On 23.02.2015 01:19, Alex Regan wrote:
Hi,
On 02/22/2015 06:43 PM, Chris Murphy wrote:
> On Sun, Feb 22, 2015 at 3:39 PM, Heinz Diehl <htd+ml(a)fritha.org> wrote:
>> On 22.02.2015, Chris Murphy wrote:
>>
>>> Windows, OS X installers have maybe 2-3 total layouts between them.
>>> And their installers are completely, totally, bullet proof. They don't
>>> ever crash, or ask the user to create required partitions, they always
>>> succeed in their penultimate goal which is to install a bootable OS.
>>
>> Frankly, the vast majority of the users of those operating systems
>> aren't even capable of installing them by themselves.
>
> The users don't know these things because they don't have to know
> them, not the other way around. There's no benefit in them knowing
> such things it's not intrinsically valuable knowledge for the
> majority. It's sufficient that a scant minority know such things.
>
> Look at even Android and cyanogen. Look at the reinvention of all OS's
> for mobile devices and how much simpler things are when constraining
> choices. Chromebooks are in that same category. Simple. Just works.
> They picked a layout and stuck with it.
>
> And that's not to say the layout of my cyanogen phone is exactly
> simple, it uses GPT partition scheme, and has 28 partitions. (Of
> course that's not by my choice, I had no say.)
On a somewhat-related note, is it now possible with F21 to create a
RAID1 /boot?
I can see this as being one reason for an "escape to parted/fdisk" option.
I'm curious why this option has been so elusive for anaconda over the
years? A situation where a failed /dev/sda in an otherwise RAID5 system
is really unfortunate and requires a whole lot of extra work when things
go bad.
Thanks,
Alex
EXTLINUX RAID1 intro
https://www.redhat.com/archives/anaconda-devel-list/2013-June/msg00032.html
At the time this worked for me. ;)