Hi all,
Thanks for your response.
1) I am using zpool create -f pool name devid ---> for creating the zpool.
2) I am using reboot -- -r,shutdown -i6 -y -g0 both to reboot the machine.
3) I already force loaded my drivers in etc/system
4) and finally I am using the FC Luns for creation of zpools.
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 10:50 AM, Stefan Ring wrote:
> After having read this mailing list for a little while, I get the
> impression that there are at least some people who regularly
> experience on-disk corruption that ZFS should be able to report and
> handle. I’ve been running a raidz1 on thr
On Wed, 25 Jan 2012, Anonymous Remailer (austria) wrote:
I've been watching the heat control issue carefully since I had to take a
job offshore (cough reverse H1B cough) in a place without adequate AC and I
was able to get them to ship my servers and some other gear. Then I read
Intel is guaran
On 01/25/12 09:08, Edward Ned Harvey wrote:
Assuming the failure rate of drives is not linear, but skewed toward higher
failure rate after some period of time (say, 3 yrs) ...
See section 3.1 of the Google study:
http://research.google.com/archive/disk_failures.pdf
although section 4.2 o
> From: zfs-discuss-boun...@opensolaris.org [mailto:zfs-discuss-
> boun...@opensolaris.org] On Behalf Of Stefan Ring
>
> I’ve been running a raidz1 on three 1TB consumer disks for
> approx. 2 years now (about 90% full), and I scrub the pool every 3-4
> weeks and have never had a single error.
We
> From: zfs-discuss-boun...@opensolaris.org [mailto:zfs-discuss-
> boun...@opensolaris.org] On Behalf Of Mickaël CANÉVET
>
> Unless I misunderstood something, zfs send of a volume that has
> compression activated, uncompress it. So if I do a zfs send|zfs receive
> from a compressed volume to a com
I've been watching the heat control issue carefully since I had to take a
job offshore (cough reverse H1B cough) in a place without adequate AC and I
was able to get them to ship my servers and some other gear. Then I read
Intel is guaranteeing their servers will work up to 100 degrees F ambient
t