Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-10-01 Thread Lamar Owen
On Saturday, October 01, 2011 12:56:46 AM Cliff Pratt wrote:
 prompt tune2fs /dev/sdb1 -U c491d94e-7004-4b08-9993-4c9a7a25b6b1

As the saying goes, try typing that fast ten times and see how many times 
the UUID ends up being fat-fignered.

Unless the UUID contains spellable words that use only the hex digits (like 
deadbeef, cafebabe, or similar). (you can find a list of 1196 hex words at 
http://nedbatchelder.com/text/hexwords.html )

Mnemonics are essential for jogging the memory... oh, wait

Now, was that filesystem with the backup copy of that priceless 
one-in-a-lifetime video c491d94e-7004-4b08-9993-4c9a7a25b6b1 or was it 
bb6c2bb9-f01e-3135-a8de-9f885a7afdef or maybe it was 
f82ffa31-2587-3db8-970a-36e54e72621b... oh, I don't remember!

But I guess if you physically label the disk with the partitioning and the 
UUID's of each filesystem, it might be workable.

Too bad many, if not most, drive serial numbers are not spellable in hex
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-10-01 Thread Cliff Pratt
On Sun, Oct 2, 2011 at 5:24 AM, Lamar Owen lo...@pari.edu wrote:
 On Saturday, October 01, 2011 12:56:46 AM Cliff Pratt wrote:
 prompt tune2fs /dev/sdb1 -U c491d94e-7004-4b08-9993-4c9a7a25b6b1

 As the saying goes, try typing that fast ten times and see how many
 times the UUID ends up being fat-fignered.

I said, in a bit that you snipped, cut-and-paste.

 Unless the UUID contains spellable words that use only the hex digits
 (like deadbeef, cafebabe, or similar). (you can find a list of 1196 hex
 words at http://nedbatchelder.com/text/hexwords.html )

 Mnemonics are essential for jogging the memory... oh, wait

 Now, was that filesystem with the backup copy of that priceless
 one-in-a-lifetime video c491d94e-7004-4b08-9993-4c9a7a25b6b1 or was
 it bb6c2bb9-f01e-3135-a8de-9f885a7afdef or maybe it was
 f82ffa31-2587-3db8-970a-36e54e72621b... oh, I don't remember!

That's silly. The UUID is probably only of interest when the disk or
partition is being mounted. If it isn't mounted, mount it and *look*.

 But I guess if you physically label the disk with the partitioning and
 the UUID's of each filesystem, it might be workable.

 Too bad many, if not most, drive serial numbers are not spellable in hex

Cheers,

Cliff
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread Hakan Koseoglu
On 29/09/11 22:19, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 When I build, our PXEboot ks partitions and labels the partitions. When I
 add or replace, I make the partition, the fs, and e2label them. I've
 gotten to really appreciate labeling. I hate the UUIDs - they're
 ludicrously too long, and bear no relationship to what device they are, or
 where they go.
Although I'm a fan of labelling, for some weird reason I had seriously 
weird issues with multipath SAN setups in the last couple of months. I'm 
on holiday at the moment so I can't the logs up but more than once, with 
multipath, labels have caused me too much headache than their worth. In 
one instance the label would latch to one of the individual paths, not 
the multipath and then all hell would break loose. Any suggestions on 
the list are much welcome.

I haven't found a new good practice yet, UUIDs are pretty unwieldly and 
no one can expect to remember one whereas a label of database or 
redo1 or redo2 are just meaningful and can be parsed by a normal 
human! :)
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread Hakan Koseoglu
Hi Les,
On 29/09/11 22:25, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On Thu, Sep 29, 2011 at 4:19 PM,m.r...@5-cent.us  wrote:
 When I build, our PXEboot ks partitions and labels the partitions. When I
 add or replace, I make the partition, the fs, and e2label them. I've
 gotten to really appreciate labeling. I hate the UUIDs - they're
 ludicrously too long, and bear no relationship to what device they are, or
 where they go.

 What happens when you move the disks around among machines?  Or don't
 you ever do that after they contain data?
Why would you move disks around machines unless you're recovering them 
after a failure? Then just make sure they don't exist on the recovery 
server.

Maybe it's the way the machines I get involved are used, they're mostly 
database servers and their lifetime are measured in 3-5 years so once 
they're up and running, not a lot of people touches them. If a disk is 
being moved around, it gets decomissioned and wiped out first, not after.

Also if you stick to more descriptive labels I think you'd be safe over 
the long run. Just don't call all of them data. :-)
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread Les Mikesell
On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 4:56 AM, Hakan Koseoglu ha...@koseoglu.org wrote:

 What happens when you move the disks around among machines?  Or don't
 you ever do that after they contain data?

 Why would you move disks around machines unless you're recovering them
 after a failure?

Because I can.  Why wouldn't you?   Mine are nearly all in swappable
carriers and it is a lot faster to move them than to ship data any
other way.

 Then just make sure they don't exist on the recovery
 server.

And how would I know that?

 Maybe it's the way the machines I get involved are used, they're mostly
 database servers and their lifetime are measured in 3-5 years so once
 they're up and running, not a lot of people touches them. If a disk is
 being moved around, it gets decomissioned and wiped out first, not after.

Some of our machines are like that, some aren't.

 Also if you stick to more descriptive labels I think you'd be safe over
 the long run. Just don't call all of them data. :-)

That doesn't any more sense than having to label all your shipping
containers descriptively before you know what you are going to put in
them.  And besides, most of the labels are applied by the installer
without user input.

-- 
  Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread m . roth
Les Mikesell wrote:
 On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 4:56 AM, Hakan Koseoglu ha...@koseoglu.org
 wrote:

 What happens when you move the disks around among machines?  Or don't
 you ever do that after they contain data?

 Why would you move disks around machines unless you're recovering them
 after a failure?

 Because I can.  Why wouldn't you?   Mine are nearly all in swappable
 carriers and it is a lot faster to move them than to ship data any
 other way.
snip
Ok, ours go into use, and stay in their servers. Besides, we have Dells,
and Penguins (several different models), and the few Suns, and the HP, and
EVERY BLOODY MANUFACTURER not only has their own sleds, but they *change*
them

  mark, with another dozen sleds to remove and unscrew in
  preparation for sanitizing

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread Lamar Owen
On Friday, September 30, 2011 11:41:02 AM Les Mikesell wrote:
 Because I can.  Why wouldn't you?   
...
 That doesn't any more sense than having to label all your shipping
 containers descriptively before you know what you are going to put in
 them.  And besides, most of the labels are applied by the installer
 without user input.

While finding the corner cases seems to be your specialty, Les, recognize that 
there will always be a corner case not covered by any filesystem 
labeling/naming scheme, no matter what scheme is used.

It's not at all hard to change the labels after the install.

Linux disk device names aren't reliable (with iSCSI and other SAN technologies 
they never have been).  

LVM has name collision issues (if two sets of one volume group name are found, 
hilarity ensues, part of the reason why LVM volume group names picked by the 
installer are now in EL6 based on hostname and not just generic names as 
before).

Labels of course have their own collision issues, but a label is the one thing 
that is the most easily modified by the user; use the chosen filesystem's 
labeling command (e2label for ext2/3/4; other filesystems have their own) and 
change it in /etc/fstab as well; next reboot it will get picked up.  Labels 
have serious multipathing issues.

UUID is, IMHO at least, the worst of all worlds due to the length and the 
user-unfriendliness of it all (it's been the Ubuntu default for a while, 
though!).  It is guaranteed unique (until you use complete clones), but is the 
most difficult to change and use.

Doing it by controller, channel, and logical unit makes a lot of sense until 
you change things around a few times (and with SAN technologies change is very 
easy).  My boot drive on one box gets a new drive 'letter' (yuck, DOSism at its 
worst!) nearly every boot due to the highly dynamic and multipathed nature of  
of the SAN fabric connection to it, and the fibre channel HBA is being 
enumerated before the boot RAID controller (3Ware).  

And it needs to be that way because of the different PCI-X speeds involved, as 
well as cable lengths and clearance issues inside the 2U server's chassis.  But 
having /dev/sdag as my boot drive doesn't bother me in the least; everything is 
either LVM or label-based mounting, and I haven't had any collision problems 
(but multipath problems are a different story).  

But my multipathing issues relate to my situation being one of those corner 
cases (the normal multipathing assumes an A and a B side redundancy from HBA 
ports through the fabric to the storage processors to the backend loops; while 
I will soone be there I am not right now, with machines seeing four paths to 
every LUN and not just two).  When I get things into the recommended dual-path 
HA state either the standard EL-provided multipathing or the EMC PowerPath 
routing will work as designed, so I can't actually complain that my situation 
is working properly.
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread Benjamin Franz
On 9/30/2011 8:41 AM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 4:56 AM, Hakan Koseogluha...@koseoglu.org  wrote:
 Why would you move disks around machines unless you're recovering them
 after a failure?
 Because I can.  Why wouldn't you?   Mine are nearly all in swappable
 carriers and it is a lot faster to move them than to ship data any
 other way.


Because you are wearing the machine's connectors out. They are rated to 
be *infrequently* changed out. When you do it on a regular basis it will 
just be a matter of time until they develop electrical/physical problems.

If you want to use drives to ship data around plug in a USB hub and 
connect USB drives to it. That way when the connectors inevitably wear 
out all you need to replace is the hub (and/or the drives).

-- 
Benjamin Franz
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread Les Mikesell
On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 11:03 AM, Lamar Owen lo...@pari.edu wrote:

 While finding the corner cases seems to be your specialty, Les, recognize 
 that there will always be a corner case not covered by any filesystem 
 labeling/naming scheme, no matter what scheme is used.


I've found that it is a good idea to find concepts and implementations
 that weren't very well thought out before they bite you somewhere, so
yes, I do go out of my way.  For example when mounting by label was
first implemented, having a duplicate label (very likely if you move
disks around at all since the installer always used the same labels)
would keep the system from booting at all.  You had to just say 'what
were they thinking...' - and wonder about the rest of the system.

 It's not at all hard to change the labels after the install.

To what?  It's something that is going to hold some data in the
future.  And you may not know you need to re-mount it until the
machine that labeled it is gone or dead and the drive is all that is
left.

Within 5.x I've found auto-assembled md devices to be pretty reliable
at identifying themselves, but booting the 6.x livecd completely
messed that up on the one machine where I tried it.

-- 
  Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread Les Mikesell
On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 11:20 AM, Benjamin Franz jfr...@freerun.com wrote:

 Why would you move disks around machines unless you're recovering them
 after a failure?

 Because I can.  Why wouldn't you?   Mine are nearly all in swappable
 carriers and it is a lot faster to move them than to ship data any
 other way.


 Because you are wearing the machine's connectors out. They are rated to be
 *infrequently* changed out. When you do it on a regular basis it will just
 be a matter of time until they develop electrical/physical problems.

Source?   The numbers I've seen are on the order of 50,000 insertions.

-- 
  Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread Lamar Owen
On Friday, September 30, 2011 12:26:28 PM Les Mikesell wrote:
 On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 11:03 AM, Lamar Owen lo...@pari.edu wrote:
 
 
 For example when mounting by label was
 first implemented, having a duplicate label (very likely if you move
 disks around at all since the installer always used the same labels)
 would keep the system from booting at all.  You had to just say 'what
 were they thinking...' - and wonder about the rest of the system.

Again I'll say that no matter what scheme were to be used there are issues and 
problems.  'What were they thinking?' is something that obviously the nameless 
'they' must answer for themselves, but at the same time I'm reminded of the old 
engineering adage 'the better is the enemy of the good enough' meaning that 
while you can always make a product 'better' you must recognize when it is good 
enough for the targeted use case.  And if your particular corner case is not 
the targeted use case... well, things do break.  Try not to have known corner 
cases or be prepared to work around the breakage.

But 'breakage' and 'bugginess' are not synonyms; something can be broken for a 
corner case but not be a bug in the general sense.  Is the current filesystem 
mounting standard broken?  In certain use cases most certainly.  Is the current 
filesystem mounting standard buggy?  For the targeted use cases probably not.  
After all, upstream developers and CentOS builders all operate within finite 
resource limits; it takes infinite resources to reach perfection.

  It's not at all hard to change the labels after the install.
 
 To what?  It's something that is going to hold some data in the
 future.  And you may not know you need to re-mount it until the
 machine that labeled it is gone or dead and the drive is all that is
 left.

The only truly unique identifier belonging to the drive and externally visible 
is the drive serial number.  Or you can literally and physically label the disk 
with information about its filesystems; I've both seen that done and have done 
it in certain hotswap cases.

 Within 5.x I've found auto-assembled md devices to be pretty reliable
 at identifying themselves, but booting the 6.x livecd completely
 messed that up on the one machine where I tried it.

There seem to be enough differences in the md scheme of 5.x and 6.x to 
discourage disk interchange among the two in mdraid cases.  Having said that, I 
have an EL6.1 (upstream EL) machine with this:
[root@www ~]# cat /proc/mdstat
Personalities : [raid1] 
md127 : active raid1 sdae1[0] sdaf1[1]
  732570841 blocks super 1.2 [2/2] [UU]
  
unused devices: none
[root@www ~]# 

Yeah, md127.  But it works reliably, so why change it?  When LUNs go away or 
whatnot, the member disks, between boots, will change in terms of device name 
(for a while they were /dev/sdw and /dev/sdx, then I added some LUNs to the 
fibre channel and they went to /dev/sdz and /dev/sdaa; I've added a LUN or two 
since then (and thanks to multipathing) they are now at /dev/sdae and 
/dev/sdaf; the mirror hasn't broken.  And this md set was created under CentOS 
5 a couple of years back.  

This would definitely break things if mount points in /etc/fstab are keyed by 
md number; that's not the case here, the filesystem is mounted by label.  

But is that buggy?  Depends entirely on use case.
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread m . roth
Benjamin Franz wrote:
 On 9/30/2011 8:41 AM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 4:56 AM, Hakan Koseogluha...@koseoglu.org
 wrote:
 Why would you move disks around machines unless you're recovering them
 after a failure?
 Because I can.  Why wouldn't you?   Mine are nearly all in swappable
 carriers and it is a lot faster to move them than to ship data any
 other way.

 Because you are wearing the machine's connectors out. They are rated to
 be *infrequently* changed out. When you do it on a regular basis it will
 just be a matter of time until they develop electrical/physical problems.
snip
Most of our servers have all drives in hot swap bays (and the older ones
that don't are being surplussed as fast as we can)... *ALL* of which have
sleds they have to fit in. The only drives I swap on a regular basis are
our offline backups (of the online backups), and that's every two weeks,
and for that I've got a dual bay eSATA base, just drop them in, then push
it up. Nothing else moves until it dies.

mark

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread Les Mikesell
On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 12:55 PM,  m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:

 Most of our servers have all drives in hot swap bays (and the older ones
 that don't are being surplussed as fast as we can)... *ALL* of which have
 sleds they have to fit in. The only drives I swap on a regular basis are
 our offline backups (of the online backups), and that's every two weeks,
 and for that I've got a dual bay eSATA base, just drop them in, then push
 it up.

If 750gb disks are big enough, you can get a cute little internal
trayless hot swap bay for 2 -  2.5 SATA drives that fits in the space
a 3.5 floppy would have taken.   The WD ''Scorpio Black drives are
pretty snappy - and you can toss your backup in your shirt pocket.  I
think someone even has a 1 Tb drive in the standard laptop height now.
 Until recently there were 2.5 1 and 1.5 Tb drives but they were too
tall for standard enclosures.

-- 
  Les Mikesell
   lesmikes...@gmail.com
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread m . roth
Les Mikesell wrote:
 On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 12:55 PM,  m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:

 Most of our servers have all drives in hot swap bays (and the older ones
 that don't are being surplussed as fast as we can)... *ALL* of which
 have sleds they have to fit in. The only drives I swap on a regular
 basis are our offline backups (of the online backups), and that's every
 two weeks, and for that I've got a dual bay eSATA base, just drop them
 in, then push it up.

 If 750gb disks are big enough, you can get a cute little internal
 trayless hot swap bay for 2 -  2.5 SATA drives that fits in the space
 a 3.5 floppy would have taken.   The WD ''Scorpio Black drives are
 pretty snappy - and you can toss your backup in your shirt pocket.  I
 think someone even has a 1 Tb drive in the standard laptop height now.
  Until recently there were 2.5 1 and 1.5 Tb drives but they were too
 tall for standard enclosures.

#insert rocking_chair.h
Why, Ah remember when my bosses at a job long ago gave me a *big*, brand
new drive as a holiday gift, knowing I'd be working at home. Why, it was
all of 30MB!

Sorry, the 750GB's are going, going, gone, and even the 1TB's are
smaller, except for the HPC clusters, which don't need a lot of disk.
And no, I do not toss my backups at work in my shirt: the offline backups,
fully encrypted disks, go in the fire safe in the locked server room. Some
of the systems they're backing up have HIPAA and PII data.

mark why, yes, I *am* where some of your US tax dollars
   are going

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread Les Mikesell
On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 1:39 PM,  m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:

 And no, I do not toss my backups at work in my shirt:

Figuratively speaking, of course - the 2.5 drives are just easier for
any use where the capacity makes sense.

  the offline backups,
 fully encrypted disks, go in the fire safe in the locked server room. Some
 of the systems they're backing up have HIPAA and PII data.

Do you encrypt at the disk level (hardware support?), the filesystem,
or just per file with tar-type files?  And has the technique ever
caused data loss?

-- 
  Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread m . roth
Les Mikesell wrote:
 On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 1:39 PM,  m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:

 And no, I do not toss my backups at work in my shirt:

 Figuratively speaking, of course - the 2.5 drives are just easier for
 any use where the capacity makes sense.

Um, we just went from the 1TB drives to 3TB drives, so I only need four.

  the offline backups,
 fully encrypted disks, go in the fire safe in the locked server room.
 Some of the systems they're backing up have HIPAA and PII data.

 Do you encrypt at the disk level (hardware support?), the filesystem,
 or just per file with tar-type files?  And has the technique ever
 caused data loss?

As I said, the disks are fully encrypted, using LUKS. Can't do hardware
support - these are just ordinary drives. Never had data loss, unless the
drive started failing.

 mark

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread Bob Hoffman
Well, first thing is I got lucky and not bought all the same drives. If 
I had all the same I would never have known I put my OS on the two 
drives added with the new sata card, something I DID NOT want to do.

If they were all 1 tb drives, it would have been a disaster to me. 
Luckily I set up P0-P2 drives with my 500gb and saw the issue immediately.


Below is the issue I am talking about. The system ignores the sda/sdb
etc labeling to use UUID and things like hd0, hd1...
Yet mdstat shows you the drives in the useless labeling way...sda sdab

---
lamar owen wrote
There seem to be enough differences in the md scheme of 5.x and 6.x to 
discourage disk interchange among the two in mdraid cases.  Having said 
that, I have an EL6.1 (upstream EL) machine with this:
[root at www ~]# cat /proc/mdstat
Personalities : [raid1]
md127 : active raid1 sdae1[0] sdaf1[1]
   732570841 blocks super 1.2 [2/2] [UU]
-

taking out a dead drive and adding a new one negates a real ability to 
re-label them as you want since the new drive would have a different 
UUID/serial, etc..and screw up any label system you might have done.


That mdstat is not the only monitoring software that pays attention to 
the 'useless' labels like sda sdb sdc, etc...

and that leads to my fear of not getting accurate reports on problems 
with drives or partitions...

(in my case I have 8 drives with 2 raid1 arrays made up of 3 drives 
each, each one having a hot spareand then a few drives as backups)

I am going to just leave it alone, but I feel their is something missing 
in the whole theory...
if the labels sda, sdb, etc mean nothing to the system admin, then why 
are they used in monitoring software...and worse, why are they the only 
drive identification listed in the installer???

And the disk manager, graphical one, in centos 6 does not list the UUID, 
it calls it 'worldwide ID'.


By forcing the use of UUID it makes monitoring impossible. If your 
scripts use the UUID, then you must know the UUID and add them manually. 
If you change out a drive, your script now fails to pick up the new 
UUIDvery annoying.

I am sure it is needed, but I still see UDEV using unchanging labeling 
(things I would use to add grub on a drive) like 'HD0,HD1, etc.

why even use the labels, just use HD1, HD2 and the UUID and let it be.
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread Lamar Owen
On Friday, September 30, 2011 03:36:50 PM Bob Hoffman wrote:
 Below is the issue I am talking about. The system ignores the sda/sdb
 etc labeling to use UUID and things like hd0, hd1...
 Yet mdstat shows you the drives in the useless labeling way...sda sdab
...

Useless?  Those names are what the currently running kernel sees, and thus 
correspond to the current devices.  You then have to do a little more digging 
with other tools, but that is what it is.  The output from a cat of 
/proc/mdstat is raw data, and is more useful for rebuild status than anything 
else.

 taking out a dead drive and adding a new one negates a real ability to 
 re-label them as you want since the new drive would have a different 
 UUID/serial, etc..and screw up any label system you might have done.

For software RAID, yes.  It makes it a challenge keeping up with what device is 
what.  However, palimpsest (the GNOME Disk Utility included in EL 6) shows more 
detail about RAID components; also, if you check the drive itself there is a 
link in the page to the array device (Go to array).  

It's not quite as easy as using, say, EMC Unisphere to manage arrays, but it's 
not bad.  EMC arrays show you on the array itself, using an amber LED, exactly 
which drive is faulted, and also lights the amber fault LED on the enclosure, 
and numbers the drives by backend bus number, enclosure number, and drive 
number, so that, say, drive 14 in enclosure 7 on bus 3 would be device 3_7_14 
(zero origin on all these numbers).  But when you can have up to 960 drives in 
a single array such 'luxuries' become necessities (960 drives in a CX4-960; we 
have a CX4-480 that only will allow 480 drives, currently populated with 230).  
I can't imagine managing 480 drives on a Linux box with the current device 
naming.

 That mdstat is not the only monitoring software that pays attention to 
 the 'useless' labels like sda sdb sdc, etc...

/proc/mdstat?  It's not monitoring software; it's a kernel API mounted on the 
/proc filesystem; those names can and will change if disk enumeration order 
changes.  File a bug report with the kernel developers to see this changed.

 I am going to just leave it alone, but I feel their is something missing 
 in the whole theory...
 if the labels sda, sdb, etc mean nothing to the system admin, then why 
 are they used in monitoring software...and worse, why are they the only 
 drive identification listed in the installer???

Hmm, are they?  I'll have to do another install to double check, but I think 
the drive model numbers/types are listed, but it has been a little bit since I 
did the install (of my RHEL 6.1 box at least).

If you want the disks listed differently in the installer, the right thing to 
do is file a bug report upstream (with Red Hat, in other words) on 
bugzilla.redhat.com, as CentOS is 100% going to do what upstream does in this 
regard.

 And the disk manager, graphical one, in centos 6 does not list the UUID, 
 it calls it 'worldwide ID'.

That's because it is the WWN in the case of fibre channel, and a unique ID 
otherwise.  WWN is unique, for fibre channel.  Fibre channel: the original 
serial-attached SCSI.  And, well, FC is giving way to dual-attach SAS in the 
enterprise space; 2.5 inch enterprise SAS drives in the EMC VNX series, for 
instance.

I have found palimpsest (the EL6 'Disk Utility' in the Applications - System 
Tools menu) to give a lot of good information in one very nice display.  It 
doesn't yet deal well with LVM; for that you use system-config-lvm.  But the 
serial number, the filesystem label, RAID components, etc all in one place.  
Also, for one of the controllers I have it shows which port on the card a 
particular disk is attached to.

While many around this list detest GUI's on servers, I'll be honest; this is 
one very handy and useful utility that works quite well using ssh tunnelled X.  
A similar text-mode interface tool would be super nice, but someone has to 
write it, it's not in there right now.

 I am sure it is needed, but I still see UDEV using unchanging labeling 
 (things I would use to add grub on a drive) like 'HD0,HD1, etc.

The grub device names are the BIOS names; the grub hd0 should be the BIOS boot 
drive.  I say 'should be' because I have had a mismatch there before.  So in my 
example (where /boot is on /dev/sdag) it just so happens that /dev/sdag is 
grub's hd0, but once the kernel comes up and enumerates the disks what was 
first shall become last... (hmmm, seems like a quote from the world's most 
popular book...).

 why even use the labels, just use HD1, HD2 and the UUID and let it be.

The /dev/sdX names are older than udev.  Historical, (or hysterical, depending 
upon your PoV).  HD1, HD2, etc would be far worse. 

In the general case with PC hardware this is where things stand.  With general 
PC hardware it becomes the responsibility of the individual systems 
administrator to simply know the machine inside and out, and document the 
machine 

Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread John R Pierce
On 09/30/11 12:27 PM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 Um, we just went from the 1TB drives to 3TB drives, so I only need four.


yes, but 12 2.5 1TB drives take the same amount of space (1U), and are 
capable of higher IO throughput due to being more spindles.

-- 
john r pierceN 37, W 122
santa cruz ca mid-left coast

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread m . roth
John R Pierce wrote:
 On 09/30/11 12:27 PM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 Um, we just went from the 1TB drives to 3TB drives, so I only need four.

 yes, but 12 2.5 1TB drives take the same amount of space (1U), and are
 capable of higher IO throughput due to being more spindles.

You missed what I originally said: I have a two-bay eSATA dock, like this
http://www.bizrate.com/hard-drives/2095977853.html. And it's only on one
channel. It's not a high priority, so it takes me the better part of a
week to do the backups *shrug*, it also doesn't strain the network, esp.
when some folks are moving *large* amounts of data (we do actual
scientific computing here). Network lag would be very much of a bad thing.

mark

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread Les Mikesell
On Fri, Sep 30, 2011 at 11:57 AM, Lamar Owen lo...@pari.edu wrote:

 But 'breakage' and 'bugginess' are not synonyms; something can be broken for 
 a corner case but not be a bug in the general sense.  Is the current 
 filesystem mounting standard broken?  In certain use cases most certainly.  
 Is the current filesystem mounting standard buggy?  For the targeted use 
 cases probably not.

I think the first incarnation of the 'labels in fstab' that I saw
would have died a horrible death if you did a dual boot install with 2
copies of it, something that should have been planned as a normal use
case.  That might have been a fedora version though, and I'm not sure
what happens in that case now.

 After all, upstream developers and CentOS builders all operate within finite 
resource limits; it takes infinite resources to reach perfection.

But there are only 2 hard problems in computer science: naming things,
cache invalidation, and off-by-one errors.  (Hmmm, can't find the
right attribution for that now).

-- 
  Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-30 Thread Cliff Pratt
On Sat, Oct 1, 2011 at 5:03 AM, Lamar Owen lo...@pari.edu wrote:

 UUID is, IMHO at least, the worst of all worlds due to the length
 and the user-unfriendliness of it all (it's been the Ubuntu default
 for a while, though!).  It is guaranteed unique (until you use
 complete clones), but is the most difficult to change and use.

Surely it is a single command? Two if you have to generate the UUID.
On my home machine I cloned my boot drive, then set the UUID of the
second drive with:

prompt uuidgen
then cut and paste into
prompt tune2fs /dev/sdb1 -U c491d94e-7004-4b08-9993-4c9a7a25b6b1
and check it with
prompt blkid

Cheers,

Cliff
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-29 Thread John Doe
From: Bob Hoffman b...@bobhoffman.com

 When installing with anaconda, the 2 drives located on the add-on sata 
 card are being listed as sda and sdb instead of going
 to the back of the line.

Check in the bios if it proposes a ctrl detection order.

JD
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-29 Thread Lamar Owen
On Wednesday, September 28, 2011 07:47:15 PM Bob Hoffman wrote:
 I do not want my raid 1 mirror OS to be on sdc, sdd, and sdeit just 
 looks weird.

It's related to PCI enumeration order, and may not be changeable.  You could 
try the add-on card in another slot.

However, if you think that's weird, I want you to note the portion of the 
output of mount below, and note the drive device my /boot is on (and yes, that 
is actually the real booting drive):

[root@www ~]# mount|grep boot
/dev/sdag1 on /boot type ext4 (rw)
[root@www ~]# cat /etc/issue
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 6.1 (Santiago)
Kernel \r on an \m

[root@www ~]#
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-29 Thread David C. Miller


- Original Message -
 From: Lamar Owen lo...@pari.edu
 To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
 Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2011 1:36:28 PM
 Subject: Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation
 
 On Wednesday, September 28, 2011 07:47:15 PM Bob Hoffman wrote:
  I do not want my raid 1 mirror OS to be on sdc, sdd, and sdeit
  just
  looks weird.
 
 It's related to PCI enumeration order, and may not be changeable.
  You could try the add-on card in another slot.
 
 However, if you think that's weird, I want you to note the portion of
 the output of mount below, and note the drive device my /boot is on
 (and yes, that is actually the real booting drive):
 
 [root@www ~]# mount|grep boot
 /dev/sdag1 on /boot type ext4 (rw)
 [root@www ~]# cat /etc/issue
 Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 6.1 (Santiago)
 Kernel \r on an \m
 
 [root@www ~]#
 ___
 CentOS mailing list
 CentOS@centos.org
 http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
 

This type of issue is why relying on /dev/sdX is bad. Mounting based on uuid or 
label when available is best. Unfortunately, there are controller cards that 
present all disks as the same uuid. It makes using mdadm that can only see 
/dev/sdX a pain to use.

David.
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-29 Thread Les Mikesell
On Thu, Sep 29, 2011 at 4:09 PM, David C. Miller
mille...@fusion.gat.com wrote:

 This type of issue is why relying on /dev/sdX is bad. Mounting based on uuid 
 or label when available is best. Unfortunately, there are controller cards 
 that present all disks as the same uuid. It makes using mdadm that can only 
 see /dev/sdX a pain to use.

So how do you propose getting a uuid or label on a disk in the first
place if you can't identify which is which physically?  And how do you
know which to move when you want the content in some other box?

-- 
  Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-29 Thread m . roth
Les Mikesell wrote:
 On Thu, Sep 29, 2011 at 4:09 PM, David C. Miller
 mille...@fusion.gat.com wrote:

 This type of issue is why relying on /dev/sdX is bad. Mounting based on
 uuid or label when available is best. Unfortunately, there are
 controller cards that present all disks as the same uuid. It makes using
 mdadm that can only see /dev/sdX a pain to use.

 So how do you propose getting a uuid or label on a disk in the first
 place if you can't identify which is which physically?  And how do you
 know which to move when you want the content in some other box?

When I build, our PXEboot ks partitions and labels the partitions. When I
add or replace, I make the partition, the fs, and e2label them. I've
gotten to really appreciate labeling. I hate the UUIDs - they're
ludicrously too long, and bear no relationship to what device they are, or
where they go.

mark

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-29 Thread Les Mikesell
On Thu, Sep 29, 2011 at 4:19 PM,  m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:

 This type of issue is why relying on /dev/sdX is bad. Mounting based on
 uuid or label when available is best. Unfortunately, there are
 controller cards that present all disks as the same uuid. It makes using
 mdadm that can only see /dev/sdX a pain to use.

 So how do you propose getting a uuid or label on a disk in the first
 place if you can't identify which is which physically?  And how do you
 know which to move when you want the content in some other box?

 When I build, our PXEboot ks partitions and labels the partitions. When I
 add or replace, I make the partition, the fs, and e2label them. I've
 gotten to really appreciate labeling. I hate the UUIDs - they're
 ludicrously too long, and bear no relationship to what device they are, or
 where they go.

What happens when you move the disks around among machines?  Or don't
you ever do that after they contain data?

-- 
  Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-29 Thread Lamar Owen
On Thursday, September 29, 2011 05:16:16 PM Les Mikesell wrote:
 So how do you propose getting a uuid or label on a disk in the first
 place if you can't identify which is which physically?  And how do you
 know which to move when you want the content in some other box?

Drive model number plus serial number.  Really the only way; when putting 
systems together you just need to note the drive model and serial number(s).
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-29 Thread m . roth
Les Mikesell wrote:
 On Thu, Sep 29, 2011 at 4:19 PM,  m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:

 This type of issue is why relying on /dev/sdX is bad. Mounting based
 on uuid or label when available is best. Unfortunately, there are
 controller cards that present all disks as the same uuid. It makes
 using mdadm that can only see /dev/sdX a pain to use.
snip
 When I build, our PXEboot ks partitions and labels the partitions. When
 I add or replace, I make the partition, the fs, and e2label them. I've
 gotten to really appreciate labeling. I hate the UUIDs - they're
 ludicrously too long, and bear no relationship to what device they are,
 or where they go.

 What happens when you move the disks around among machines?  Or don't
 you ever do that after they contain data?

Other than offline backups, we don't move disks, other than to replace.

   mark

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-29 Thread Bob Hoffman
--
Lamar Owen wrote

Drive model number plus serial number.  Really the only way;
  when putting systems together you just need to note the drive model and 
serial number(s)

--

That seems like an important thing.

After some research I have decided the only two options are

1) to leave as is and deal with any software (such as monitoring tools, 
mdadm reports, etc) as they come and try to fix them.

2) You can actually change the order that UDEV looks at things and you 
can assign permanent drive letters AFTER the install.
However, there is not much documentation on that, so option 1 seems easiest.

I do not understand the technical reasons why linux decided to 
dynamically label things sda, sdb, etc.
After looking at udev files I find the drives are listed by UUID and a 
deeper labeling system
like hd0, hd1, hd2.

So why even have the labels in the first place if the system doesn't use 
them, you cannot rely on them, and
apparently they don't matter?
It would be better for the anaconda installer to just list them as hd0, 
hd1, hd2, etc.

Where this is an issue is when you are cloning drives, adding grubs, 
etc...because all my instructions rely on using sda, sdb,
etc...and not UUID or other things. And reports from mdadm (and all tech 
instructions) use the sda sdb.

IT is what it is. I am sure there is a reason. Just odd.
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-29 Thread David C. Miller


- Original Message -
 From: Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com
 To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
 Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2011 2:16:16 PM
 Subject: Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation
 
 On Thu, Sep 29, 2011 at 4:09 PM, David C. Miller
 mille...@fusion.gat.com wrote:
 
  This type of issue is why relying on /dev/sdX is bad. Mounting
  based on uuid or label when available is best. Unfortunately,
  there are controller cards that present all disks as the same
  uuid. It makes using mdadm that can only see /dev/sdX a pain to
  use.
 
 So how do you propose getting a uuid or label on a disk in the first
 place if you can't identify which is which physically?  And how do
 you
 know which to move when you want the content in some other box?
 
 --
   Les Mikesell
 lesmikes...@gmail.com

I just had to come up with a solution for this recently. Here is what I did.

I create a small 2 block partition on each disk and gave them labels that is 
the drives serial number when I format them as ext3/4. I dedicate the rest of 
the disk to Linux auto RAID. Something like this to create a label.

mkfs.ext3 -L $DRIVE_SN /dev/sd1

I then have a script that mounts the small partitions by label to a directory 
with the same name as the label.

mount LABEL=$DRIVE_SN /mnt/drive-check/$DRIVE_SN

So if you do a df it will show something like.

FilesystemSize  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/md0   71G  3.9G   63G   6% /
tmpfs  12G 0   12G   0% /dev/shm
/dev/sdc1  16M  1.2M   14M   8% /mnt/drive-check/WD-WMAY03208723
/dev/sdd1  16M  1.2M   14M   8% /mnt/drive-check/WD-WMAY03287844
/dev/sde1  16M  1.2M   14M   8% /mnt/drive-check/WD-WMAY03247298
/dev/sdf1  16M  1.2M   14M   8% /mnt/drive-check/WD-WMAY03247844
/dev/sdg1  16M  1.2M   14M   8% /mnt/drive-check/WD-WMAY03674888
/dev/sdh1  16M  1.2M   14M   8% /mnt/drive-check/WD-WMAY03678644
/dev/sdi1  16M  1.2M   14M   8% /mnt/drive-check/WD-WMAY03674814
/dev/sdj1  16M  1.2M   14M   8% /mnt/drive-check/WD-WMAY03675850
/dev/sdk1  16M  1.2M   14M   8% /mnt/drive-check/WD-WMAY03675194
/dev/sdl1  16M  1.2M   14M   8% /mnt/drive-check/WD-WMAY03288196
/dev/sdm1  16M  1.2M   14M   8% /mnt/drive-check/WD-WMAY03672314
/dev/sdn1  16M  1.2M   14M   8% /mnt/drive-check/WD-WMAY03287843
/dev/sdo1  16M  1.2M   14M   8% /mnt/drive-check/WD-WMAY03674460
/dev/sdp1  16M  1.2M   14M   8% /mnt/drive-check/WD-WMAY03585344
/dev/sdq1  16M  1.2M   14M   8% /mnt/drive-check/WD-WMAY03508896
/dev/sdr1  16M  1.2M   14M   8% /mnt/drive-check/WD-WMAY03209984

Now if I'm using mdadm to make a software RAID and it is complaining /dev/sdf2 
is missing. I can run my script to mount all the small partitions and the one 
that complains it can't mount is easily identified by the serial number. Sure I 
can just let the hardware RAID card handle everything but I don't trust them 
from past experiences seeing failed cards and corrupted arrays. With the disks 
seen by linux as raw block devices I can put these disks on any JBOD controller 
and mount my raid using mdadm. I'm not tied to a particular controller if it 
fails. 

David.
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-28 Thread Craig White
On Sep 28, 2011, at 4:47 PM, Bob Hoffman wrote:

 Hi all.
 
 I have a new server and am playing with the installation. (centos 6). My 
 onboard sata card has 6 drives attached to it,
 yet the server has 8 bays. I bought a sata controller card (adaptec) and 
 added it to the mix, adding two more drives.
 
 Everything works and all is accessible, but there is one annoying issue.
 
 When installing with anaconda, the 2 drives located on the add-on sata 
 card are being listed as sda and sdb instead of going
 to the back of the line.
 
 I would rather my a and b drives be the 0 and 1 sata ports of the 
 onboard controller, but it seems the add-on is taking priority.
 
 My only thought is to install without the 2 drives connected and then 
 add them afterwords.
 But again, that makes no sense to have to do it that way.
 
 Is this just normal for the add on sata cards?
 If I add the drives to the system after I install it all, will linux 
 barf on it and change the drive letters?
 
 I do not want my raid 1 mirror OS to be on sdc, sdd, and sdeit just 
 looks weird.

get over it - it really doesn't matter and you seemingly want to do cartwheels 
 headstands to fight the system.

It may actually be as simple as re-ordering the drives in BIOS but only you can 
get into that.

If you install with the extra drives removed, you probably will have a 
difficult time booting once you put them back in (probably will have to 
'grub-install /dev/sda' and edit /boot/grub/grub.conf to change the drive 
discovery).

If you install with the extra drives inserted and then remove them later, you 
may also run into the same issues with booting.

You really should see if you can fix the drive ordering within BIOS itself.

If not, you should probably just live your mirrors on drives other than 
/dev/sda  /dev/sdb

Craig

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-28 Thread Bob Hoffman
Craig,

I think you misunderstand. It is just the lettering. The extra sata card 
is not going to be booted from. The bios only sets the
boot order, not which drive letter linux is going to assign it.
it is the drive letters that just annoy me and was hoping for an easy 
changeable fix. I was surprised anaconda installer
had no option to change them.

It is like installing windows on your f drive and having c and d as 
storage drives...just rubs ya wrong.

It boots fine from sdc with or without card in it...it is centos 
labeling based on how it looks at the hardware.
Apparently an add on sata card comes first in the order linux analyzes 
the system.


___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-28 Thread Les Mikesell
On Wed, Sep 28, 2011 at 7:05 PM, Bob Hoffman b...@bobhoffman.com wrote:
 Craig,

 I think you misunderstand. It is just the lettering. The extra sata card
 is not going to be booted from. The bios only sets the
 boot order, not which drive letter linux is going to assign it.
 it is the drive letters that just annoy me and was hoping for an easy
 changeable fix. I was surprised anaconda installer
 had no option to change them.

 It is like installing windows on your f drive and having c and d as
 storage drives...just rubs ya wrong.

 It boots fine from sdc with or without card in it...it is centos
 labeling based on how it looks at the hardware.
 Apparently an add on sata card comes first in the order linux analyzes
 the system.

If you are doing raid, once the partitions are set up you will only
see /dev/md? device names except in madam commands or when looking at
/proc/mdstat. And you can move the drives around later so the actual
device names would be different without affecting the  md assemblies.
 I think you are being a little picky  You could always move the
controller cables around, but I'm not sure there is any guarantee that
the drives will be detected in the same order every time.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
 lesmikes...@gmail.com
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-28 Thread Bob Hoffman
Les Mikesell wrote


If you are doing raid, once the partitions are set up you will only
see /dev/md? device names except in madam commands or when looking at
/proc/mdstat. And you can move the drives around later so the actual
device names would be different without affecting the  md assemblies.
  I think you are being a little picky  You could always move the
controller cables around, but I'm not sure there is any guarantee that
the drives will be detected in the same order every time.
--


I am just worried that it would affect some programming or scripting, but if 
that is not the case
then it will be fineI hope.
I looked into the guts of etc and boot and grub...they proper drives are placed 
hd0 hd1 , etc...
Those things look good.

It just seems changing that lettering would be scary, guess linux uses them as 
kind of a virtual naming
convention while keeping the underlying info the same (hd0, etc..).

well, nothing I can do to change it I guess, so I will move on.

Thanks for the help all. Definitely an interesting thing to look at tonight.

bob


___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] add on sata card relabeling drives, installation

2011-09-28 Thread Keith Keller
On Wed, Sep 28, 2011 at 08:05:53PM -0400, Bob Hoffman wrote:
 
 It is like installing windows on your f drive and having c and d as 
 storage drives...just rubs ya wrong.

Fortunately, linux is not so braindead that the actual drive assignments
cause any problems.  Just don't worry about it.  The only time you might
experience problems is if the drives get different assignments later-- I
have seen this, for example, when doing a fairly major kernel update, if
drivers get loaded in a different order than previously.  But this would
be something you'd look for after doing a kernel update, so it shouldn't
be a problem either way.

As Les already mentioned, nothing in CentOS will care that your boot
drive is sdc as long as it's properly configured to boot.  It sounds
like it is working for you, so you should just leave the drive
assignments the way they are--it's not worth the effort to try to change
it, because it won't get you any benefit.

--keith

-- 
kkel...@wombat.san-francisco.ca.us

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos