Installing on a 3TB main drive
Posted: Wed May 09, 2012 6:39 am
I just wanted to document and share my experience installing Amahi.
I'm using a MediaSmart Server ex485 and wanted to get a 3TB drive, which WHS supports, so I chose Amahi as a replacement.
I was using my htpc, a core i5 box with uefi. I struggled for a day or two trying to install from a flash drive, since I don't have a cd/DVD drive. The problem was that the iso i wrote to the flash drive always tried to boot from my internal drive (which I first put Ubuntu on so i didn't need to keep reconnecting disks), except for the Express CD but that formatted my drive as MBR.
Eventually I broke down and borrowed a USB CD drive.
Next, I had trouble with the partitions. I couldn't make the drive GPT from the installer, so I used a parted magic disc to do that. I made a /, a swap, and a data partition. The f14 installer allowed that, and did the install but the drive wouldn't boot. (this part took the longest to figure out) I had to make a /boot partition for it to use. I don't really understand why I needed to waste 500MB for /boot, but that was the default value so I kept it.
Once I had a /boot partition, everything worked fine. I can't find anywhere saying that F14 needs a separate /boot partition, but apparently it does. Interestingly, F16 also needs one (well I think its just recommended) but it's a bios_boot partition and only needs to be 2MB. The F16 partition did not work with F14 though, I needed the larger ext2 formatted partition.
Incidentally, the ">2.1TB drives" wiki page was not helpful for installing on a big drive, but I wouldn't mind updating it to include steps for installing on a main drive that big if I was given a wiki username.
I do have one question about migrating from WHS - I made my data partition NTFS so I could read it on Windows if for some reason I need to go back to WHS. Is this a bad idea? Additionally, I was wondering if I could just make a symlink to point the whs shares folder to the gh/ folder so I wouldn't need to copy the data from my other drives, just mount it and have greyhole pick up the files
I'm using a MediaSmart Server ex485 and wanted to get a 3TB drive, which WHS supports, so I chose Amahi as a replacement.
I was using my htpc, a core i5 box with uefi. I struggled for a day or two trying to install from a flash drive, since I don't have a cd/DVD drive. The problem was that the iso i wrote to the flash drive always tried to boot from my internal drive (which I first put Ubuntu on so i didn't need to keep reconnecting disks), except for the Express CD but that formatted my drive as MBR.
Eventually I broke down and borrowed a USB CD drive.
Next, I had trouble with the partitions. I couldn't make the drive GPT from the installer, so I used a parted magic disc to do that. I made a /, a swap, and a data partition. The f14 installer allowed that, and did the install but the drive wouldn't boot. (this part took the longest to figure out) I had to make a /boot partition for it to use. I don't really understand why I needed to waste 500MB for /boot, but that was the default value so I kept it.
Once I had a /boot partition, everything worked fine. I can't find anywhere saying that F14 needs a separate /boot partition, but apparently it does. Interestingly, F16 also needs one (well I think its just recommended) but it's a bios_boot partition and only needs to be 2MB. The F16 partition did not work with F14 though, I needed the larger ext2 formatted partition.
Incidentally, the ">2.1TB drives" wiki page was not helpful for installing on a big drive, but I wouldn't mind updating it to include steps for installing on a main drive that big if I was given a wiki username.
I do have one question about migrating from WHS - I made my data partition NTFS so I could read it on Windows if for some reason I need to go back to WHS. Is this a bad idea? Additionally, I was wondering if I could just make a symlink to point the whs shares folder to the gh/ folder so I wouldn't need to copy the data from my other drives, just mount it and have greyhole pick up the files