Hello,
Ok I managed to fix this myself using the mdadm options in
/etc/mdadm.conf
Many thanks
Arun
-----Original Message-----
From: centos-bounces at centos.org [mailto:centos-bounces at centos.org]On
Behalf Of Arun Tagarsi
Sent: Sunday, October 02, 2005 1:10 PM
To: CentOS mailing list
Subject: [CentOS] mdadm quandary
Hello,
I wonder if has seen a problem of the sorts I am describing as at the
moment it is driving me nuts.
We have an array of LSI disks (Hardware Raid 5) which are attached to a
Linux node. The Node has a LSI929 dual fibre channel card that has a channel
attached to controller A and B of the array.
So we have a list of devices under /proc/partitions mapping what we are
expecting to see , for example the devices
/dev/sdd1 (A) and /dev/sdx1 (B ) would form a raid 0 device under linux to
make a file system slightly under 1TB.
This file system was created using the older mkraid utils at the time but
has been in production for over a
year.
This node and the array unfortunately had a power outage and the resulting
problem faced by us is the following.
The raid start up fails with as it cannot find a device /dev/sdai1 . This
device is not part of the /etc/raidtab but is a normal device defined in the
/dev directory.
There are no references to the /dev/sdai1 device in /proc/partitions at all
. All devices expected as /dev/sdd1 and /dev/sdx1 are listed and show the
expected sizes. so I presume these are the only devices that the Linux box
would be able to work with.
If I run a mdadm --examine of the /dev/sdd1 it shows me that indeed
/dev/sdd1 and it is lun 0 of the MD device but it also has references to the
/dev/sdai1 device.
The mdadm --examine /dev/sdx1 shows up as /dev/sdai1 and is lun 1 of the MD
device.
This is where I am totally confused and I hope I was able to explain the
problem .
Is there a way to change the super block from referencing sdai1 to sdx1?
without compromising the array . The data on the array we suspect is intact
and would take a great deal of time to restore.
Thanks for your time.
Arun
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