Is there any reason NOT to zero disks that you are leaving in the system as spares? They will have to be zeroed when you add them to a volume (or create a new one) anyway, thus delaying their availability in that volume for data. If they are chosen for reconstruct, they do not need to be zeroed ahead of time. But either way, the performance effect on the system of zeroing disks is negligible, so why not zero them all?
Cheers,
Steve
-----Original Message----- From: George Kahler [mailto:george@YorkU.CA] Sent: Tuesday, July 27, 2004 10:15 AM To: watherton@BERKCOM.com Cc: toasters@mathworks.com Subject: Re: Zeroing out disks
Thanks, that is exactly what I wanted. It is too bad that one has to go round about way of accomplishing this. An argument to the spares_zero command would do the trick.
I have few disks (now spares) that used to belong to a volume that was destroyed, however, I MUST zero out any data from these disks before they can leave our premises.
George
------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------- George Kahler e-mail: george@yorku.ca
Sr. Systems Administrator humans: (416) 736-2100 x.22699 Computing and Network Services machines: (416) 736-5830 Ontario, Canada, M3J-1P3
On Tue, 27 Jul 2004 10:01:27 -0700, William Atherton watherton@BERKCOM.com wrote:
George,
The NetApp Zeros the disks in parallel so the time it takes to zero 1
disk
should be the same as 7 disks. If you really do not want to zero the
other
spares out you could pull them from the filer and then run the command
to
zero all and then place the none zeroed disk back in. Hope this helps.
Thank you,
William Atherton
watherton@berkcom.com 510-644-1599 VOICE 510-644-1598 FAX 888-812-9040 TOLL-FREE
Berkeley Communications Corporation 2990 San Pablo Avenue Berkeley, CA 94702 http://www.berkcom.com
-----Original Message----- From: George Kahler [mailto:george@YorkU.CA] Sent: Tuesday, July 27, 2004 6:53 AM To: toasters@mathworks.com Subject: Zeroing out disks
Does anyone know how you can zero out a specific disk(s) ? The "disk zero spares" command or "spares_zero" diagnostic command seem to zero out ALL spare disks only.
Thanks, George