Thanks for those who replied. One thing I didn't mention correctly is that I have several gpfs mount say: /gpfs1 /gpfs2 /gpfs3
Say it was gpfs2 that had the NSD problem. So now when I reboot a node, /gpfs1 and /gpfs3 mount, but /gpfs2 doesn't, I have to manually type mmmount gpfs2 on the node to get it mounted after the boot. So I don't think that it is a problem with mounting within linux boot sequence. But a flag than I'm missing in the gpfs setup. Or status of the filesystem that is not set OK that I cannot figure out. The output of mmlsfs of a system that mounts compared the the one that doesn't are the same except for mount point, NSDs and creation time. Is there another "mm..." command with which to check the status of a filesystem? Richard 2015-03-13 14:20 GMT-04:00 Richard Lefebvre < [email protected]>: > Hi, > > I have a GPFS cluster (v3.5). Last month, one of the filesystem had a > problem with one of it's NSD. With the help tech support, the problem was > fix and everything is OK data wise. The thing is when the problem occurred > the filesystem was offline and once the filesystem was back to being OK, we > were able to remount it. The problem is that now, every time a node is > restarted, the filesystem is not mounted automatically as before. The other > filesystems mount automatically. I did a mmlsfs on the file system and -A > is at yes. Can someone tell my what I'm missing here. I'm sure it is > something simple, but I'm drawing a blank right now. > > Richard > > -- > Richard Lefebvre, Sys-admin, CQ, (514)343-6111 x5313 "Don't Panic" > [email protected] -- THGTTG > Calcul Quebec (calculquebec.ca) ------ Calcul Canada (computecanada.ca) > -- Richard Lefebvre, Sys-admin, CQ, (514)343-6111 x5313 "Don't Panic" [email protected] -- THGTTG Calcul Quebec (calculquebec.ca) ------ Calcul Canada (computecanada.ca)
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