On Thu, 17 Apr 2008 16:17:58 +0100
Hugo Mills <hugo@???> wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 17, 2008 at 03:59:55PM +0100, John Lewis wrote:
> > On Thu, 17 Apr 2008 15:40:03 +0100
> > Hugo Mills <hugo@???> wrote:
> > > You didn't answer my second question, regarding the content
> > > of /dev/md0 -- is this a single filesystem on its own, or is
> > > there a partition table on it, or LVM?
> >
> > that is cos I didn't read the question carefully enough :-(
> >
> > Well it won't have LVM for reasons mentioned in earlier email. So
> > far as I can recall I did an <mdraid --create /dev/md0> or
> > similar and then added drives to it.
> >
> > I would have followed instructions similar to the Howto I
> > mentioned earlier and I don't think that talks about creating
> > file systems on the /dev/md0 device, I'd have to have a careful
> > read of it to be sure.
>
> If you didn't create a filesystem on it, then it would basically
> be useless, and you wouldn't have stored any data on it...
>
> > Does this answer the question?
> >
> > mdadm --examine /dev/md0
> > mdadm: No md superblock detected on /dev/md0
>
> Not really. You could try:
>
> # cat /dev/md0 | file -
/dev/stdin writable, no read permission
> which may show you what the contents of /dev/md0 is (i.e. what kind
> of filesystem). If it doesn't show anything useful, or claims that
> /dev/md0 isn't a device or doesn't exist, then you will probably
> need to assemble the array by hand.
>
> What does /proc/mdstat show? If it tells you about /dev/md0, then
> the array is up and running and you should be able to mount it. If
> not, then you will have to assemble the array by hand.
> Try:
>
> # mdadm --assemble /dev/md0 /dev/sda1 /dev/sdb1
>
> If that complains about too few devices, try:
seems OK
mdadm: /dev/md0 has been started with 2 drives
--
John Lewis
Debian (Sid) & the GeneWeb genealogical data server