At the beginning of each soft partition extent, a sector is used to mark the beginning of the soft partition extent. These hidden sectors are called extent headers and do not appear to the user of the soft partition. If all Solaris Volume Manager configuration is lost, the disk can be scanned in an attempt to generate the configuration data.
This procedure is a last option to recover lost soft partition configuration information. The metarecover command should only be used when you have lost both your metadb and your md.cf files, and your md.tab is lost or out of date.
This procedure only works to recover soft partition information, and does not assist in recovering from other lost configurations or for recovering configuration information for other Solaris Volume Manager volumes.
If your configuration included other Solaris Volume Manager volumes that were built on top of soft partitions, you should recover the soft partitions before attempting to recover the other volumes.
Configuration information about your soft partitions is stored on your devices and in your state database. Since either of these sources could be corrupt, you must tell the metarecover command which source is reliable.
First, use the metarecover command to determine whether the two sources agree. If they do agree, the metarecover command cannot be used to make any changes. If the metarecover command reports an inconsistency, however, you must examine its output carefully to determine whether the disk or the state database is corrupt, then you should use the metarecover command to rebuild the configuration based on the appropriate source.
Review the soft partition recovery information by using the metarecover command.
metarecover component-p {-d }In this case, component is the c*t*d*s* name of the raw component. The -d option indicates to scan the physical slice for extent headers of soft partitions.
For more information, see the metarecover(1M) man page.
# metarecover c1t1d0s1 -p -d The following soft partitions were found and will be added to your metadevice configuration. Name Size No. of Extents d10 10240 1 d11 10240 1 d12 10240 1 # metarecover c1t1d0s1 -p -d The following soft partitions were found and will be added to your metadevice configuration. Name Size No. of Extents d10 10240 1 d11 10240 1 d12 10240 1 WARNING: You are about to add one or more soft partition metadevices to your metadevice configuration. If there appears to be an error in the soft partition(s) displayed above, do NOT proceed with this recovery operation. Are you sure you want to do this (yes/no)?yes c1t1d0s1: Soft Partitions recovered from device. bash-2.05# metastat d10: Soft Partition Device: c1t1d0s1 State: Okay Size: 10240 blocks Device Start Block Dbase Reloc c1t1d0s1 0 No Yes Extent Start Block Block count 0 1 10240 d11: Soft Partition Device: c1t1d0s1 State: Okay Size: 10240 blocks Device Start Block Dbase Reloc c1t1d0s1 0 No Yes Extent Start Block Block count 0 10242 10240 d12: Soft Partition Device: c1t1d0s1 State: Okay Size: 10240 blocks Device Start Block Dbase Reloc c1t1d0s1 0 No Yes Extent Start Block Block count 0 20483 10240 |
This example recovers three soft partitions from disk, after the state database replicas were accidentally deleted.