Yeah, good catch. So this means that it seems to be
able to read the
label off of each device OK, and the labels look
good. I'm not sure
what else would cause us to be unable to open the
pool... Can you try
running 'zpool status -v'?
The command seems to return the same thing:
%
On Fri, 2006-10-06 at 00:07 -0700, Richard L. Hamilton wrote:
Some people are making money on the concept, so I
suppose there are those who perceive benefits:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rational_ClearCase
(I dimly remember DSEE on the Apollos; ...)
I used both fairly extensively. Much
Hi,
I am wandering HOW ZFS ensures that a storage pool isn't imported by two
machines at one time? Does it stamp the disks the hostID or hostName? Below is
a snipplet from the ZFS Admin Guide. It appears that this can be overwritten
with import -f.
importing a pool that is currently in use
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
While trouble shooting a full-disk scenario I booted from DVD after adding
two new disks. Still under DVD boot I created a pool from those two disks
and moved iso images I had downloaded to the zfs filesystem. Next I fixed
my grub, exported the zpool and rebooted.
On Oct 10, 2006, at 11:13 AM, Marion Hakanson wrote:[EMAIL PROTECTED] said: While trouble shooting a full-disk scenario I booted from DVD after addingtwo new disks. Still under DVD boot I created a pool from those two disksand moved iso images I had downloaded to the zfs filesystem. Next I
All, So I have started working with Solaris 10 at work a bit (I'm a Linux guy by trade) and I have a dying nfs box at home. So the long and short of it is as follows: I would like to setup a SATAII whitebox that uses ZFS as its filesystem. The box will probably be very lightly used, streaming