Ivan Voras wrote:> 2009/7/21 Mark Stapper <stark@mapper.nl>:
>
>> Ivan Voras wrote:
>>
>>> Mark Stapper wrote:
>>>
>>>> Good day,
>>>>
>>>> I am the proud user of a FreeBSD 7.2 AMD64 system housing,
amongst other
>>>> things, a data server.
>>>> My "server"(It's called "Yoshi") runs
FreeBSD from a mirrored system
>>>> disc, and has a zfs RAIDZ array with 4 discs for bulky data.
>>>> As it is a home server, and I work during the day, these four
discs were
>>>> spinning happily all day long without much use for them doing
so.
>>>> To save the world(and money) I issued the command
"atacontrol spindown
>>>> 1800" for all the discs in my array spinning them down
after thirty
>>>> minutes of idle spinning.
>>>> So far so good, me very happy! However, when I access the array
after
>>>> the discs have been spun down, it spins up the discs one after
the
>>>> other...
>>>> Mind you one AFTER the other, taking 4*9 seconds to do a
"ls" command on
>>>> my music directory.
>>>> Content as I am with the smooth down- and upspinning of the
disks, I
>>>> would like it better if the four discs would spin up
simultaneously.
>>>> Thus my question: "Is it possible to \"group\"
discs to be spun up
>>>> together, or to issue a custom command upon upspinning of a
disc such as
>>>> to spin up other disks?"
>>>>
>>> Good question but the answer is probably no - it really only
depends
>>> on how ZFS accesses the drives; if it accesses them in sequence,
you
>>> can't change it.
>>>
>> I've been looking at writing a shell script which monitors
>> /var/log/messages.
>> something like:
>>
>> If last line in /var/log/messages is like "request while spun
down.
>> Starting."
>> spinup disks
>>
>> couple of problems though, I should probably poll the kernel messages
>> every second or so, but if I only check the last linee, I could miss
the
>> spinup message.
>> I could count the number of lines in /var/log/messages and keep count
of
>> the number of lines i've seen. Problem with this approach is that
it's
>> not very efficient.
>> So I was hoping there is a way to receive this kernel message directly.
>> I am now thinking in the lines of a program which received a signal on
>> new kernel messages available or something similar.
>>
>> Any thoughts?
>>
>
> You could do what "tail -f" does and simply hook a kqueue to get
new
> messages from the /var/log/messages file.
>
I'll try that! thanks!
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