Vis-a-vis Aram J. Agajanian's note of 2010-05-25 20:22: > ... > F8 to F11 and RHEL 5 use dmraid for BIOS RAID. > > F12 and F13 use mdraid for BIOS RAID. Bingo! Just the info I needed. Thanks very much. "Brevity is the soul of wit" and all that. > I have installed Fedora onto several computers with Intel BIOS RAID > arrays and have always partitioned similarly to the way that you have > described. Anaconda has detected the BIOS RAID array and generated the > fstab correctly in F12 and F13. I have never used /etc/crypttab and > always do fresh installs. Let me ask for a little clarification, please, Aram. Have you migrated such a machine from F11 to F12 (or even F13)? If so, did you wipe the physical volume and re-partition, or did you re-use the old partition scheme? Due to the relative slowness of my (networked) backup device and the amount of data, doing a full restore of the system in question took many hours when I re-did the RAID going from F10 to F11, far more than migrating my desktop, w/ 3 times as much data and hardware RAID (where I simply re-used the existing partitions). By now I have nearly a year more local stuff to bring forward. > ... > In F12 and F13, I have recently experienced bug # 576749. It seems > that an mdraid resync makes the computer unresponsive. Bummer. > In F13 Anaconda, BIOS RAID storage devices are found in the Advanced > Storage option. > ... Thanks again. Joe -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines