Destroy the partial volume "vol0(1)" with "vol destroy vol0(1)". That will turn the disk into a spare. Obviously, be very careful when using the "vol destroy" command to make sure you get the right one. And make sure you really don't care about the data still on disk 8a.13!
Steve
-----Original Message----- From: John Kiniston [mailto:johnkiniston@gmail.com] Sent: Wednesday, September 15, 2004 9:32 AM To: toasters@mathworks.com Subject: Replacement disk problem
Howdy everyone,
We put a used disk in our filer when we had a disk failure a number of months ago instead of a new fresh disk and I dont believe the new disk got added correctly.
This is the output from the web interface where I noticed the problem:
Foreign volume vol0(1) RAID group 0 RAID Disk HA.ID HA SHELF BAY CHAN Used (MB/blks) Phys (MB/blks) --------- ----- ------------ ---- -------------- -------------- data 8a.13 8a 1 5 8600/17612800 8683/17783240 Raid group is missing 5 disks. Volume vol0 (root) RAID group 0 RAID Disk HA.ID HA SHELF BAY CHAN Used (MB/blks) Phys (MB/blks) --------- ----- ------------ ---- -------------- -------------- parity 8a.1 8a 0 2 8600/17612800 8683/17783240 data 8a.2 8a 0 3 8600/17612800 8683/17783240 data 8a.3 8a 0 4 8600/17612800 8683/17783240 data 8a.4 8a 0 5 8600/17612800 8683/17783240 data 8a.5 8a 0 6 8600/17612800 8683/17783240 data 8a.8 8a 1 0 8600/17612800 8683/17783240 data 8a.9 8a 1 1 8600/17612800 8683/17783240 data 8a.10 8a 1 2 8600/17612800 8683/17783240 data 8a.12 8a 1 4 8600/17612800 8683/17783240 data 8a.0 8a 0 1 8600/17612800 8683/17783240 data 8a.14 8a 1 6 8600/17612800 8683/17783112 data 8a.11 8a 1 3 8600/17612800 8683/17783240
How can I get the replacement disk set to be a spare for vol0(root)