On Thursday December 13, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > What you could do is set the number of devices in the array to 3 so
> > they it always appears to be degraded, then rotate your backup drives
> > through the array.  The number of dirty bits in the bitmap will
> > steadily grow and so resyncs will take longer.  Once it crosses some
> > threshold you set the array back to having 2 devices to that it looks
> > non-degraded and clean the bitmap.  Then each device will need a full
> > resync after which you will get away with partial resyncs for a while.
> 
> I don't undertand why clearing the bitmap causes a rebuild of
> all devices. I think I have a conceptual misunderstanding.  Consider
> a RAID-1 and three physical disks involved, A,B,C
> 
> 1) A and B are in the RAID, everything is synced
> 2) Create a bitmap on the array
> 3) Fail + remove B
> 4) Hot add C, wait for C to sync
> 5) Fail + remove C
> 6) Hot add B, wait for B to resync
> 7) Goto step 3
> 
> I understand that after a while we might want to clean the bitmap
> and that would trigger a full resync for drives B and C. I don't
> understand why it would ever cause a resync for drive A.

You are exactly correct.  That is what I meant, though I probably
didn't express it very clearly.

After you clean out the bitmap, any devices that are not in the array
at that time will need a full resync to come back in to the array.

NeilBrown
-
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