On Wed, Oct 27, 2010 at 3:56 PM, David Magda wrote:
> If the OP doesn't have a test system available, it may be possible to try
> this multi-replace experiment using plain files as the backing store
> (created with mkfile).
.. or via a VirtualBox, VMWare, or other virtualization instance.
-B
--
On Oct 27, 2010, at 21:17, Brandon High wrote:
You may be able to replace more than one drive at the same time this
way. I've never tried it, and you should test before attempting to do
so.
If the OP doesn't have a test system available, it may be possible to
try this multi-replace experimen
On Thu, Oct 7, 2010 at 12:22 AM, Kevin Walker wrote:
> I would like to know if it is viable to add larger disks to zfs pool to grow
> the pool size and then remove the smaller disks?
>
> I would assume this would degrade the pool and require it to resilver?
You can do a zfs replace without removi
> From: zfs-discuss-boun...@opensolaris.org [mailto:zfs-discuss-
> boun...@opensolaris.org] On Behalf Of Kevin Walker
>
> We are a running a Solaris 10 production server being used for backup
> services within our DC. We have 8 500GB drives in a zpool and we wish
> to swap them out 1 by 1 for 1TB
On 07/10/2010 11:22, Kevin Walker wrote:
We are a running a Solaris 10 production server being used for backup
services within our DC. We have 8 500GB drives in a zpool and we wish to
swap them out 1 by 1 for 1TB drives.
I would like to know if it is viable to add larger disks to zfs pool to
gro
Hi Guys,
We are a running a Solaris 10 production server being used for backup
services within our DC. We have 8 500GB drives in a zpool and we wish to
swap them out 1 by 1 for 1TB drives.
I would like to know if it is viable to add larger disks to zfs pool to grow
the pool size and then remove t