Forces replaced drives online and forces the drives that were incorrectly marked as CRITICAL, WARNING, or MISSING to return to a NORMAL operational state.
drive_group ‑forceDrivesOnline ‑driveGroup drive‑group‑id‑or‑fqn [{‑sessionKey | ‑u admin‑user ‑oracleFS oracle‑fs‑system}] [{‑outputformat | ‑o} { text | xml }] [{‑timeout timeout‑in‑seconds | ‑verify | ‑usage | ‑example | ‑help}]
The Oracle FS System can mark a drive as CRITICAL, WARNING, or MISSING for many reasons that do not necessarily involve a mechanical failure.
Only administrators with primary administrator, admin1, or support roles are authorized to run this command.
Specifies the fully qualified name (FQN) or the unique identifier (ID) of the drive group. When a Drive Enclosure is added to the Oracle FS System, the system automatically allocates the storage by generating one or more drive groups. The drive_group ‑list command displays the names of all drive groups that are defined on the Oracle FS System. The FQN consists of the name that the system generates preceded by a forward slash (/) character.
The following global options can be used for fully formed fscli commands:
The command completes successfully.
The command returns with an error.
The session times out.
Inspects the validity of the command syntax, not the semantics. Used to test the structure of a command without running the command. Does not determine whether errors would be produced if you issue a structurally correct command with the input provided.
Directs the CLI to prompt you to supply a session key when you issue the command. The CLI displays Sessionkey: as the prompt. To obtain a session key, log in with the ‑returnKey option specified. After the session is established, the session key is displayed in STDOUT. If you request a session key, the ‑sessionkey option is required syntax for all commands that are issued in a given session. In environments with more than one Oracle FS System, the session key is used to determine to which Oracle FS System to direct the command for validation. Session keys are also used to establish two or more CLI sessions when using a shared administrator account.