I’m pretty sure that the aggr snap
reserve is not needed for core dump – this is written to the 10% overhead
space (or to spare drives, depending on how you’ve configured your
filer), then when the filer comes back up and the ‘savecore’ is
performed, it is written to the /etc/crash directory.
As for the aggr copy command, that is news
to me (you see how often I’ve used it).
The one thing you did overlook: restoring
an aggregate – not individual volume, mind you. This is the same concept
as vol snap restore.
Glenn
From: owner-toasters@mathworks.com
[mailto:owner-toasters@mathworks.com] On
Behalf Of Michael Schipp
Sent: Monday, December 18, 2006
5:54 PM
To: toasters@mathworks.com
Subject: Aggregrate snap reserve
(again)
Hi all,
We have had a lot of talk since DOT 7 of this but just to clear it up some (I
hope).
aggregate snapshots are
required if you use (default 5%);
·
RAID SyncMirror
and/or MetroCluster configurations.
·
Aggr copy command
·
Core dump
IS the core dump in on aggr0
snap space only?
So if a Filer/FAS has two
aggregates and not using or needing SyncMirror and the aggrcopy command is it
safe to turn off the aggregate snap reserve for aggr1 (still leaving snap
reserve on for aggr0 for core dumps)?
NetApp – are
aggregates snap reserve used for any other purpose?
Thanks
Michael