>> How do we uncomplicated all of this stuff.

You pay microsoft, apple, or google to "uncomplicate" it for you.  Pay no attention to them siphoning everything you do while on their os.

-mb


On Tue, Feb 7, 2023 at 6:16 PM <techlists@phpcoderusa.com> wrote:
Around 1984 or so there was a poster in the Army National Guard building
in Tucson that read something like "Keep It Simple Stupid" and went on
to say everything should be at an 8th grade level.

I was first introduced to Linux in 1998... I took my first programming
course in 1983 at the UofA. I was already out of high school for 8
years.

I've seen a lot of stuff.  I've watched things become increasingly
Complicated.  I've mentioned this before. Most will shine me on.

I'm currently a PHP developer.  Over the years I have had my hands in a
lot of related technologies.

What you describe Michael Butash sounds very complicated. Most things
today seem to be.

Don't get me wrong, I think some advancements are good such as Proxmox
which I use.

How do we uncomplicated all of this stuff.

-Keith



On 2023-02-07 16:21, Michael Butash via PLUG-discuss wrote:
> That sounds like what they call "fakeraid" using  the rst controller,
> really there is no need to anymore.  For probably 15 years now i've
> used two disks in a linux mdraid volume for boot/rest in raid 1 for
> redundancy, usually a crypt volume with luks atop the rest physical
> volume, and lvm atop that, with ext4/xfs atop that.  Still do this
> with nvme disks just fine for a few generations of boxes.
>
> I did setup my old desktop as a proxmox box with zfs doing my raid1
> recently booting entirely off that (super dope, +++ for that), ymmv
> per distribution, but that's an option as well for handling all the
> software raid function as well.  Ubuntu server with the deb installer
> always handled setting up raid/crypt/lvm/fs just fine, haven't in a
> while personally, but probably still does adequately.  I diy normally
> with Arch, but it's what drives this laptop I'm typing on currently
> with a pair of 980pro nvme samsungs doing above.
>
> -mb
>
> On Tue, Feb 7, 2023 at 4:04 PM AZ Pete via PLUG-discuss
> <plug-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org> wrote:
>
>> Hi All,
>>
>> Ok, I'm finally very close to being able to go to a full Linux
>> environment and leave the Microsoft ecosystem. I'm semi-retired and
>> still do some Microsoft Data Platform work (which was my career). I
>> recently got a Dell Latitude and put Kubtunu 22.04 on it and managed
>> to get all my applications, dev tools (many MS tools too!), and
>> hardware working. I've been down this road before in years past and
>> Linux on the desktop was always a "no-go" for me. So, I was
>> *astonished* how easy it was to install Kubuntu and everything just
>> worked. That's how it must feel to be a Mac person! :)
>>
>> However, one of the hurdles with the Dell was that, by default, Dell
>> configures the BIOS such that the boot drive (NVME in this case) is
>> set to be in RAID mode instead of AHCI mode, even though there is
>> only one drive in the system. This caused Ubuntu to simply not boot.
>> After doing some research I came to find the Ubuntu doesn't support
>> Intel Rapid Storage Technology (RST), which RAID requires. It was a
>> simple fix to reconfigure the BIOS into AHCI mode, since I was going
>> to wipe the Windows partition anyway.
>>
>> But, my main production dev box is Win 10 and I have two NVME drives
>> in a RAID 0 (mirror) configuration (using hardware RAID in the
>> BIOS). If I want to install Ubuntu I need to be able to implement
>> this same level of RAID. If Ubuntu doesn't support the Intel RST
>> hardware, how can I install Ubuntu and have a RAID 0 arrangement?
>> I'm not looking for a particular answer to the problem just some
>> suggestions on what to research. LVM? ZFS? Software RAID?
>>
>> Any thoughts would be appreciated.
>> Peter
>>
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