > Personalities :
> > > read_ahead not set
> > > md0 : inactive
> > > md1 : inactive
> > > md2 : inactive
> > > md3 : inactive
> >
> > This looks like your problem (in both cases). You have no raid personalities
> > available, which means you do not have RAID support running. Either you have
> > modular raid support (as installed by default, for example, in
> RedHat 6.0) and
> > the modules have not been recognized at bootup, or you do not have
> raid support
> > built into your kernel at all. We could do with knowing what
> kernel, patches and
> > raidtools you are running, the contents of your syslog, and the
> output of dmesg.
> > What have you done to enable raid support?
> >
> > Cheers,
> >
> >
> > Bruno Prior [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
>
>
>