Thanks very much! your comments is helpful to me
2009/8/4 Benjamin Marzinski <bmarzins@xxxxxxxxxx>
On Wed, Jul 22, 2009 at 02:49:39PM +0800, 杨伟 wrote:Are you using the upstream or the RHEL code. multipath -p does work in
> Dear all:
>
> Q1: In RHEL 5.2, make and make install multipath-tools-0.4.8, why does not
> command "multipath -p" work well?
the RHEL code, although, if you run multipath again, or reconfigure
multipathd, it will notice that your devices aren't set up the way the
config says they should be, and it will change them back. In general,
multipath -p is pretty worthless, you should change the configuration to
use the path grouping policy you want.
By default, multipath is configured for manual failback. This means
>
> Q2: In RHEL 5.2, configure path group policy as failover or group_by_prio,
> and then create path-prio.sh to set the priority of paths. however, the
> path group with the highest priority is not always active, if I don't
> recreate the multipath devices. why is that? how I make the path group
> with the highest priority is active on-line?
that multipathd won't switch from the current active pathgroup to a
higher priority one, unless you manually force it to do so. The
easiest way to do this is by running
# service multipathd reload or
# multipathd -k"reconfigure"
adding
defaults {
<other_defaults>
failback immediate
}
to /etc/multipath.conf will make multipath immdiately switch to the
highest priority path group.
-Ben
>
> William
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