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тАО10-04-2004 12:42 AM
тАО10-04-2004 12:42 AM
What does "Bad MCR, resyncing all LVs on the PV" mean?
LVM: vg[1] pv[0] Bad MCR, resyncing all LVs on the PV
LVM: vg[1] pv[1] Bad MCR, resyncing all LVs on the PV
LVM: vg[2] pv[0] Bad MCR, resyncing all LVs on the PV
LVM: vg[2] pv[1] Bad MCR, resyncing all LVs on the PV
I think it's related to another problem I'm having which is that all of my clients keep on reporting that the NFS fileserver(this hpux box) is timing out.
Thanks for any help!
-Brent
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тАО10-04-2004 01:17 AM
тАО10-04-2004 01:17 AM
Re: What does "Bad MCR, resyncing all LVs on the PV" mean?
Dangerous : If the PV is failing
Non-Dangerous : If it is just to resync the LV's on your PV after some change to the system.
you may try finding out which Lvol's have this problem and figure our accordingly:
lvdisplay -v /dev/vg*/lvol[0-9] | grep -i stale | more
Try doing a manual lvsync or vgsync on the VG in question...
Hope this helps..
And also please summerize how to you rectify this..
Thanks
Prashant
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тАО10-04-2004 11:03 PM
тАО10-04-2004 11:03 PM
Re: What does "Bad MCR, resyncing all LVs on the PV" mean?
You need to make sure that you have applied the LVM cumulative patch for your operating system level. There were changes to how the MCR record is used.
PHKL_30553 11.00 LVM Cumulative Patch
PHKL_30622 11.11 LVM Cumulative Patch
Run a vgdisplay -v on the volume groups to make sure that the vg is not showing any problems.
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тАО10-05-2004 12:46 AM
тАО10-05-2004 12:46 AM
Re: What does "Bad MCR, resyncing all LVs on the PV" mean?
SCSI: Read error -- dev: b 31 0x050400, errno: 126, resid: 1024,
blkno: 8, sectno: 16, offset: 8192, bcount: 1024.
LVM: Performed a switch for Lun ID = 0 (pv = 0xe00000014da1e000), from raw device 0x1f050400 (with priority: 0, and current flags: 0x40) to raw device 0x1f080400 (with priority: 1, and current flags: 0x0).
LVM: VG 64 0x20000: PVLink 31 0x50400 Failed!. The PV is still accessible.
LVM: VG 64 0x20000: PVLink 31 0x50400 Recovered.
LVM: Performed a switch for Lun ID = 0 (pv = 0xe00000014da1e000), from raw device 0x1f080400 (with priority: 1, and current flags: 0x0) to raw device 0x1f050400 (with priority: 0, and current flags: 0x0).
LVM: Performed a switch for Lun ID = 0 (pv = 0xe00000014da1e000), from raw device 0x1f050400 (with priority: 0, and current flags: 0x40) to raw device 0x1f080400 (with priority: 1, and current flags: 0x0).
LVM: VG 64 0x20000: PVLink 31 0x50400 Failed!. The PV is still accessible.
LVM: Performed a switch for Lun ID = 0 (pv = 0xe00000014da1e000), from raw device 0x1f080400 (with priority: 1, and current flags: 0x0) to raw device 0x1f050400 (with priority: 0, and current flags: 0x80).
LVM: VG 64 0x20000: PVLink 31 0x50400 Recovered.
Thanks,
Brent
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тАО10-05-2004 09:31 AM
тАО10-05-2004 09:31 AM
Re: What does "Bad MCR, resyncing all LVs on the PV" mean?
ioscan -funC disk
to see if all you disks are claimed if NO_HW you call HP to come and change the disk.
If you do it yourself.
change the disk and the:
ioscan -f /dev/dsk/cXtXdX
vgcfgrestore -n VG /dev/rdsk/cXtXdX
vgchange -a y vgXX
or
vgchange -a e vgXX (cluster)
If it is a root disk you need to do this as well:
mkboot -l /dev/rdsk/cXtXdX
lifls ├в l /dev/rdsk/cXtXdX
mkboot -a hpux /dev/rdsk/cXtXdX
or
mkboot -a ├в hpux ├в lq├в /dev/rdsk/cXtXdX
lifcp /dev/rdsk/cXtXdX:AUTO
vgsync vgXY &
To check the progress of the synchronization you could use:
lvdisplay -v $(find /dev/vgXY -type b) | grep stale | wc -l
If the disk is claimed then look for staled PE in you lv's:
lvdisplay -v
and is otherwise ok you could a:
vgsync vgXY &
LOOK AT THIS LINK:
http://www2.itrc.hp.com/service/iv/node.do?node=prodITRC%2FWW_Start%2F