On 1/31/2011 4:19 PM, Mike Tancsa wrote:
On 1/31/2011 3:14 PM, Cindy Swearingen wrote:
Hi Mike,
Yes, this is looking much better.
Some combination of removing corrupted files indicated in the zpool
status -v output, running zpool scrub and then zpool clear should
resolve the corruption,
Excellent.
I think you are good for now as long as your hardware setup is stable.
You survived a severe hardware failure so say a prayer and make sure
this doesn't happen again. Always have good backups.
Thanks,
Cindy
On 02/01/11 06:56, Mike Tancsa wrote:
On 1/31/2011 4:19 PM, Mike Tancsa
On Feb 1, 2011, at 5:56 AM, Mike Tancsa wrote:
On 1/31/2011 4:19 PM, Mike Tancsa wrote:
On 1/31/2011 3:14 PM, Cindy Swearingen wrote:
Hi Mike,
Yes, this is looking much better.
Some combination of removing corrupted files indicated in the zpool
status -v output, running zpool scrub and
On 1/29/2011 6:18 PM, Richard Elling wrote:
On Jan 29, 2011, at 12:58 PM, Mike Tancsa wrote:
On 1/29/2011 12:57 PM, Richard Elling wrote:
0(offsite)# zpool status
pool: tank1
state: UNAVAIL
status: One or more devices could not be opened. There are insufficient
replicas for the
Hi Mike,
Yes, this is looking much better.
Some combination of removing corrupted files indicated in the zpool
status -v output, running zpool scrub and then zpool clear should
resolve the corruption, but its depends on how bad the corruption is.
First, I would try least destruction method:
On 1/31/2011 3:14 PM, Cindy Swearingen wrote:
Hi Mike,
Yes, this is looking much better.
Some combination of removing corrupted files indicated in the zpool
status -v output, running zpool scrub and then zpool clear should
resolve the corruption, but its depends on how bad the corruption
On Jan 31, 2011, at 1:19 PM, Mike Tancsa wrote:
On 1/31/2011 3:14 PM, Cindy Swearingen wrote:
Hi Mike,
Yes, this is looking much better.
Some combination of removing corrupted files indicated in the zpool
status -v output, running zpool scrub and then zpool clear should
resolve the