From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: Alexander Shenkin Subject: Re: Raid-6 won't boot Date: Tue, 31 Mar 2020 17:20:27 +0100 Message-ID: <2e8dc7c0-434b-e759-c7e8-36791cd297d6@shenkin.org> References: <7ce3a1b9-7b24-4666-860a-4c4b9325f671@shenkin.org> <3868d184-5e65-02e1-618a-2afeb7a80bab@youngman.org.uk> <1f393884-dc48-c03e-f734-f9880d9eed96@shenkin.org> <740b37a3-83fa-a03f-c253-785bb286cefc@shenkin.org> <98b9aff4-978c-5d8d-1325-bda26bf7997f@shenkin.org> <0354b224-b762-915e-5f89-61c485fa0ec4@shenkin.org> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Return-path: In-Reply-To: Content-Language: en-US Sender: linux-raid-owner@vger.kernel.org To: Roger Heflin Cc: antlists , Linux-RAID List-Id: linux-raid.ids Yes, I had added a drive and it was busy copying data to the new drive when the reshape slowed down gradually, and eventually the system locked up. I didn't change raid configurations or anything like that - just added a drive. I didn't use any external files, so not sure if i'd be able to recover any... i suspect not... thanks, allie On 3/31/2020 5:16 PM, Roger Heflin wrote: > were you doing a reshape when it was rebooted? And if so did you > have to use an external file when doing the reshape and were was that > file? I think there is a command to restart a reshape using an > external file. > > On Tue, Mar 31, 2020 at 11:13 AM Alexander Shenkin wrote: >> >> quick followup: trying a stop and assemble results in the message that >> it "Failed to restore critical section for reshape, sorry". >> >> On 3/31/2020 11:08 AM, Alexander Shenkin wrote: >>> Thanks Roger, >>> >>> It seems only the Raid1 module is loaded. I didn't find a >>> straightforward way to get that module loaded... any suggestions? Or, >>> will I have to find another livecd that contains raid456? >>> >>> Thanks, >>> Allie >>> >>> On 3/30/2020 9:45 PM, Roger Heflin wrote: >>>> They all seem to be there, all seem to report all 7 disks active, so >>>> it does not appear to be degraded. All event counters are the same. >>>> Something has to be causing them to not be scanned and assembled at >>>> all. >>>> >>>> Is the rescue disk a similar OS to what you have installed? If it is >>>> you might try a random say fedora livecd and see if it acts any >>>> different. >>>> >>>> what does fdisk -l /dev/sda look like? >>>> >>>> Is the raid456 module loaded (lsmod | grep raid)? >>>> >>>> what does cat /proc/cmdline look like? >>>> >>>> you might also run this: >>>> file -s /dev/sd*3 >>>> But I think it is going to show us the same thing as what the mdadm >>>> --examine is reporting. >>>> >>>> On Mon, Mar 30, 2020 at 3:05 PM Alexander Shenkin wrote: >>>>> >>>>> See attached. I should mention that the last drive i added is on a new >>>>> controller that is separate from the other drives, but seemed to work >>>>> fine for a bit, so kinda doubt that's the issue... >>>>> >>>>> thanks, >>>>> >>>>> allie >>>>> >>>>> On 3/30/2020 6:21 PM, Roger Heflin wrote: >>>>>> do this against each partition that had it: >>>>>> >>>>>> mdadm --examine /dev/sd*** >>>>>> >>>>>> It seems like it is not seeing it as a md-raid. >>>>>> >>>>>> On Mon, Mar 30, 2020 at 11:13 AM Alexander Shenkin wrote: >>>>>>> Thanks Roger, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> The only line that isn't commented out in /etc/mdadm.conf is "DEVICE >>>>>>> partitions"... >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Thanks, >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Allie >>>>>>> >>>>>>> On 3/30/2020 4:53 PM, Roger Heflin wrote: >>>>>>>> That seems really odd. Is the raid456 module loaded? >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> On mine I see messages like this for each disk it scanned and >>>>>>>> considered as maybe possibly being an array member. >>>>>>>> kernel: [ 83.468700] md/raid:md13: device sdi3 operational as raid disk 5 >>>>>>>> and messages like this: >>>>>>>> md/raid:md14: not clean -- starting background reconstruction >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> You might look at /etc/mdadm.conf on the rescue cd and see if it has a >>>>>>>> DEVICE line that limits what is being scanned. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> On Mon, Mar 30, 2020 at 10:13 AM Alexander Shenkin wrote: >>>>>>>>> Thanks Roger, >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> that grep just returns the detection of the raid1 (md127). See dmesg >>>>>>>>> and mdadm --detail results attached. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Many thanks, >>>>>>>>> allie >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> On 3/28/2020 1:36 PM, Roger Heflin wrote: >>>>>>>>>> Try this grep: >>>>>>>>>> dmesg | grep "md/raid", if that returns nothing if you can just send >>>>>>>>>> the entire dmesg. >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> On Sat, Mar 28, 2020 at 2:47 AM Alexander Shenkin wrote: >>>>>>>>>>> Thanks Roger. dmesg has nothing in it referring to md126 or md127.... >>>>>>>>>>> any other thoughts on how to investigate? >>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>> thanks, >>>>>>>>>>> allie >>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>> On 3/27/2020 3:55 PM, Roger Heflin wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>> A non-assembled array always reports raid1. >>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>> I would run "dmesg | grep md126" to start with and see what it reports it saw. >>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>> On Fri, Mar 27, 2020 at 10:29 AM Alexander Shenkin wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>> Thanks Wol, >>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Booting in SystemRescueCD and looking in /proc/mdstat, two arrays are >>>>>>>>>>>>> reported. The first (md126) in reported as inactive with all 7 disks >>>>>>>>>>>>> listed as spares. The second (md127) is reported as active >>>>>>>>>>>>> auto-read-only with all 7 disks operational. Also, the only >>>>>>>>>>>>> "personality" reported is Raid1. I could go ahead with your suggestion >>>>>>>>>>>>> of mdadm --stop array and then mdadm --assemble, but I thought the >>>>>>>>>>>>> reporting of just the Raid1 personality was a bit strange, so wanted to >>>>>>>>>>>>> check in before doing that... >>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Thanks, >>>>>>>>>>>>> Allie >>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>> On 3/26/2020 10:00 PM, antlists wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>>> On 26/03/2020 17:07, Alexander Shenkin wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> I surely need to boot with a rescue disk of some sort, but from there, >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> I'm not sure exactly when I should do. Any suggestions are very welcome! >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Okay. Find a liveCD that supports raid (hopefully something like >>>>>>>>>>>>>> SystemRescueCD). Make sure it has a very recent kernel and the latest >>>>>>>>>>>>>> mdadm. >>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> All being well, the resync will restart, and when it's finished your >>>>>>>>>>>>>> system will be fine. If it doesn't restart on its own, do an "mdadm >>>>>>>>>>>>>> --stop array", followed by an "mdadm --assemble" >>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> If that doesn't work, then >>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> https://raid.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/Linux_Raid#When_Things_Go_Wrogn >>>>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Cheers, >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Wol