
Slackware and RocketRaid 454 native mode
Slackware and RocketRaid 454 native mode
I got the generic opensource driver from http://www.highpoint-tech.com and compiled it. I can load the driver using insmod hpt374.o and it detects everything fine. I reboot my machine and the driver is no longer loaded but at the same time I'm missing some dependencies which cause tulip to not start (I know, networking)...Any ideas on how I can clean up my mess here? 

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Damn right. One day in the future when your controller decides to shit all over itself and you can't find another card to replace it with, you will ask yourself, "Why didn't I just go with software RAID?"raw wrote:The RAID controller is a cheap ass solution so I'm better off with a Linux software RAID.
BTW, sup raw?

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:icon14:Disruptor wrote:Damn right. One day in the future when your controller decides to shit all over itself and you can't find another card to replace it with, you will ask yourself, "Why didn't I just go with software RAID?"raw wrote:The RAID controller is a cheap ass solution so I'm better off with a Linux software RAID.
what if the software for the software RAID gets currupted/dies, or the disk it's on?JulesWinnfield wrote:RAW: still putzing around w/ Slackware?? Switch to linspire and be done w/ it
Software raid is actually quite handy in certain circumstances - and in some places i'd recommend it over a hardware raid config; really depends on the usage, deployment, etc.
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glossy wrote:
what if the software for the software RAID gets currupted/dies, or the disk it's on?
:icon6:
I'm speaking from Windows experience here but I have never once heard of RAID corruption happening and, even if it did, RAID isn't a replacement for a backup. If the disk died....well thats kind of the point of RAID in the first place now isn't it.
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My .02: software RAID's been around long enough and has been locked down tighter than Andy Dick's vagina by OSes such as AIX and HPUX to the point that I'd gladly bet my last ball that it's as stable as most hardware raid and likely more stable than most ATA RAID. If you don't mind the performance hit and won't need to run a relational multithreaded database it's the best bet.
Heya Dis! I ended up going back to software RAID with the latest Gentoo which I totally love. Emerge is the bomb and I'm actually working at a new job which depends on my Linux/Unix skills which makes me a *nix professional now.Disruptor wrote:Damn right. One day in the future when your controller decides to shit all over itself and you can't find another card to replace it with, you will ask yourself, "Why didn't I just go with software RAID?"raw wrote:The RAID controller is a cheap ass solution so I'm better off with a Linux software RAID.
BTW, sup raw?

Nice.raw wrote:Heya Dis! I ended up going back to software RAID with the latest Gentoo which I totally love. Emerge is the bomb and I'm actually working at a new job which depends on my Linux/Unix skills which makes me a *nix professional now.Disruptor wrote:Damn right. One day in the future when your controller decides to shit all over itself and you can't find another card to replace it with, you will ask yourself, "Why didn't I just go with software RAID?"raw wrote:The RAID controller is a cheap ass solution so I'm better off with a Linux software RAID.
BTW, sup raw?
So, you still a sysadmin at this job or are you doing something different?
BTW, I have been tied up with an ungodly Active Directory conversion (we are talking 100,000+ users at about 2000+ sites spread out across the country) that has been 5 years in planning. :icon28: