Hervé Eychenne wrote:
On Tue, Apr 19, 2005 at 01:00:11PM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
First you have to look if there are partitions on that disk to which no
data was written since the disk failed (this typically concerns the swap
partition). These partitions have to be marked faulty by hand using mdadm -f
before you can remove them with mdadm -r.


Ok, but how do you automate/simplify that?

EVMS? Or some other enterprise volume manager



A script with a while loop and some grep,sed commands? A grep on what exactly? (this kind of precise information seems to be written nowhere in the manpage of the HOWTOs)
You're talking about specific configs - not all sysadmins will want to do this.
And those who do can type:
fdisk -l /dev/sda | grep -i fd | cut -f1 -d' ' | xargs -n1 mdadm -r


Wouldn't it be much simpler if it could be possible to do something
like the following?
# mdadm --remove-disk /dev/sda
So this command could mark as faulty and remove of the array any
implied partition(s) of the disk to be removed.

see above 1 liner...

David

-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-raid" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html

Reply via email to