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тАО02-17-2006 07:47 PM
тАО02-17-2006 07:47 PM
Re: RSS Disk state
I am sorry, but it is not a ready tool - it is just a set of library routines.
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тАО02-18-2006 04:32 AM
тАО02-18-2006 04:32 AM
Re: RSS Disk state
No worries Uwe, cheers anyway
One more thing. When I swop those 2 disks around, would it be a good idea to shut down the eva first
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тАО02-18-2006 06:44 AM
тАО02-18-2006 06:44 AM
Re: RSS Disk state
Another thing one might try is:
- increase the disk timeout
- move one of the disks to a different free bay
- wait for the system to settle
- move the second disk to the bay the first disk was in
- wait for the system to settle
- move the first disk to the bay the second disk was in
- set the timeout back to 1 minute
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тАО02-20-2006 01:31 AM
тАО02-20-2006 01:31 AM
Re: RSS Disk state
How would I increase the disk timeout?
cheers
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тАО02-20-2006 02:23 AM
тАО02-20-2006 02:23 AM
Re: RSS Disk state
- start Command View EVA
- click the EVA name on the left side to
-- see its "Initialized Storage System Poperties"
- look for "disk replacement delay" in the lower right corner
- change the value and press [Save changes]
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тАО02-23-2006 05:12 AM
тАО02-23-2006 05:12 AM
Re: RSS Disk state
Here's the XSLT sheet you need to format the XML. The OpenVMS DCL command procedure which creates the XML follows. The instructions to run this are in the procedure. Basically you get the sssu output of show disk full and do a search to pick out the lines of interest before running this procedure:
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тАО02-23-2006 05:28 AM
тАО02-23-2006 05:28 AM
Re: RSS Disk state
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тАО02-23-2006 10:55 PM
тАО02-23-2006 10:55 PM
Re: RSS Disk state
Uwe,
forgive my ignorance, but when you refer to the quorum disk, does this relate to a cluster quorum or something specific to the eva RSS?
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тАО02-24-2006 01:25 AM
тАО02-24-2006 01:25 AM
Re: RSS Disk state
I was talking about EVA's internal so-called "quorum disks". They contain special meta data.
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тАО02-24-2006 04:57 AM
тАО02-24-2006 04:57 AM
Re: RSS Disk state
If you can get RSSid, RSSindex, enclosure and bay number from the SSSU output, you've done the important part - then just figure out if there any disks with the same same RSSid on the same shelf (this means you don't have parity, you have at most, mirrored). It sounds like you have a small number of shelves which may not be able to achieve an rss state of parity, but you should be able to get mirrored.
If there are any drives with the same RSSid and with consecutive odd, even rssindexes on the same shelf, you have an rss state of NONE - meaning both vraid5 and vraid1 are vulnerable to a shelf failure.