Bohumil Chalupa's post to the linux raid list on the work around for the raid1 + 5 mdstop problem. His solution does not address the possibility of the raid device being corrupt at shutdown. So I have added a simple status comparison to a good reference status at boot. This allows the operator to intervene if something is wrong with a disk in the array. The description of this is in the main body of this document.
> From: Bohumil Chalupa <[email protected]> > > I can now boot initrd and use linuxrc to start the RAID1 array, > then successfully switch root to /dev/md0. > > I don't know, however, any way how to cleanly _stop_ the array. Well. I have to answer myself :-) > Date: Mon, 29 Dec 1997 02:21:38 -0600 (CST) > From: Edward Welbon <[email protected]> > Subject: Re: dismounting root raid device > > For md devices other than raid0, there is probably state that needs to > be saved that is only known once all writes have completed. Such state > of course can't be saved to root once it is mounted readonly. In that > case, you would have to be able to mount a writeable filesystem "X" > on the readonly root and be able to write to "X" (I recall doing this > during "rescue" operations, but not as an automated procedure). > > The filesystem "X" would presumably be a boot device from which the raid > (during linuxrc exection via initrd) would pickup it's initial state from. > Fortunately raid0 isn't required to write out any state (though it would > be pleasant to be able to write the check sums to mdtab after an mdstop). > Eventually, I will fiddle with this but it doesn't seem difficult though > the "devil" is always in the "details". Yes, that's it. I had this idea in mind for some time already, but had no time to try it. Yesterday I did, and it works. With my RAID1 (mirror), I don't save any checksums or raid superblock data. I only save an information on the "real" boot partition, that the root md volume was remounted readonly during shutdown. Then, during boot, the linuxrc script runs mkraid --only-superblock when it finds this information; otherwise, it runs ckraid. This means, that the raid superblock information is not updated during shutdown; it's updated at the boot time. It is not very clean, I'm afraid, :-( but it works. I'm using Slackware and initrd.md by Edward Welbon to boot the root raid device. As far as I remember now, the only modified files are mkdisk and linuxrc, and /etc/rc.d/rc.6 shutdown script. And lilo.conf, of course. I'm appending the important parts. Bohumil Chalupa --------------- my.linuxrc follows ----------------- #!/bin/sh # we need /proc /bin/mount /proc # start up the md0 device. let the /etc/rc.d scripts get the rest of them # we should do as little as possible here # ________________________________________ # root raid1 shutdown test & recreation # /start must be created on the rd image in my.mkdisk echo "preparing md0: mounting /start" /bin/mount /dev/sda2 /start -t ext2 echo "reading saved md0 state from /start" if [ -f /start/root.raid.ok ]; then echo "raid ok, modyfying superblock" rm /start/root.raid.ok /sbin/mkraid /etc/raid1.conf -f --only-superblock else echo "raid not clean, runing ckraid --fix" /sbin/ckraid --fix /etc/raid1.conf fi echo "unmounting /start" /bin/umount /start # _________________________________________ # echo "adding md0 for root file system" /sbin/mdadd /dev/md0 /dev/sda1 /dev/sdb1 echo "starting md0" /sbin/mdrun -p1 /dev/md0 # tell kernel we want to switch to /dev/md0 as root device, the 0x900 value # is arrived at via 256*major_device_number + minor_device number. echo "setting real-root-dev" /bin/echo 0x900>/proc/sys/kernel/real-root-dev # unmount /proc so that the ram disk can be deallocated. echo "unmounting /proc" /bin/umount /proc /bin/echo "We are hopefully ready to mount /dev/md0 (major 9, minor 0) as root" exit --------------- end of my.linuxrc ---------------------------------- ----------- extract from /etc/rc.d/rc.6 follows ----------------- # Turn off swap, then unmount local file systems. echo "Turning off swap." swapoff -a echo "Unmounting local file systems." umount -a -tnonfs # Don't remount UMSDOS root volumes: if [ ! "`mount | head -1 | cut -d ' ' -f 5`" = "umsdos" ]; then mount -n -o remount,ro / fi # Save raid state echo "Saving RAID state" /bin/mount -n /dev/sda2 /start -t ext2 touch /start/root.raid.ok /bin/umount -n /start -------------- end of excerpt from rc.6 ------------------------ ------------------ part of my.mkdisk follows ---------------------- # # now we have the filesystem ready to be populated, we need to # get a few important directories. I had endless trouble till # I created a pristine mtab. In my case, it is convenient that # /etc/mdtab is copied over, this way I can activate md with # a simple "/sbin/mdadd -ar" in linuxrc. # cp -a $ROOT/etc $MOUNTPNT 2>cp.stderr 1>cp.stdout rm -rf $MOUNTPNT/etc/mtab rm -rf $MOUNTPNT/etc/ppp* rm -rf $MOUNTPNT/etc/termcap rm -rf $MOUNTPNT/etc/sendmail* rm -rf $MOUNTPNT/etc/rc.d rm -rf $MOUNTPNT/etc/dos* cp -a $ROOT/sbin $ROOT/dev $ROOT/lib $ROOT/bin $MOUNTPNT 2>>cp.stderr 1>>cp.stdout # _____________________________________________________________________ # RAID: will need mkraid and ckraid cp -a $ROOT/usr/sbin/mkraid $ROOT/usr/sbin/ckraid $MOUNTPNT/sbin 2>>cp.stderr 1>>cp.stdout # --------------------------------------------------------------------- # it seems that init wont come out to play unless it has utmp. this can # probably be pruned back alot. no telling what the real bug was 8-). # mkdir $MOUNTPNT/var $MOUNTPNT/var/log $MOUNTPNT/var/run $MOUNTPNT/initrd touch $MOUNTPNT/var/run/utmp $MOUNTPNT/etc/mtab chmod a+r $MOUNTPNT/var/run/utmp $MOUNTPNT/etc/mtab ln -s /var/run/utmp $MOUNTPNT/var/log/utmp ln -s /var/log/utmp $MOUNTPNT/etc/utmp ls -lstrd $MOUNTPNT/etc/utmp $MOUNTPNT/var/log/utmp $MOUNTPNT/var/run/utmp # # since I wanted to change the mount point, I needed this though # I suppose that I could have done a "mkdir /proc" in linuxrc. # mkdir $MOUNTPNT/proc chmod 555 $MOUNTPNT/proc # # ------------------------------------------------------ # we'll mount the real boot device to /start temporarily # to check the root raid state saved at shutdown time # mkdir $MOUNTPNT/start # ------------------------------------------------------- # # need linuxrc (it is, after all, the point of this exercise). # if [ -x ./my.linuxrc ]; then cp -a ./my.linuxrc $MOUNTPNT/linuxrc chmod 777 $MOUNTPNT/linuxrc else ln -s /bin/sh $MOUNTPNT/linuxrc fi # ----------------- part of my.mkdisk ends -----------------