if the hardware can hotswap then you should be ok if i am reading what
les said correctly.
Les Mikesell wrote:
Cen Tos wrote:
On 3/31/07, Scott Silva <ssilva@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
It is the breaking of electrical connections that it trips on. Even if a
drive
fails, it is still commected, and the system can ignore it. AFAIR you
can't
hot swap a regular SCSI drive either.
Does this mean I cannot hotswap a SATA drive in a software RAID array
even
if I have it in a hotswap bay with a SATA hotswap backplane?
Software raid has mdadm commands to fail/remove/add partitions, so it is
up to the hardware to be able recognize the new working drive. There
are scsi-specific commands to remove and re-detect drives and
firewire/usb normally do it automatically (but not always the way you
expect). I'm not sure how SATA fits into this picture. If the service
is so critical that you can't run on the single mirror until a
convenient time to swap with a reboot you might want a hot spare so you
don't have worry about getting a new drive recognized with the machine
running. Even if you didn't dedicate it to an array, if the spare drive
is in the machine you can easily partition it to match and add it with a
few commands.
--
My "Foundation" verse:
Isa 54:17 No weapon that is formed against thee shall prosper; and
every tongue that shall rise against thee in judgment thou shalt
condemn. This is the heritage of the servants of the LORD, and their
righteousness is of me, saith the LORD.
-- carpe ductum -- "Grab the tape"
CDTT (Certified Duct Tape Technician)
Linux user #322099
Machines:
206822
256638
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http://counter.li.org/
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