On Sunday July 8, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Quoting Neil Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > > > Version 0.90 MD superblocks (still the default) uses host-endian > > values so you cannot move between architectures directly. However > > isn't too hard to make it work. > > Firstly, use > > mdadm --examine --metadata=0.swap /dev/DEVICE > > ----- s n i p ----- > ppc:~# mdadm --examine --metadata=0.swap /dev/md0 > mdadm: No super block found on /dev/md0 (Expected magic a92b4efc, got > 00000000) > ppc:~# mdadm --examine --metadata=0.swap /dev/md1 > mdadm: No super block found on /dev/md1 (Expected magic a92b4efc, got > 00000000) > ppc:~# mdadm --examine --metadata=0.swap /dev/md2 > mdadm: No super block found on /dev/md2 (Expected magic a92b4efc, got > 00000000)
You --examine component devices of an array, not the whole array. > ppc:~# mdadm --examine --metadata=0.swap /dev/sda1 > mdadm: No super block found on /dev/sda1 (Expected magic a92b4efc, got > fc4e2ba9) This suggests that the superblock is currently the correct byteorder for the current host. You use mdadm --examine --metadata=0.swap /dev/sda1 when you have moved a devices from one host to different host with the opposite endian-ness (e.g. bigendian to littlendian). > > > to check that you have the right devices. > > Then > > > > mdadm --assemble /dev/md0 --update=byteorder /dev/DEV0 /dev/DEV1 .... > > > > That should assemble the array and update the superblocks so that they > > are in the right byteorder and will assemble easily in future. > > Is this safe, changing the byteorder on all the physical devices (that are > part of my MD's)? > Will it still work on the PPC? I cannot remember where you were moving 'from' or 'to', but what you have to do is: 1/ move the devices to the new computer. 2/ use "mdadm --examine" to make sure they are where you expect them to be. Use "--metdata=0.swap" if the byteorder is different on the new machine. 3/ Once you are satisfied that things look right, use mdadm --assemble /dev/md0 --update=byteorder .... to assemble the array. This will change the byteorder in the superblocks. After you have done this, the array will assemble normally on the new machine, but will not if you move it back to the old machine. If you want to use the old machine again, you need to use --update=byteorder again. Does that make it clear? NeilBrown - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/