Alan Gagne <alanjgagne@xxxxxxxxx> writes: >> >/ # cat /proc/mdstat >> />/ Personalities : [raid0] [raid1] >> />/ md124 : active raid1 sdb[1] sdc[0] >> />/ 293032960 blocks super external:/md125/0 [2/2] [UU] >> />/ >> />/ md125 : inactive sdb[1](S) sdc[0](S) >> />/ 6184 blocks super external:imsm >> />/ >> />/ md126 : active raid0 sdd[1] sde[0] >> />/ 156296192 blocks super external:/md127/0 128k chunks >> />/ >> />/ md127 : inactive sde[1](S) sdd[0](S) >> />/ 5032 blocks super external:imsm >> / >> Super something on external devices which are inactive? > They are all internal drives. That is the normal good state > for the arrays. After a reboot md124 would show auto-read-only > instead of active. When in that state I cannot mount the filesystem. You mean the whole array md124 goes read-only? Or are the partitions on it mounted ro? Why do you need to rewrite the partition tables? How do you know when any of the physical disks go bad? -- Fedora release 19 (Schrödinger’s Cat) -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines Have a question? Ask away: http://ask.fedoraproject.org