Robert Heller wrote: > At Wed, 9 Jun 2010 16:50:53 -0700 CentOS mailing list <centos@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > >> Hi, >> >> I've used mdadm for years now to manage software raids. >> >> The task of using fdisk to first create partitions on a spare drive >> sitting on a shelf (raid 0 were my 1st of 2 drives failed) is kind of >> bugging me now. >> >> After using fdisk to create the same partition layout on the new drive >> as is on the existing drive and then using mdadm to finish every thing >> up is a little tedious. >> >> Any one have an idea how to have a sort of hot plug were I just swap >> out the drive and it rebuilds? >> > > sfdisk is your friend (from man sfdisk): > > -d Dump the partitions of a device in a format useful as input to > sfdisk. For example, > % sfdisk -d /dev/hda > hda.out > % sfdisk /dev/hda < hda.out > will correct the bad last extended partition that the OS/2 fdisk > creates. > > So: > > 1) plug in replacement disk. > 2) partition it: > > # sfdisk -d /dev/sdX | sfdisk /dev/sdY > > Where /dev/sdX is an existing disk and /dev/sdY is the replacement disk > > 3) add the partition(s) to the array(s): > > # mdadm /dev/mdI ... -a /dev/sdYI > # mdadm /dev/mdJ ... -a /dev/sdYJ > # mdadm /dev/mdK ... -a /dev/sdYK > # mdadm /dev/mdL ... -a /dev/sdYL > > No reason not to put all of the above in a script... Agreed. And I have... :) The script is designed to add a third drive to a raid1 set. I use this with a removable drive to get a backup of the system that can be taken off-site. The sleeps in this script are probably a bit excessive, but they are designed to let the system fully process each command before the next one is given. I found that certain things would not work properly without a pause in there. Since I only run this once a month, it's not a big deal if it takes a couple of minutes to run. Just posting this in case it proves useful to anyone. -- Bowie
#!/bin/bash # This script expects a device name such as "sdc". It will partition the device based on # the partition info in the partitions.(device) file in the current directory, add the # partitions to the appropriate mdraid devices, and fix grub so the disk is bootable. if [ "$1" == "" ] then echo "ERROR - Please enter a device name" exit fi if [ ! -b /dev/$1 ] then echo "ERROR - Device \"$1\" does not exist" exit fi if [ -b /dev/${1}1 ] then echo "ERROR - Device \"$1\" already has partitions" exit fi if [ ! -e partitions.$1 ] then echo "ERROR - \"partitions.$1\" file does not exist" exit fi read -p "This will erase all data on /dev/$1, are you sure? (yes|no) " yesno if [ "$yesno" != "yes" ] then exit fi echo -e "\n" echo "Creating partition table" sfdisk /dev/$1 < partitions.$1 sleep 30 echo "Adding partitions to raid arrays" mdadm -a /dev/md0 /dev/${1}1 sleep 2 mdadm --grow -n 3 /dev/md0 sleep 30 mdadm -a /dev/md1 /dev/${1}2 sleep 2 mdadm --grow -n 3 /dev/md1 sleep 30 mdadm -a /dev/md2 /dev/${1}3 sleep 2 mdadm --grow -n 3 /dev/md2 sleep 30 echo "Fixing grub on the new drive" grub --batch << EOF device (hd0) /dev/$1 root (hd0,0) setup (hd0) quit EOF
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