From: LCID Fire <lcid-fire@gmx.net>
Cc: linux-raid@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: Recreate raid 10 array
Date: Thu, 09 Apr 2009 00:14:30 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <49DD21C6.4060200@gmx.net> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <1239227842.18515.8.camel@cichlid.com>
First off the good news: I'm currently running on my raid10 again - with
only little data loss.
Andrew Burgess wrote:
> On Wed, 2009-04-08 at 17:47 -0400, Bill Davidsen wrote:
>> Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
>>> mdadm --create --assume-clean -l 10 -n 4 /dev/mdX /dev/copied_disk_1 /dev/copied_disk2 missing missing
>>>
>>> You need to match the create parameters exactly with the ones you
>>> initially used (near/offset/farcopies? stripe size? ...) and the order
>>> of devices is relevant so you might have to shuffle the disk
>>> arguments. So just try different orders till the result can be mounted
>>> or fscked. With the wrong options the mount/fsck could screw up the
>>> data but then you copy the disk again for the next try. It should be
>>> reasonably obvious when mount/fsck goes wrong as it should find tons
>>> of errors. Mostly I would expect mount/fsck to just fail with the
>>> wrong mdadm args though.
>
> Most fscks can be told to run read-only so they won't write to the
> device and also interactive so they ask before writing so you should be
> able to avoid recopying. The ext3 journal recovery violates at least one
> of these IIRC (or used to) so if it's ext3 find an option to tell it to
> ignore the journal.
Too late. The journal recovery did complain quite a bit and I didn't
know better than to have it fix the things it liked to fix.
As a result it shows the problem with many apps using sqlite these days
- it's not very good when the database file is corrupted.
>> May I say that this makes a great case for saving the contents of some
>> files to a safe place when the system is up and running right.? Maybe
>> all of /etc, and at least a "tree /sys" and /proc/mdstat would be
>> useful, preferably on something readable like a CD or USB flash drive,
>> so you have a chance of reading it if you can't boot.
>>
>> Of course a rescue flash drive is pretty useful as well, so that's
>> probably the way to go.
Quite frankly I don't really care about / - as long as my /home is safe
- because I can setup my machine again - but losing my work means losing
far more time.
> It also seems like mdadm could be enhanced to figure stuff like this out
> given intact device superblocks (I suggest --wild-ass-guess as the
> option name)
That would be great (not that I'm eager to run into that again).
As a note I did a binary comparison between the raid1 stuff and got
quite shocked. The corrupted one had around 1.000.000 byte difference -
something I would expect - but even the valid mirror had around 20.0000
bytes difference - which I can't explain to myself this easily.
Anyway - thanks guys for the great help.
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2009-04-08 22:14 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 11+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2009-04-06 19:49 Recreate raid 10 array LCID Fire
2009-04-07 6:13 ` Goswin von Brederlow
2009-04-08 21:47 ` Bill Davidsen
2009-04-08 21:57 ` Andrew Burgess
2009-04-08 22:13 ` Goswin von Brederlow
2009-04-08 22:14 ` LCID Fire [this message]
2009-04-09 10:47 ` Andrew Burgess
2009-04-10 1:41 ` Goswin von Brederlow
2009-04-09 22:38 ` Bill Davidsen
2009-04-10 11:01 ` LCID Fire
2009-04-10 14:25 ` LCID Fire
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