Thru a sequence of good intentions, I find myself with a raidz'd pool that has a failed drive that I can't replace.
We had a generous department donate a fully configured V440 for use as our departmental server. Of course, I installed SX/b56 on it, created a pool with 3x 148Gb drives and made a dozen filesystems on it. Life was good. ZFS is great! One of the raidz pool drives failed. When I went to replace it, I found that the V440's original 72Gb drives had been "upgraded" to Dell 148Gb Fujitsu drives, and the Sun versions of those drives (same model number...) had different firmware, and more importantly, FEWER sectors! They were only 147.8 Gb! You know what they say about a free lunch and too good to be true... This meant that zpool replace <drive> faild because the replacement drive is too small. The question of the moment is "what to do?". All I can think of is to Attach/create a new pool that has enough space to hold the existing content, Copy the content from the old to new pools, Destroy the old pool, Recreate the old pool with the (slightly) smaller size, and copy the data back onto the pool. Given that there are a bunch of filesystems in the pool, each with some set of properties ..., what is the easiest way to move the data and metadata back and forth without losing anything, and without having to manually recreate the metainfo/properties? (adding to the 'shrink' RFE, if I replace a pool drive with a smaller one, and the existing content is small enough to fit on a shrunk/resized pool, the zpool replace command should (after prompting) simply do the work. In this situation, losing less than 10Mb of pool space to get a healthy raidz configuration seems to be an easy tradeoff :-) TIA, -John _______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss