On Fri, Nov 17, 2006 at 02:57:46PM +0530, Siju George wrote:
> On 11/15/06, Vijay Sankar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >Good day,
> >
> >Hope this helps,
> >
>
> Yup some final confusions :-(
>
> The raid seems to be working fine. But how do I access the RAID partitions?
> it seems I have 3 copies of the OpenBSD system on "wd0a" and "wd1a"
> and also raid0a
> and how do I run on the OpenBSD system that is on "raid0"
> I 'l explain.
>
> 1) I can boot both from wd0a and wd01
> 2) I am running the RAID kernel
> 3) The raid is working fine :-)
>
> =============================================================
> # raidctl -sv raid0
> raid0 Components:
> /dev/wd0d: optimal
> /dev/wd1d: optimal
> No spares.
> Component label for /dev/wd0d:
> Autoconfig: Yes
> Root partition: Yes
> Last configured as: raid0
> Component label for /dev/wd1d:
> Autoconfig: Yes
> Root partition: Yes
> Last configured as: raid0
> ==================================================================
>
> but
> # mount
> /dev/wd0a on / type ffs (local)
> # df -h
> Filesystem Size Used Avail Capacity Mounted on
> /dev/wd0a 2.0G 649M 1.2G 34% /
> #
> # disklabel raid0
> # mount /dev/raid0a /mnt
> # cat /mnt/etc/fstab
> /dev/raid0a / ffs rw 1 1
> How do I access the wd0d partitions that are Raided?
Not at all, I hope. RAIDFrame is doing it's thing on wd0d, better leave
it to it.
> Do I need to mount them manually under /
No, mount /dev/raid0a or somesuch. In fact, with the configuration you
have, /dev/raid0a should be mounted *on* /.
At least, if you enabled 'option RAID_AUTOCONFIG' when you compiled your
kernel. dmesg will tell you whether or not this is the case - raidX will
be configured before you see 'root on XXX' if it is.
Note that you should not use /etc/raidX.conf in this case.
Joachim