First I want to thank all of you who responded to me both on this list and
in the CentOS wiki. Your responses helped greatly!
I want to say that if you are running CentOS 5 and you do not have a
overriding reason to go to CentOS 6, stay where you are. It was so much
easier installing CentOS 6 on a new machine, migrating is next to
impossible.
Here's where I am today:
1. The base DVD install would not allow me to run the gnome desktop
at 1920x1080 resolution with the default nVidia driver, the highest
resolution I could obtain was 1024x768. However the text screen worked
just fine after I introduced the video=1920x1080 in the grub.conf file.
2. When I installed the nVidia closed source drivers, the gnome
desktop ran perfectly in the high resolution mode. The text mode then
dropped to 1024x768 even though it retained the video=1920x1080 parameter
(could it be those blacklist parameters introduced to disable the noveau
drivers?).
3. During the installation I instituted software raid-1 along with
LVM. It all worked perfectly until I got to the Boot Loader screen and
instead of using the default (/dev/sda) I used what I thought would work
in a raid-1 environment IF one of the hard drives went bad. I chose to
install the boot loader in /dev/md0. Of course it would not boot. I
recovered from this by going through the install and choosing to upgrade a
existing installation and it allowed me to place the boot loader in
/dev/sda. What that leaves me with is a raid-1 environment that works
great as long as /dev/sda remains. How do I fix that???
4. I still need to add all of those extra repositories (adobe;
webmin; rpmfusion; etc).
5. I'm still trying to decide if I want a high resolution text screen
(that I would use almost everyday) or a high resolution GUI screen (that
I'll only use for certain application installs)???
At my 'real' job, we use RHEL and we've done some things using RHEL
6.2
for POC (Proof Of Concept) projects. With a POC, we install using a
standard installation DVD (as opposed to using our RH Satellite Server).
All of this to say that there are application installation options that
really fit the needs of a server installation, you can choose 'Server'
and
'Server GUI', which installs the gnome GUI without selecting a desktop
environment.. Some things we run require a GUI to install (Oracle DB; IBM
DB2 UDB; IBM WebSphere; etc.). How do I select this type of environment
using CentOS 6.2? In other words, I'm running CentOS 6.2 x86_64 Desktop
TIA,
Gene Poole
+ It's impossible for everything to be true. +