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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Move a LUN from one server to the other Post 303013272 by rbatte1 on Monday 19th of February 2018 05:06:31 AM
Old 02-19-2018
Very good. Does it show the data/filesystems you are expecting?

If you are certain that they are not is use elsewhere, can you mount them?

If you are not sure, think carefully. Trying to mount them may just refuse, but it may possible say "Are you sure?" and then force it or just try and fails with a suggestion to fsck it. All of these could be very bad for your data. When sharing a LUN/filesystem(s) between servers, there is usually a need for good HA software. There are all sorts of problems, such as the free block list which will be held in memory, so if one side uses some free blocks, the other side doesn't know about it and could just use the same blocks causing data loss.



Kind regards,
Robin
 

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icheck(8)						      System Manager's Manual							 icheck(8)

Name
       icheck - check inode consistency

Syntax
       /etc/icheck [ -s ]  [ -b numbers ] [ filesystem ]

Description
       The command is obsoleted for normal consistency checking by

       The command examines a file system, builds a bit map of used blocks, and compares this bit map against the free list maintained on the file
       system.	If the file system is not specified, a set of default file systems is checked.	The normal output of includes a report of:

       o   The total number of files and the numbers of regular, directory, block special and character special files.

       o   The total number of blocks in use and the numbers of single-, double-, and triple-indirect blocks and directory blocks.

       o   The number of free blocks.

       o   The number of blocks missing, that is, not in any file nor in the free list.

       The option causes to ignore the actual free list and reconstruct a new one by rewriting the super-block of the file system.  The file  sys-
       tem  should  be dismounted while this is done; if this is not possible (for example if the root file system has to be salvaged) care should
       be taken that the system is quiescent and that it is rebooted immediately afterwards so that the old, bad in-core copy of  the  super-block
       will not continue to be used.  Notice also that the words in the super-block which indicate the size of the free list and of the i-list are
       believed.  If the super-block has been curdled these words will have to be patched.  The option causes the normal output reports to be sup-
       pressed.

       Following the option is a list of block numbers; whenever any of the named blocks turns up in a file, a diagnostic is produced.

       The command is faster if the raw version of the special file is used, since it reads the i-list many blocks at a time.

Diagnostics
       For  duplicate  blocks  and  bad  blocks  (which lie outside the file system) announces the difficulty, the i-number, and the kind of block
       involved.  If a read error is encountered, the block number of the bad block is printed and considers it to  contain  0.   `Bad	freeblock'
       means that a block number outside the available space was encountered in the free list.	`n dups in free' means that n blocks were found in
       the free list which duplicate blocks either in some file or in the earlier part of the free list.

Restrictions
       Since is inherently two-pass in nature, extraneous diagnostics may be produced if applied to active file systems.

       It believes even preposterous super-blocks and consequently can get core images.

Files
       Default file systems vary with installation.

See Also
       fs(5), clri(8), dcheck(8), fsck(8), ncheck(8)

																	 icheck(8)
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