If you disable gptid labels in /boot/loader.conf and reboot, it should
display the device nodes again. Alternatively, since you are using gpt, you
can just label the partitions, and 'zfs replace' each disk with the
/dev/gpt/labelname node.
On Sunday, July 24, 2011, Stephen Hocking wrote:
> On Mon
On 25/07/2011, at 13:54, Stephen Hocking wrote:
>> If you run 'gpart list' you will see a list of device names and UUIDs.
>>
>> Mapping it by hand is a bit tedious though..
>>
>
>
> Both Test Rat & Daniel pointed me towards gpart list. The gpart man
> page doesn't seem to mention the list comm
On 25/07/2011, at 11:03, Stephen Hocking wrote:
> Now this is all very interesting, but I would like to be able to map
> that back to a /dev/adXpY device entry, so when I offline them I can
> then go to the appropriate physical disk. I thought that gpart show -r
> might help, but the numbers emitt
On Mon, Jul 25, 2011 at 2:15 PM, Daniel O'Connor wrote:
>
> On 25/07/2011, at 11:03, Stephen Hocking wrote:
>> Now this is all very interesting, but I would like to be able to map
>> that back to a /dev/adXpY device entry, so when I offline them I can
>> then go to the appropriate physical disk. I
Hi all,
After shuffling some disks around in a ZFS array (moving them to a
hot-swap cabinet) I am now seeing gptid numbers when doing a zpool
status:
zpool status schtuff
pool: schtuff
state: ONLINE
scan: scrub repaired 0 in 5h57m with 0 errors on Wed Jul 20 17:05:29 2011
config:
N
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