Preparing the partitions with fdisk
Each partition in the RAID set must be set to the type Linux raid auto.
- We will be doing this using
fdisk
again, as shown in the following screenshot: - Your disk may come with a number of partitions, as shown here:
- First, we must get rid of any existing partitions using the
o
command, as shown in the following screenshot: - Now that we have removed the unwanted partitions, we can create our own using the
n
command: - Select a partition and modify its type using the
t
command and specify the partition number and type code. Then, use thep
command to get the new proposed partition table, as shown here: - Use the
w
command to permanently save the changes to the/dev/sda
disk:
We will not cover the process for the other partitions. It's enough to know that the steps to change the IDs for /dev/sdb1
and /dev/sdb2
are very similar.
Now that we have our RAID drives initialized, it is time to install Linux Mdadm, which stands for Multiple Disk Administrator.