Okay, it's quite possible this forum question has outlived it's original scope. Sorry!
And for posterity's sake, I'm going to log the wiki docs I used and what I had to do to rebuild our Amahi 7 Server:
1. Using the
HDA OS Migration Guide I readied my server and its Greyhole disks.
2. I disconnected all my Greyhole-managed "data" harddrives when I shutdown the server and slipped the Amahi 7 DVD in my optical drive.
3. Using the
Amahi Installation Instructions I downloaded and installed the latest version of Amahi 7 on F19. I used the directions that gave exacting guidance on the size of the SWAP, BOOT, and ROOT directories. Installation of Amahi 7 on my OS drive was flawless and went without a hitch.
4. After the final restart of the Amahi installation I signed into the Amahi Dashboard to configure my Network settings.
5. Using the Amahi Wiki article
Adding Hard Drives 101, I especially appreciated the steps that guided me to gather the before-and-after /dev/disk/by-id and "
Compare the difference between before.txt and after.txt to determine the new hard drive(s) device name." It's output identified EXACTLY which disks to focus on without the risk of affecting the swap, boot, or root partitions. KUDOS!
6. Then, using the above Amahi Wiki article and another article:
Reconnect Existing Greyhole Storage Pool I mounting the Greyhole-managed drives and appended the UUIDs to /etc/fstab, I restarted my Amahi 7 server. Again, Not a single issue.
7. After signing-in to my Amahi 7 Dashboard, I recreated my shares. I did perform some tweaking on the smb.conf file to ensure specific access rights but more than 95% of the smb.conf file was properly created/appended simply by adding the shares and selecting the access rights of my users.
8. Then I installed the Greyhole App in the Setup - Apps - Available page.
9. In the Drive Pooling - Partitions section of the Amahi 7 Dashboard, I selected the partitions I wanted Greyhole to manage, clicking on the Drive Pooling - Shares page, I then selected which shares I wanted in the pool and how many duplicates I desired to maintain.
Of course, it's probably good to mention that there are obviously more than 9 steps to rebuild a server - ANY server - but I have to give kudos to the Amahi Team for the impeccable work they've done to document and publish such exacting guidance.
Now that my server is back online, I'm going to dive into learning about the Greyhole LZ...the area of that software I didn't first acknowledge and give proper attention to this CRITICAL part of Greyhole!
THANK YOU VERY MUCH for your help!