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From: Roman Mamedov <rm@romanrm.net>
To: Matt Huszagh <huszaghmatt@gmail.com>
Cc: linux-btrfs@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: How to replace a failing device
Date: Wed, 2 Nov 2022 00:44:24 +0500	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <20221102004424.3683a2e0@nvm> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20221102003232.097748e7@nvm>

On Wed, 2 Nov 2022 00:32:32 +0500
Roman Mamedov <rm@romanrm.net> wrote:

Some afterthoughts...

> Remove this cryptsdc2 from the FS (btrfs dev remove), stop the crypto device,
> wipe sdc2 entirely with wipefs.

That's not "entirely" of course, but just wiping the signatures is enough.

> After "ddrescue" manages to copy whatever it could, power-off and remove the
> old failing "sdd" from the system. Do not boot the main OS with both disks
> still plugged in. You can wipe the failing one later (after verifying the
> created copy is good) on some other PC, or booting into the same rescue system
> again.

After verifying it is good, you can enlarge the Btrfs' opinion of the
partition size on the copied 16TB device, see "btrfs resize devid:max ..."

> > $ sudo btrfs fi df /
> > Data, single: total=3.15TiB, used=2.74TiB
> > System, RAID1: total=32.00MiB, used=432.00KiB
> > Metadata, RAID1: total=110.00GiB, used=18.25GiB

^ A side note, this looks weird, as if at some point you had a ton of tiny
files, and then you removed them. If I'm not mistaken, running:

  btrfs fi balance -musage=80 ...

could gain you around 150 GB of usable disk space (as seen in df and
accessible for writing non-tiny files).

But of course do that only after the failing disk problem has been resolved.

And I vaguely remember that at some point the kernel may have started doing
this kind of cleanup automatically.

> > GlobalReserve, single: total=512.00MiB, used=0.00B

-- 
With respect,
Roman

  reply	other threads:[~2022-11-01 19:44 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 9+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2022-11-01 19:13 How to replace a failing device Matt Huszagh
2022-11-01 19:32 ` Roman Mamedov
2022-11-01 19:44   ` Roman Mamedov [this message]
2022-11-03  3:51   ` Matt Huszagh
2022-11-03  4:19     ` Andrei Borzenkov
2022-11-03  4:25       ` Matt Huszagh
2022-11-03 12:18     ` Roman Mamedov
2022-11-03 21:39       ` Matt Huszagh
2022-11-03 22:32         ` Roman Mamedov

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