Tom Horsley wrote: > 2. Linux treats SATA drives as scsi devices, and honest to gosh scsi > disks only allowed 15 partitions (historically, anyway, maybe > true even today). Technically, it's not the *disks* that have the limitation. It's a Linux limitation. Other operating systems may or may not have similar limitations, but this one is solely Linux. It's not even a limitation of the partitioning scheme -- it's the same one (usually) as you get on IDE disks, the traditional MS-DOS partitioning scheme. The disks should neither know nor care what pattern of bits is laid on them, as long as they can reproduce it faithfully. They should have nothing to do with partitioning -- being SCSI, they may well be attached to various weird and wonderful computers with different partitioning schemes. In fact, they might well not *be* partitioned as we understand it -- they might have LVM laid straight on the raw device (AIX), have database extents that perform better if they're laid straight on the raw device (Oracle), or be used in IBM's high-end "Shark" Enterprise Storage products with multiple layers of virtualisation between the disks and anything that the various computers attached to the shark actually see. Hope this helps, James. -- E-mail: james@ | "It has taken 24 years to get the Reichstag wrapped. aprilcottage.co.uk | Chancellor Kohl said it would only be wrapped over his | dead body, so sensing an opportunity the Bundestag | outvoted him." -- The Guardian