Sunday, May 31, 2009

Mirroring your OpenSolaris root disk with ZFS

Solaris/OpenSolaris supports booting with ZFS filesystem. For example, if you look into your opensolaris insallation you'll notice the zfs rpool (root pool). ZFS is default filesystem on opensolaris (optional with Solaris). If you look into detailts of that pool with zpool utility , you'll see that it's a single disk or a partition (depends how you partitioned your disk on installation process of opensolaris). If that single disk crashes, you may lost your data and operating system.That's one point of failure. The simple solution is to convert our zpool into RAID-1 with a secondary disk (with same capacity or bigger one).









As you can see, our zpool contains a single disk called c4t0d0. Let's add a new disk to our rpool to convert it into mirror. zpool will do it automatically for us. One important point here is that Solaris doesn't support boot devices to be in EFI label format. So, if your new disk label is in EFI format, you need to convert it into SMI label. So, I'll use fdisk command to create a Solaris2 partition and remove any EFI labels if present. My new disk name is c4t1d0.






After creating the partition which covers whole disk area, I copied partition map of original rpool member c4t0d0 to our new disk c4t1d0.




Now, it's time to attach our brand new disk into rpool. After attaching the disk, our rpool pool will be converted into mirror (raid-1). Except one thing, the grub boot manager. We need to install it into new disk by hand using installgrub command.





Now, we have created our mirror on rpool. It will take time to sync original disk to new disk. You can watch this process by using zpool's status command.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Super and helpful. Will try it later.

Anonymous said...

Very helpful... Works like a charm.

Thanks!

Unknown said...

I have a question doubt.
Why is it first c4t0d0p0, and later you call it as c4t0d0s0.
In the pftvtoc and zpool attach COMMANDS.

Why first as p and later on as s?

Unknown said...

Hi Jasen,

p0 means whole disk. s stands for solaris slice, so s0 is solaris slice number 0.

Anonymous said...

Keep posting stuff like this i really like it

Andy said...

Worked a treat! Thanks for taking the time to post and help out a newbie.