Hi Michelle,
thanks for the Data.
lets try the most painless option. ;)
we will try to split the pool
c5t0d0 has to leave.. the pool.
so try a
zpool split backup junk
please keep in touch.
Oh and have a read bout it
http://www.c0t0d0s0.org/archives/6257-zpool-split-in-depth.html
Am 17.
I had another drive that was one of that old pool, so I ran a little test.
A relabel didn't work. ZFS still thought the drive was part of the old pool.
However, re-writing the partition table and running an all free hog did work.
In this case, it looks like I'm going to have to export the data p
Thanks Bernd,
Here are the results... Note that there is a backup pool already mounted and
running.
I think that part of my problem is that I didn't know to write a new label to
a disk before putting it in another pool. I thought it was overwrite any
previous pool label. I was obviously wrong
Sorry i forgot
zdb -eubbcsL mypool /root/zfs_corruption.txt
less /root/zfs_corruption.txt
and provide the output.
Thanks in Advance. :-)
Am 17.01.11 13:01, schrieb Michelle Knight:
> Good suggestions, but now I've got both backup pools in trouble :-)
>
> I've also got another issue. Beca
Am 17.01.11 13:01, schrieb Michelle Knight:
> Good suggestions, but now I've got both backup pools in trouble :-)
>
> I've also got another issue. Because they're degraded, I can't import them,
> which means I can't destroy them, either.
>
> I can import by ID number, but I can't destroy by ID n
Good suggestions, but now I've got both backup pools in trouble :-)
I've also got another issue. Because they're degraded, I can't import them,
which means I can't destroy them, either.
I can import by ID number, but I can't destroy by ID number.
A reboot didn't help, either.
__
Am 17.01.11 12:30, schrieb Michelle Knight:
I'm using an external caddy to mount "backup" drives to. The ZFS pools are,
rather imaginatively, called, "backup."
However, there seems to be a phantom of an old set that was present when the
machine hung once upon a time, and I can't get rid of it. I
I'm using an external caddy to mount "backup" drives to. The ZFS pools are,
rather imaginatively, called, "backup."
However, there seems to be a phantom of an old set that was present when the
machine hung once upon a time, and I can't get rid of it. I've tried deleting
/etc/zfs/zpool.cache but