Wow. Thanks
Not very operations friendly though…

Wouldn’t it be just OK to pull the disk that we think is the bad one, check the 
serial number, and if not, just replug and let the udev rules do their job and 
re-insert the disk in the ceph cluster ?
(provided XFS doesn’t freeze for good when we do that)

Regards

De : Craig Lewis [mailto:cle...@centraldesktop.com]
Envoyé : lundi 17 novembre 2014 22:32
À : SCHAER Frederic
Cc : ceph-users@lists.ceph.com
Objet : Re: [ceph-users] jbod + SMART : how to identify failing disks ?

I use `dd` to force activity to the disk I want to replace, and watch the 
activity lights.  That only works if your disks aren't 100% busy.  If they are, 
stop the ceph-osd daemon, and see which drive stops having activity.  Repeat 
until you're 100% confident that you're pulling the right drive.

On Wed, Nov 12, 2014 at 5:05 AM, SCHAER Frederic 
<frederic.sch...@cea.fr<mailto:frederic.sch...@cea.fr>> wrote:
Hi,

I’m used to RAID software giving me the failing disks  slots, and most often 
blinking the disks on the disk bays.
I recently installed a  DELL “6GB HBA SAS” JBOD card, said to be an LSI 2008 
one, and I now have to identify 3 pre-failed disks (so says S.M.A.R.T) .

Since this is an LSI, I thought I’d use MegaCli to identify the disks slot, but 
MegaCli does not see the HBA card.
Then I found the LSI “sas2ircu” utility, but again, this one fails at giving me 
the disk slots (it finds the disks, serials and others, but slot is always 0)
Because of this, I’m going to head over to the disk bay and unplug the disk 
which I think corresponds to the alphabetical order in linux, and see if it’s 
the correct one…. But even if this is correct this time, it might not be next 
time.

But this makes me wonder : how do you guys, Ceph users, manage your disks if 
you really have JBOD servers ?
I can’t imagine having to guess slots that each time, and I can’t imagine 
neither creating serial number stickers for every single disk I could have to 
manage …
Is there any specific advice reguarding JBOD cards people should (not) use in 
their systems ?
Any magical way to “blink” a drive in linux ?

Thanks && regards

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