On 2010-11-07, at 12:32, Bob Ball <[email protected]> wrote:
> Tomorrow, we will redo all 8 OST on the first file server we are redoing.  I 
> am very nervous about this, as a lot is riding on us doing this correctly.  
> For example, on a client now, if I umount one of the ost, without first 
> taking some (unknown to me) action on the MDT, then the client will hang on 
> the "df" command.
> 
> So, while we are doing the reformat, is there any way to avoid this "hang" 
> situation?

If you issue "lctl --device %{OSC UUID} deactivate" on the MDS and clients then 
any operations on those OSTs will immediately fail with an IO error. If you are 
migrating I objects from those OSTs, I would have imagined you already did this 
on the MDS or new objects would have continued to be allocated there

> Is the --index=XX argument to mkfs.lustre hex, or decimal?  Seems from your 
> comment below that this must be hex?

Decimal, though it may also accept hex (I can't check right now). 

> Finally, does supplying the --index even matter if we restore the files below 
> that you mention?  That seems to be what you are saying.

Well, you still need to set the filesystem label. This could be done with 
tune2fs, but you may as well specify the right index from the beginning. 
 
> On 11/6/2010 11:09 AM, Andreas Dilger wrote:
>> On 2010-11-06, at 8:24, Bob Ball<[email protected]>  wrote:
>>> I am emptying a set of OST so that I can reformat the underlying RAID-6
>>> more efficiently.  Two questions:
>>> 1. Is there a quick way to tell if the OST is really empty?  lfs_find
>>> takes many hours to run.
>> If you mount the OST as type ldiskfs and look in the O/0/d* directories 
>> (capital-O, zero) there should be a few hundred zero-length objects owned by 
>> root.
>> 
>>> 2. When I reformat, I want it to retain the same ID so as to not make
>>> "holes" in the list.  From the following information, am I correct to
>>> assume that the id is 24?  If not, how do I determine the correct ID to
>>> use when we re-create the file system?
>> If you still have the existing OST, the easiest way to do this is to save 
>> the files last_rcvd, O/0/LAST_ID, and CONFIGS/*, and copy them into the 
>> reformatted OST.
>> 
>>> /dev/sdj              3.5T  3.1T  222G  94% /mnt/ost51
>>>  10 UP obdfilter umt3-OST0018 umt3-OST0018_UUID 547
>>> umt3-OST0018_UUID           3.4T        3.0T      221.1G  88%
>>> /lustre/umt3[OST:24]
>>>  20 IN osc umt3-OST0018-osc umt3-mdtlov_UUID 5
>> The OST index is indeed 24 (18 hex). As for /dev/sdj, it is hard to know 
>> from the above info. If you run "e2label /dev/sdj"  the filesystem label 
>> should match the OST name umt3-OST0018.
>> 
>> Cheers, Andreas
>> 
_______________________________________________
Lustre-discuss mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.lustre.org/mailman/listinfo/lustre-discuss

Reply via email to