On Fri, 2 Sep 2011 14:11:57 +0100 Michael Busby <michael.a.busby@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I am using the 3.0.0 kernel so that should not be a issue, have just > upgraded mdadm on my box to 3.2.2 from 3.1.4 > > would i be right in thinking that to get from raid0 to raid5 i would > first have to change from raid0 to raid4 and add the extra disk for > parity, once i am at this level i would need a command to get the > parity data striped over the raid5 and not in a single disk like raid4 > or maybe there is a way to go from raid0 direct to raid5 by adding the > extra disk and then having the parity data created and spread over the > disks.... (I vaguely recall already replying to this but find no evidence - apologies if this is a duplicate). RAID0 to RAID5 does happen in two stages but only one rebuild is needed. mdadm should make it all 'just work'. i.e. mdadm -G /dev/md0 -l 5 --raid-devices=4 --add /dev/sdf \ --backup-file=/root/md0-backup This will: - convert the array from RAID0 to RAID5 in a 'parity-last' layout, which is really the same thing as RAID4. - 'freeze' recovery - add /dev/sdf as a spare - request a reshape to change the layout from 'parity-last' to 'left-symetric' - 'unfreeze' recovery Then the kernel will notice that a reshape is needed and allowed, will add the spare and start reshaping the array and creating parity at the same time. So you don't need an intermediate state of a complete RAID4 - a degraded RAID4 is sufficient and handled automatically. NeilBrown > > On 2 September 2011 13:49, NeilBrown <neilb@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, 2 Sep 2011 11:35:30 +0100 Michael Busby <michael.a.busby@xxxxxxxxx> > > wrote: > > > >> Great, will test that in a bit > >> > >> will mdadm 3.2.2 support converting raid4 to raid5 > >> > >> "A RAID4 can change the number of devices or the size of individual > >> devices. It cannot be converted to RAID5 yet (though that should be > >> trivial to implement)" > > > > I guess the man page needs updating. You would need a reasonably recent > > kernel... 2.6.30 or later. I guess that isn't so recent any more. > > > > NeilBrown > > > > > >> > >> On 2 September 2011 11:22, NeilBrown <neilb@xxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > On Fri, 2 Sep 2011 10:12:32 +0100 Michael Busby <michael.a.busby@xxxxxxxxx> > >> > wrote: > >> > > >> >> Thanks Neil > >> >> > >> >> Is there anyway back from raid0 to raid4 as i know once at raid0 i > >> >> will no longer be able to add any disks, in theory i could change > >> >> echo raid0 > /sys/block/md0/md/level,but this would require adding a > >> >> missing disk to the raid4 at the same time, not sure how easy that > >> >> would be todo > >> >> > >> > > >> > Yes, you can switch from RAID0 to RAID4 in much the same way as you switch > >> > from RAID4 to RAID0. > >> > You can then freeze/add-disk/change-size/unfreeze/wait/switch-back-to-RAID0 > >> > to add more devices. > >> > > >> > mdadm-3.2.2 should be able to do all this for you. i.e. you ask it to --grow > >> > a RAID and --add some disks at the same time, and it will do all the required > >> > magic. > >> > > >> > This hasn't been tested extensively, but should work in simple cases. > >> > > >> > Of course the more devices you have in a RAID0, the less reliability you have > >> > - but e.g. as a cache for a tape backup system a large RAID0 is fine. > >> > > >> > NeilBrown > >> > > >> > > >> > > > > > -- 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