Alan Hagge posted on Wed, 17 Sep 2014 10:13:01 -0700 as excerpted: > I know that sounds weird, but here's my scenario: > > - Create a RAID1 filesystem (both data and metadata) using 2 same-sized > external USB drives - Copy data (backup of other filesystem) onto this > new filesystem - Dismount the filesystem - Split up the drives (keep one > at home, move one to offsite backup) > > This way if I need to recover a file, I can mount the one drive I have > with "-o ro,degraded" to recover data. If there's a read error on the > backup drive during the copy, I can go to the offsite location, bring > back the 2nd drive and mount both and have RAID1 protection. > > BUT...if I accidentally (because I forgot to use "ro" when mounting) or > purposely write data to the single drive in degraded mode, is it > possible to later mount both drives in RAID1 mode and "resync" them (as > opposed to having to do a "replace" operation on the out-of-sync drive, > which would force it to be completely rewritten)? If so, how would > btrfs know which drive is the "master" (ie. the updated one)? > > Or is it not possible to write to a btrfs volume mounted in "degraded" > mode?
In general this works. However, as the thread linked in Piotr's reply mentions, don't expect it to work for NOCOW files. (But you have to make files nocow, so if you haven't, that shouldn't be an issue.) Additionally, the "newest version" detection is based on file generation, so you want to be SURE you don't separately mount first one device writable and then the other, so they diverge not only from each other but from the point of separation. If you split them, make SURE only the one is mounted writable, so it'll be very clear which one has the updated content. If you DO accidentally separately mount both of them writable, I'd suggest using wipefs (or dd) to kill the btrfs magic on one of them so there's no possibility of btrfs getting mixed up which is newer, and then doing a btrfs replace to replace it with a new, current copy. Meanwhile, again as noted in the Piotr's linked thread, the detection and update isn't automatic. Once split with one mounted writable, when rejoined you'll want to do a btrfs scrub to bring the other one current. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-btrfs" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html