Hello. If the new disk has the same bus and target numbers, it will reset as sd0 and you won't see a new disk, but a restored existing disk. Of course, at this point, you'll have to re-partition and/or disklabel it, before you do your raidctl -R /dev/sd0a raid0, but once you do those steps, and the raid rebuild is complete, it will be as if you never replaced the disk at all. -Brian
On Apr 8, 10:48am, =?iso-8859-1?Q?Edgar_Fu=DF?= wrote: } Subject: Re: RAIDframe component replacement } > then, after replacing the failed sd0 with the new sd0 } But with scsictl detach/scan, I suppose? } I've done this several times with non-hotpluggable SCSI hardware where I = } had to power off anyway. But with SCA, I'm unsure, whether, after = } detaching sd0 (and sd1 still there), a newly scanned sd will become sd0 = } or sd2? } I.e., is an attached sd given the smallest unused device number or that = } following the highest used one?= >-- End of excerpt from =?iso-8859-1?Q?Edgar_Fu=DF?=
