Robin Becker wrote:
Dave wrote:
Hi,
I've got smartd going on a gmirror system, however when smartd
starts up it says it can't find the various drives. I've tried both
the autodetection line as well as specifying the individual drives.
If this does work i'd like to know about it as i believe i might have
one failing drive, but am not sure which one.
Thanks.
Dave.
well as root I can certainly run smartctl -a /dev/ad4 (or /dev/ad6) so
I assume smartd could.
I like the idea of using gmirror status -s , but I don't know what the
results would be if one of the disks were going bad. Would it change
from COMPLETE to DEGRADED suddenly?
I would expect gmirror to report a problem when a disk gad *gone* bad.
Going bad from a SMART point of view can mean, for example, too high a
rate of read retries or too many bad sectors remapped. At that point
the drive is technically working, so there is nothing technically wrong
with the array status. In such a case SMART would just be telling you
that the disk is likely to go kablooey soon; time for backups, new drive
etc. etc.
Something like gmirror status -s you can presumably run even every five
minutes from cron; if you weed out the good results you'll only get
email if something does go wrong.
Use both approaches since they tell you different things which just
happen some of the time to coincide.
--Alex
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