I've run into this a few times, especially drives like SSDs just vanishing and 
going "missing".  No amount of physical work will help those.
Normally just '--simulate-fail' is enough to kick the disk hospital into 
getting the erase code rebuild rolling.   But with a few disks I've had to use 
--simulate-fail and --simulate-dead BOTH, and that was what it took to get an 
SSD to prep.

The worst part here is that since the drive is 'missing' you cannot just rely 
on 'replace' to kick things off for you, as '--prepare' will NOT allow you to 
swap the drive at LEAST until the simulate-fail gets rolling.

Ed Wahl
Ohio Supercomputer Center

-----Original Message-----
From: gpfsug-discuss <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Ruffner, 
Scott (jpr9c)
Sent: Monday, July 17, 2023 2:13 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [gpfsug-discuss] replacing a "missing" disk

I've got a couple of disks which were failing/draining and never completed this 
stage, and now simply report as missing after a revive and then resume. I've 
also reseated the drive, but no blinking lights, so I'm thinking it's dead. Can 
one force a drain? What's the procedure for a drive lost when it's altogether 
dead?

TIA

Scott Ruffner
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