> > On Jan 26, 2007, at 7:17, Peter Eriksson wrote:
> >> If you _boot_ the original machine then it should see that the pool
> >> now is "owned" by
> >> the other host and ignore it (you'd have to do a "zpool import -f"
> >> again I think). Not tested though so don't take my word for it...
> >
> >
Ed Gould wrote:
> On Jan 26, 2007, at 7:17, Peter Eriksson wrote:
>> If you _boot_ the original machine then it should see that the pool
>> now is "owned" by
>> the other host and ignore it (you'd have to do a "zpool import -f"
>> again I think). Not tested though so don't take my word for it...
>
Peter Eriksson wrote:
> If you _boot_ the original machine then it should see that the pool now is
> "owned" by
> the other host and ignore it (you'd have to do a "zpool import -f" again I
> think). Not tested though so don't take my word for it...
>
> However if you simply type "go" and let it
On Jan 26, 2007, at 7:17, Peter Eriksson wrote:
If you _boot_ the original machine then it should see that the pool
now is "owned" by
the other host and ignore it (you'd have to do a "zpool import -f"
again I think). Not tested though so don't take my word for it...
Conceptually, that's about
If you _boot_ the original machine then it should see that the pool now is
"owned" by
the other host and ignore it (you'd have to do a "zpool import -f" again I
think). Not tested though so don't take my word for it...
However if you simply type "go" and let it continue from where it was then
t