The result of the command zpool status -v is the following:
pool: zpool_repos
state: DEGRADED
status: One or more devices has experienced an error resulting in data
corruption. Applications may be affected.
action: Restore the file in question if possible. Otherwise restore the
Am 20.06.2013 17:16, schrieb Alessio:
The result of the command zpool status -v is the following:
pool: zpool_repos
state: DEGRADED
status: One or more devices has experienced an error resulting in data
corruption. Applications may be affected.
action: Restore the file in
just an FYI, The disk may not be dead ... but you'll need to give it a low
level format and surface scan to check that it's not broken.
On 20 June 2013 18:25, Christian Manal moen...@informatik.uni-bremen.dewrote:
Am 20.06.2013 17:16, schrieb Alessio:
The result of the command zpool status
On 2013-06-20 19:30, Jonathan Adams wrote:
just an FYI, The disk may not be dead ... but you'll need to give it a low
level format and surface scan to check that it's not broken.
It might also be possible to invoke its own low-level diagnostics
scan via SMART interface (see smartctl; if OI
Yes but... what disk? It is c6d0, I suppose, but why all disks are reported as
degraded?
Christian Manal moen...@informatik.uni-bremen.de wrote:
Am 20.06.2013 17:16, schrieb Alessio:
The result of the command zpool status -v is the following:
pool: zpool_repos
state: DEGRADED
status:
On Thu, Jun 20, 2013 at 2:42 PM, alessio ales...@ftgm.it wrote:
Yes but... what disk? It is c6d0, I suppose, but why all disks are
reported as degraded?
At a guess, since writes to a raidz vdev get striped across all component
disks, if it can't successfully reconstruct a block, it can't