From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: "michael@kmaclub.com" Subject: Re: Confused about UUID mounting and mirrors Date: Mon, 16 Jun 2008 14:29:48 -0700 Message-ID: <4856DB4C.20905@kmaclub.com> References: <4856A8C6.3030609@kmaclub.com> <4856CFE1.1020105@ziu.info> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Return-path: In-Reply-To: <4856CFE1.1020105@ziu.info> Sender: linux-raid-owner@vger.kernel.org To: Michal Soltys Cc: linux-raid@vger.kernel.org List-Id: linux-raid.ids Michal Soltys wrote: > michael@kmaclub.com wrote: >> Hello, >> >> This confuses mount at boot time. >> >> How to I get it to correctly find md0 and not the components of the >> mirror? >> > > You mean you mount by /dev/disk/by-uuid/* ? In /etc/fstab, I have entries like this: UUID=8e651838-38c1-4783-8bde-4174ec484d52 / ext3 defaults 1 1 UUID=aaeca70c-f0fe-470c-b631-87248648d275 /export xfs defaults,nobarrier 1 2 UUID=6e22c5b0-2874-4826-a871-ed733f8da643 swap swap defaults 0 0 UUID=323cd094-4cbe-4c3b-9096-366c05465e7c /export/services xfs defaults 1 2 so it is referring to the UUID of the filesystem and not necessarily the device. Some are single partitions, some md devices, and some sit on top of LVM. > The 0.9x or 1.0 superblocks (the ones working nicely with grub and > raid1) are placed at the end of the device, thus existing filesystem can > be detected both from /dev/sd{a,b}1 and /dev/md0. > > In such case, you will have to adjust udev rules, so sd{a,b}1 filesystem > uuid symlinks will not be created, or will be overwritten by the symlink > to /dev/md0. > > You can achieve the latter with higher link_priority in OPTIONS, in your > udev rules. Do you have an example? I am not sure I follow. So what happens if someone sticks in a USB key and boots the machine. The key bcomes sda, and each following drive shifts. Is UDEV in this case going to know to account for this? The goal is to be able to always find the filesystem regardless of what the disk name might be. Michael