SA23-2221-00
- Change disk availability using the mmchdisk command and the stop and start options
- Change disk status using the mmchdisk command and the suspend and resume options.
Issue the mmchdisk command with one of the following four options to change disk state:
- suspend
- Instructs GPFS to stop allocating space on the specified disk. Place a disk in this state prior to disk deletion or replacement. This is a user-initiated state that GPFS will never use without an explicit command to change disk state. Note: A disk remains suspended until it is explicitly resumed. Restarting GPFS or rebooting nodes does not restore normal access to a suspended disk.
- resume
- Informs GPFS that a disk previously suspended is now available for allocating new space. Resume a disk only when you've suspended it and decided not to delete or replace it. If the disk is currently in a stopped state, it remains stopped until you specify the start option. Otherwise, normal read and write access to the disk resumes.
- stop
- Instructs GPFS to stop any attempts to access the specified disk. Use this option to inform GPFS that a disk has failed or is currently inaccessible because of maintenance. A disk's availability remains down until it is explicitly started with the start option.
- start
- Informs GPFS that a disk previously stopped is now accessible. GPFS does this by first changing the disk availability from down to recovering. The file system metadata is then scanned and any missing updates (replicated data that was changed while the disk was down) are repaired. If this operation is successful, the availability is then changed to up.
If the metadata scan fails, availability is set to unrecovered. This could occur if other disks remain in recovering or an I/O error has occurred. Repair all disks and paths to disks. See mmfsck. The metadata scan can then be re-initiated at a later time by issuing the mmchdisk start command again.
If more than one disk in the file system is down, they should all be started at the same time by using the -a option. If you start them separately and metadata is stored on any disk that remains down, the mmchdisk start command fails.
mmchdisk fs1 suspend -d hd8vsdn100To confirm the change, enter:
mmlsdisk fs1 -d hd8vsdn100The system displays information similar to:
disk driver sector failure holds holds storage
name type size group metadata data status availability pool
------------ -------- ------ ------- -------- ----- ------------- ------------ ------------
hd8vsdn100 nsd 512 7 yes yes suspended up system
You can also use the mmchdisk command with the change option to change the Disk Usage and Failure Group parameters for one or more disks in a GPFS file system. This can be useful in situations where, for example, a file system that contains only RAID disks is being upgraded to add conventional disks that are better suited to storing metadata. After adding the disks using the mmadddisk command, the metadata currently stored on the RAID disks would have to be moved to the new disks to achieve the desired performance improvement. To accomplish this, first the mmchdisk change command would be issued to change the Disk Usage parameter for the RAID disks to dataOnly. Then the mmrestripefs command would be used to restripe the metadata off the RAID device and onto the conventional disks.
mmchdisk fs1 change -d "hd8vsdn100:::dataOnly"To confirm the change, enter:
mmlsdisk fs1 -d hd8vsdn100The system displays information similar to:
disk driver sector failure holds holds storage
name type size group metadata data status availability pool
------------ -------- ------ ------- -------- ----- ------------- ------------ ------------
hd8vsdn100 nsd 512 1 no yes ready up sp1
See the mmchdisk Command and the mmlsdisk Command for complete usage information.
Comentarios
Publicar un comentario