.... A straight disk-to-disk copy (with rsync, tar, or "cp -a" doesn't much matter) manages about 75MB per minute, which would take almost three days, and the system gets very sluggish while such a copy is going on, so we can't afford to just let it run. Is it possible, without loss of data, to convert the existing ext2 filesystem into a mirrored software RAID, then add the new drive as a second device and let rebuilding the RAID take care of making the copy? Even if this took more time, we've had good overall system performance with software RAIDs rebuilding in the background before, so it could run as long as necessary. We'd then need to be able to remove the second device from the RAID and either convert it back into a plain ext2 or put it into a similar software RAID in the destination machine. Is this possible? Is there another plan that would make more sense?
I'm sure it's possible, and other users here can give you the exact syntax.
However, I'd suggest running rsync to the second server before attempting anything anyway, since if your mirror-add operation fails, well, do you have a backup?
rsync has an option for bandwidth limiting (--bwlimit). You could run it throttled, which should cause it to calm down quite a bit and not thrash your system so much. Also, on subsequent runs, it will run much faster, since it'll only be sending the diffs between the servers.
You may find doing it this way completely negates the need to use the mirror-and-move method -- the initial run could be done over a week or two with bwlimit, and then you could run it again without bwlimit on an already-rsynced path and "clean up" the most recent changes quickly enough as to not need very long of a downtime maintenance window.
best, Jeff _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos