Hi, what?s the proposed way of handling mdadm in Centos 7? I did not get any notification when a disk in a RAID1 failed, and now that the configuration has changed after resolving the problem, I might be supposed to somehow update /etc/mdadm.conf. Am I not supposed to be notified by default when something goes wrong with an array? How do I update /etc/mdadm.conf? I?m used to all this working automagically.
> Am 24.01.2018 um 19:17 schrieb hw <hw at adminart.net>: > > Hi, > > what?s the proposed way of handling mdadm in Centos 7? I did not get > any notification when a disk in a RAID1 failed, and now that the > configuration has changed after resolving the problem, I might be > supposed to somehow update /etc/mdadm.conf. > > Am I not supposed to be notified by default when something goes wrong > with an array? How do I update /etc/mdadm.conf?mdadm --detail --scan >> /etc/mdadm.conf.new> I?m used to all this working automagically.man mdadm (check MAILADDR and MAILFROM) -- LF
> Am 24.01.2018 um 20:37 schrieb Leon Fauster <leonfauster at googlemail.com>: > > >> Am 24.01.2018 um 19:17 schrieb hw <hw at adminart.net>: >> >> Hi, >> >> what?s the proposed way of handling mdadm in Centos 7? I did not get >> any notification when a disk in a RAID1 failed, and now that the >> configuration has changed after resolving the problem, I might be >> supposed to somehow update /etc/mdadm.conf. >> >> Am I not supposed to be notified by default when something goes wrong >> with an array? How do I update /etc/mdadm.conf? > > > mdadm --detail --scan >> /etc/mdadm.conf.new > > >> I?m used to all this working automagically. > > > man mdadm (check MAILADDR and MAILFROM)man mdadm.conf -- LF