The kernelparameter 'partman/alignment=cylinder' seems to fix this behaviour.
When you add the 'partman/alignment=cylinder' kernel-parameter before
starting the Linux installation, the partitioner will not realign the
extended partition to MB-boundaries and eCS LVM-info will be preserved.
So, installing Ubuntu 10.10 will go like this:
- Create the extended partition (and swap) with eCS MiniLVM
- Boot from the Ubuntu live CD
- Press a key to get the menu (this takes a second before being displayed)
- Choose your language
- Press F6
- Press ESC
Now you see the line with the kernel-parameters that looks something like this:
..... quiet splash --
Insert the partman-parameter, so the line reads like:
..... quiet splash partman/alignment=cylinder --
Double-check you spelled the parameter correctly.
Now proceed with the Linux installation.
Note: I have not tested this on non-Debian derived distro's.
The kernelparameter 'partman/ alignment= cylinder' seems to fix this behaviour.
When you add the 'partman/ alignment= cylinder' kernel-parameter before
starting the Linux installation, the partitioner will not realign the
extended partition to MB-boundaries and eCS LVM-info will be preserved.
So, installing Ubuntu 10.10 will go like this:
- Create the extended partition (and swap) with eCS MiniLVM
- Boot from the Ubuntu live CD
- Press a key to get the menu (this takes a second before being displayed)
- Choose your language
- Press F6
- Press ESC
Now you see the line with the kernel-parameters that looks something like this: alignment= cylinder --
..... quiet splash --
Insert the partman-parameter, so the line reads like:
..... quiet splash partman/
Double-check you spelled the parameter correctly.
Now proceed with the Linux installation.
Note: I have not tested this on non-Debian derived distro's.