CentOS List wrote: >> CentOS List wrote: >>>>>>> I am running raid 1 on a centos 4.4. One of the harddisk (sda1) >>>>>>> failed. How can i carry on running the server using only sda2? >>>>>> >>>>>> Generate a grub floppy and use that to load the grub menu from the >>>>>> sdb (probably now sda) disk. >>>>>> >>>>>> If you are really talking about sda1 and sda2, those are >>>>>> partitions on the same disk. >>>>> >>>>> Is there a detail step by step howto? The raid 1 has no LVM. just >>>>> md0, md1 and md2. md0 is /boot, md1 is swap and md2 is the storage. >>>>> I had replace sba with a new disk. I tried to boot up and it says >>>>> kernel panic. How am i going to reconstruct the raid and sync sdb >>>>> to sda? >>>> >>>> It might be easier to swap the old sdb into the sda position so >>>> you'll boot from it, but you should also be able to boot the install >>>> cd with >>> >>> If swapped and booted, and got a kernel panic error. >> >>>> 'linux rescue' at the boot prompt, let it detect and mount your >>>> system (which will be the 'broken' raid devices with their single >>>> members), >>> >>> If i use linux rescue, The 3 mds I created are gone. /cat >>> /proc/mdstat says Personalitlies: [raid0] [raid1] [raid5] [raid6], no >>> longer Personalities : [raid1] >> >> Perhaps your raid wasn't really working the way you thought before. >> From the rescue boot, does fdisk show the 3 partitions on the old disk >> with type 'fd'? Can you mount the old /boot and / partitions >> somewhere by hand? You should be able to do this with the /dev/sda1 >> and /dev/sda3 device names if the md devices aren't detected at boot. > > cat /proc/partitions still shows me the 3 partitions. Does fdisk say that they are type 'fd'(raid autodetect)? > I actually copied > /boot to the "replaced disk" and it is able to boot up, but without any > filesystem, so i guess the boot is still intact. So do i need to mount > /boot and /? If you can get the original partitions to be detected as their md devices you should fdisk matching partitions on the replacement disk, then 'mdadm --add ...' to add them and they will automatically sync up. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell at gmail.com