> On 15 Jul 2016, at 14:10, Austin S. Hemmelgarn <ahferro...@gmail.com> wrote: > > On 2016-07-15 05:51, Matt wrote: >> Hello >> >> I glued together 6 disks in linear lvm fashion (no RAID) to obtain one large >> file system (see below). One of the 6 disk failed. What is the best way to >> recover from this? >> > The tool you want is `btrfs restore`. You'll need somewhere to put the files > from this too of course. That said, given that you had data in raid0 mode, > you're not likely to get much other than very small files back out of this, > and given other factors, you're not likely to get what you would consider > reasonable performance out of this either.
Thanks so much for pointing me towards btrfs-restore. I surely will give it a try. Note that the FS is not a RAID0 but linear (“JPOD") configuration. This is why it somehow did not occur to me to try btrfs-restore. The good news about in this configuration the files are *not* distributed across disks. We can read most of the files just fine. The failed disk was actually smaller than the others five so that we should be able to recover more than 5/6 of the data, shouldn’t we? My trouble is that the IO errors due to the missing disk cripple the transfer speed of both rsync and dd_rescue. > Your best bet to get a working filesystem again would be to just recreate it > from scratch, there's not much else that can be done when you've got a raid0 > profile and have lost a disk. This is what I plan to do if there if btrfs-restore turns out to be too slow and nobody on this list has any better idea. It will, however, require transferring >15TB across the Atlantic (this is were the “backup” reside). This can be tedious which is why I would love to avoid it. Matt -- 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