After much pain in trying to start the install, I was finally able to get the install underway.
What was the problem ?
I have 4 disks (2x 9 and 2 x 18G) and the installer was not recognising the logical disk that I setup on the RAID array (2 x 8 as one, RAID1 or 0)
What was the "possible" solution ?
Apparently it is a common found problem with these MegaRAID adaptors.
Essentially I2O is a specification used in these RAID arrays.
Personally I don't care too much, I just need my server running.
Apparently, the i2o module (i2o_core) for linux loads up first and then the megaraid module can't find the disks when it loads.
A few people found ways around it by manually loading the modules in the right
order (RHE, Fedora).
My answer for Ubuntu 6.10 server:
I found a tip on the RHEL "release" notes for RHEL 5 beta 2.
http://www.linuxcompatible.org/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux_5_Beta_2_s76179.html
It states: Change the megaraid mode from I2O to Mass Storage.
I did that .. (Ctrl-M when it pops up) and then went back through the install. No problem.
I can see my 9G and then also my 2 x 18G's.
Nice.
Thanks Red Hat. (Sorry I left you at RE 4.2)
3 comments:
Hi!
Could you please tell me the exact configuration this server has? And what kind of load it can sustain? If you have any ideea of course :)
Thanks
Hi Florin,
I haven't actually performed any load testing on this server but was used in a fairly passive network environment for 5 users.
I know from past experience, these PE 2400 servers are quite performant for their day.
I have two, the 2400 desktop, and a 2RU 2450. Both with Dual 733Mhz CPUs.
One has more disks but I cannot remember how much or which.
r.
Actually i have another problem right now :(
I'm trying to isntall ubuntu on it, but it keeps finding sda, sdb, ... sdz :(
Any idea?
Post a Comment