On 19/01/24 at 20:14, Nicolas George wrote:
Franco Martelli (12024-01-19):
One case against using partitions on mdraid: if your array gets messed
up, you get to recreate those partition tables yourself and that's just
hilarious if you don't have a backup. Happened to a friend of mine,
reason was
Franco Martelli (12024-01-19):
> > One case against using partitions on mdraid: if your array gets messed
> > up, you get to recreate those partition tables yourself and that's just
> > hilarious if you don't have a backup. Happened to a friend of mine,
> > reason was a UPS brownout.
> How can I ge
On 19/01/24 at 09:03, Anssi Saari wrote:
One case against using partitions on mdraid: if your array gets messed
up, you get to recreate those partition tables yourself and that's just
hilarious if you don't have a backup. Happened to a friend of mine,
reason was a UPS brownout.
How can I get a
Hi,
On Thu, Jan 18, 2024 at 10:28:30AM -0600, Nicholas Geovanis wrote:
> Sounds like this group has finally achieved a long overdue consensus. How
> many times since LVM was ready for root/boot volumes have I been told that
> using partitions was necessary good practice. Even had that in job
> int
On Wed, Jan 17, 2024, 9:35 PM gene heskett wrote:
> On 1/17/24 19:54, Steve McIntyre wrote:
> > Andy Smith wrote:
> ...
> >> Then there will just be people going by taste.
> >>
> >> Personally I still put them directly on drives. If I ever get taken
> >> out by one of those crappy motherboard
On 1/17/24 19:54, Steve McIntyre wrote:
Andy Smith wrote:
The newer set of people recommending partitions are mostly doing so
because there's been a few incidents of "helpful" PC motherboards
detecting on boot what they think is a corrupt GPT, and replacing it
with a blank one, damaging the RAI
6 matches
Mail list logo