On Fri, May 16, 2014 at 2:03 PM, Raghuv Adhepalli raghuv.adhepalli@seagate.com wrote:
@mark: I didn't umount the drive before removing. Was performing hard removal. I will try clearing the concerned UUID and see if that mounts the drive back.
As an alternative, I think you can change the UUID of a device.
Raghuv.
On Fri, May 16, 2014 at 11:59 AM, m.roth@5-cent.us wrote:
Raghuv Adhepalli wrote:
<snip> > @mark: This is my dmesg output, > > XFS (sdf): xfs_log_force: error 5 returned. > sd 0:0:9:0: [sdj] Synchronizing SCSI cache > sd 0:0:9:0: [sdj] Result: hostbyte=DID_NO_CONNECT driverbyte=DRIVER_OK > mpt2sas0: removing handle(0x000e), sas_addr(0x4433221105000000) > XFS (sdf): xfs_log_force: error 5 returned. <snip > sdj: unknown partition table > sd 0:0:10:0: [sdj] Attached SCSI disk > XFS (sdj): Filesystem has duplicate UUID <snip> This concerns me. As I asked, you *did* umount the drive before removing it? I would expect that to remove the UUID from /dev/disk/by-uuid; for some reason, it's clearly still there, and I think that's what's confusing the system.
mark
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