Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Linux Ubuntu Samba share on software raid1 Post 303022494 by tomislav91 on Sunday 2nd of September 2018 03:25:09 AM
Old 09-02-2018
Quote:
Originally Posted by Aia
The highlighted parts in red shows that the raid is good, you would need to investigate if you see a degraded state.

You should be able to access the files going to the mounting point whether your raid1 is degraded or not. There's some indication that you have done it in /mnt/md0

The samba setup is not particularly related to whether the underneath storage technology is raid or something else.
I understand that, and samba just watch for folders. My problem was that when i pull out one disk of two, that test folder inside /dev/raid (earlier mount point) was unreadable.
Now is ok.
THanks a loT!
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How can i set up Software disk mirroring(Raid1) in SCO 5.0.5 with two SCSI harddisk ?

thank u very much, (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: coralsea
1 Replies

2. Linux

Facing problem in Samba share

Hi, I am facing problem while accessing samba share on Linux 5.1 from windows, though I have done the same configuration on Linux 4 (Update 2), on Red Hat 4.0 it is working but while on Linux 5.1 these configuration are not working, I have disabled the firewall also. Kindly suggest me... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: manoj.solaris
1 Replies

3. Linux

Samba share script

Hi everyone! I'm trying to run a script when a folder is shared and when it stop being shared. Is there something like .start_share or .stop_share scripts in Samba where I could run some commands?:confused: edit: maybe with a wrapper in smbmount but I share folders via nautilus. Any ideas? (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: funyotros
0 Replies

4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Problems between a HP UX 11.31 Samba share and Windows 7...

Hi I have an issue with a client. He was able to use his mounted Samba share for a long time. However, a couple of days ago, he wasn't able to access all of his files all of a sudden. He still see's the share and majority of the files, but not some that he needs. I checked with Secure CRT on... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: zixzix01
1 Replies

5. Solaris

samba issue: one samba share without password prompting and the others with.

Hi All, I've been trying to configure samba on Solaris 10 to allow me to have one share that is open and writable to all users and have the rest of my shares password protected by a generic account. If I set my security to user, my secured shares work just fine and prompt accordingly, but when... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: ideal2545
0 Replies

6. Red Hat

How to Map AD groups to Samba share?

I am setup a samba share server which is authenticating from Active Directory. I am able to access the share with AD user but not able to access when group defined in "valid users" parameters. below are the steps i performed. In smb.conf workgroup = QASLABS password server =... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sunnysthakur
3 Replies

7. Red Hat

Samba share problem in Linux 6.4

Hi , In samba i have shared my home directory, but its showing as a printer. Not able to share data. $ smbclient -L 192.168.122.1 Enter priyank's password: Domain= OS= Server= Sharename Type Comment --------- ---- ------- shared_priyank Printer ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Priy
3 Replies

8. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Samba Share access from windows

Hello, I want to connect to two samba shares both on the same Linux box but each with a different username from a windows server 2008. I created 2 gpos to connect and I can connect to the shares individually via net use command, but once I entered credentials for one of the shares, it seems I... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: zaineyma
1 Replies

9. Red Hat

Samba share - currently not working

Long running samba share. Never have any problems, Suddenly started asking windows users for password - which doesnt work. Tried to manually reset smb password and manually map - still wrong password. Restart samba? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: psychocandy
2 Replies

10. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Mounting a samba share

Hi, I need to mount a directory from a Windows server to a CentOS box. The Windows server used is Windows Server 2003, and the path to the directory that I want to mount on CentOS is C:\Tomcat6\webapps\NASApp\logs. I am not sure of the correct way to mount this on CentOS, as most of the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: anaigini45
2 Replies
MDMON(8)						      System Manager's Manual							  MDMON(8)

NAME
mdmon - monitor MD external metadata arrays SYNOPSIS
mdmon CONTAINER [NEWROOT] OVERVIEW
The 2.6.27 kernel brings the ability to support external metadata arrays. External metadata implies that user space handles all updates to the metadata. The kernel's responsibility is to notify user space when a "metadata event" occurs, like disk failures and clean-to-dirty transitions. The kernel, in important cases, waits for user space to take action on these notifications. DESCRIPTION
Metadata updates: To service metadata update requests a daemon, mdmon, is introduced. Mdmon is tasked with polling the sysfs namespace looking for changes in array_state, sync_action, and per disk state attributes. When a change is detected it calls a per metadata type handler to make modifi- cations to the metadata. The following actions are taken: array_state - inactive Clear the dirty bit for the volume and let the array be stopped array_state - write pending Set the dirty bit for the array and then set array_state to active. Writes are blocked until userspace writes active. array_state - active-idle The safe mode timer has expired so set array state to clean to block writes to the array array_state - clean Clear the dirty bit for the volume array_state - read-only This is the initial state that all arrays start at. mdmon takes one of the three actions: 1/ Transition the array to read-auto keeping the dirty bit clear if the metadata handler determines that the array does not need resyncing or other modification 2/ Transition the array to active if the metadata handler determines a resync or some other manipulation is necessary 3/ Leave the array read-only if the volume is marked to not be monitored; for example, the metadata version has been set to "external:-dev/md127" instead of "external:/dev/md127" sync_action - resync-to-idle Notify the metadata handler that a resync may have completed. If a resync process is idled before it completes this event allows the metadata handler to checkpoint resync. sync_action - recover-to-idle A spare may have completed rebuilding so tell the metadata handler about the state of each disk. This is the metadata han- dler's opportunity to clear any "out-of-sync" bits and clear the volume's degraded status. If a recovery process is idled before it completes this event allows the metadata handler to checkpoint recovery. <disk>/state - faulty A disk failure kicks off a series of events. First, notify the metadata handler that a disk has failed, and then notify the kernel that it can unblock writes that were dependent on this disk. After unblocking the kernel this disk is set to be removed+ from the member array. Finally the disk is marked failed in all other member arrays in the container. + Note This behavior differs slightly from native MD arrays where removal is reserved for a mdadm --remove event. In the external metadata case the container holds the final reference on a block device and a mdadm --remove <container> <victim> call is still required. Containers: External metadata formats, like DDF, differ from the native MD metadata formats in that they define a set of disks and a series of sub- arrays within those disks. MD metadata in comparison defines a 1:1 relationship between a set of block devices and a raid array. For example to create 2 arrays at different raid levels on a single set of disks, MD metadata requires the disks be partitioned and then each array can created be created with a subset of those partitions. The supported external formats perform this disk carving internally. Container devices simply hold references to all member disks and allow tools like mdmon to determine which active arrays belong to which container. Some array management commands like disk removal and disk add are now only valid at the container level. Attempts to perform these actions on member arrays are blocked with error messages like: "mdadm: Cannot remove disks from a 'member' array, perform this operation on the parent container" Containers are identified in /proc/mdstat with a metadata version string "external:<metadata name>". Member devices are identified by "external:/<container device>/<member index>", or "external:-<container device>/<member index>" if the array is to remain readonly. OPTIONS
CONTAINER The container device to monitor. It can be a full path like /dev/md/container, a simple md device name like md127, or /proc/mdstat which tells mdmon to scan for containers and launch an mdmon instance for each one found. [NEWROOT] In order to support an external metadata raid array as the rootfs mdmon needs to be started in the initramfs environment. Once the initramfs environment mounts the final rootfs mdmon needs to be restarted in the new namespace. When NEWROOT is specified mdmon will terminate any mdmon instances that are running in the current namespace, chroot(2) to NEWROOT, and continue monitoring the con- tainer. Note that mdmon is automatically started by mdadm when needed and so does not need to be considered when working with RAID arrays. The only times it is run other that by mdadm is when the boot scripts need to restart it after mounting the new root filesystem. SEE ALSO
mdadm(8), md(4). v3.0.3 MDMON(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:14 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy