"Leslie Rhorer" <lrhorer@xxxxxxxxxxx> writes: >> This is one of many things proposed occasionally here, no real >> objection, sometimes loud support, but no one actually *does* the code. > > At the risk of being a metoo, I would really love this feature. > >> You have described the problem exactly, and the solution is still to do >> it manually. But you don't need to fail the drive long term, if you can >> stop the array for a few moments. You stop the array, remove the suspect >> drive, > > Um, how, exactly? That is to say, after stopping the array, how does one > remove the drive? From the next step in your suggestion, it doesn't seem > tome you are talking about physically removing the drive, so how does one > remove a drive from a stopped array for this purpose? I didn't think that > either > > mdadm -r <drive> <array> > or > > mdadm -f <drive> <array> > > could be used on a stopped array. Am I mistaken? > >> create a raid1 of the suspect drive marked write-mostly and the >> new spare, > > But doesn't creating the array with the drive wipe the contents? If so, it > doesn't seem to me this provides much redundancy. > >> then add the raid1 in place of the suspect drive. > > Before starting the array? If so, how? Or should one do an assemble > including the newly minted RAID1? I thought mdadm would take the newly > added drive to be blank, even if it isn't. > >> For any >> chunks present on the new drive the reads will go there, reducing > > Huh? Are you saying any read which finds one chunk missing will > automatically write back the missing data (doing a spot rebuild), or > something else? > >> access, while data is copied from the old to the new in resync, and > > See my query above. It seems to me you are saying the RAID1 can be created > without wiping the drive. > >> writes still go to the old suspect drive so if the new drive fails you >> are no worse off. > > I think I would expect the old drive to be more likely to fail than the new. > >> When the raid1 is clean you stop the main array and >> back the suspect drive out. > > OK, basically the same question. How does one disassemble the RAID1 array > without wiping the data on the new drive? I think he ment this: mdadm --stop /dev/md0 mdadm --build /dev/md9 --chunk=64k --level=1 --raid-devices=2 /dev/suspect /dev/new mdadm --assemble /dev/md0 /dev/md9 /dev/other ... MfG Goswin -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-raid" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html