Changes Prior to 1.9.0 release - Fix rpm build problem (stray %) - Minor manpage updates - Change "dirty" status to "active" as it was confusing people. Changes Prior to 1.8.0 release - Makefile cleanup from Luca Berra - --pid-file (-i) to set a pid file to use with --monitor --daemonise - Fix typo in mdadm man page - Fix coredump when "-s" used with no config file present. - Support new "faulty" personality which can inject synthetic faults. (Not in kernel.org yet at 1Nov2004) - Support raid0/linear on devices > 2 Terabytes - Make sure raid6 resyncs when created with one missing device Changes Prior to 1.7.0 release - Support "--grow --add" to add a device to a linear array, if the kernel supports it. Not documented yet. - Restore support for uclibc which was broken recently. - Several improvements to the output of --detail, including reporting "resyncing" or "recovering" in the state. - Close filedescriptor at end of --detail (exit would have closed it anyway, so this isn't abig deal). - Report "Sync checkpoint" in --examine output if appropriate. - Add --update=resync for --assemble mode to for a resync when the array is assembled. - Add support for "raid10", which is under development in 2.6. Not documented yet. - --monitor now reads spare-group and spares info from config file even when names of arrays to scan are given on the command line Changes Prior to 1.6.0 release - Device name given in -Eb is determined by examining /dev rather than assuming /dev/md%d - Fix bug in --monitor where an array could be held open an so could not be stopped without killing mdadm. - Add --grow mode. Currently only --size and --raid-disks can be changed. Both require kernel support which, at the time of writing, is not in a release kernel yet. - Don't print out "errors" or "no-errors" in -D and -E, as the bit is never set or used. - Use md event notification in 2.6.??? to make --monitor mode respond instantly to events. - Add --auto= option and auto= configfile entry to tell mdadm to create device files as needed. This is particularly useful with partitioned arrays where the major device number can change. - When generating --brief listing, if the standard name doesn't exist, search /dev for one rather than using a temp name. - Allow --build to build raid1 and multipath arrays. - Add "--assume-clean" for Create and Build, particularly for raid1 Note: this is dangerous. Only use it if you are certain. - Fix bug so that Rebuild status monitoring works again. - Add "degraded" and "recovering" options to the "Status:" entry for --detail Changes Prior to 1.5.0 release - new commands "mdassemble" which is a stripped-down equivalent of "mdadm -As", that can be compiled with dietlibc. Thanks to Luca Berra . It can be using in an initramfs or initrd. - Fix compiling error with BLKGETSIZE64 and some signed/unsigned comparison warnings. - Add Rebuild Status (% complete) to --detail output. - Support "--monitor --test" which will generate a test alert for each array once, to test notification paths. - Generate RebuildFinished event when rebuild finishes. - Support for raid6 as found in 2.6.2 - thanks to H. Peter Anvin - Support partitioned md arrays with a different major number and naming scheme (md_dX in /proc/mdstat, /dev/md/dXpY in /dev). Changes Prior to 1.4.0 release - Document fact that creating a raid5 array really creates a degraded array with a spare. - Add "spares=" tag to config file and generate it wit --detail and --examine - Add "SparesMissing" event when --monitor first sees an array and it doesn't have the enough spare devices. - Add --update=summaries for --assemble to update summary information in superblock, and correct other inconsistancies in the superblock. - Add --test option to --detail to set a meaningful exit status. Changes Prior to 1.3.0 release - Make 'size' and unsigned long in Create to allow creation of larger arrays. - Explicitly flag spare devices as 'spare' in --detail and --examine output. Previously they simply had no flags lists. - Make MailCmd (for monitor) configurable in Makefile, and default to "/usr/sbin/sendmail -t". Also split out the warning related flags into CWFLAGS for easier build configurability. - Minor bugfix in Manage code. - --monitor now notices and reports degraded arrays at startup using "DegradedArray" event, and also has a --oneshot option to only report DegradedArrays, and then exit. - Small man-page clarification w.r.t. raid levels and raid4 in particular. - Disallow creation of arrays with only one device as this is probably a mistake. --force will override this check. - Correct some misleading documentation in the "mdadm --create --help" message. - Ignore chunksize if raid1 or multipath. - Explicit statement in man page that raid-disks cannot be changed after array is created. - Improve message when attempting to start an array with insufficient devices. Instead of required the array to be full, we only require it has as many active devices as last time. Changes Prior to 1.2.0 release - Fix bug where --daemonise required an argument. - In --assemble --verbose, print appropriate message if device is not in devices= list - Updated mdadm.conf.5 to reflect fact that device= takes wildcards - Typos: componenet -> component - Reduce size of "--help" message put excess into "--help-options" - Fix bug introduced when MD_SB_DISKS dependancy removed, and which caused spares not be assembled properly. - Print appropriate message if --monitor --scan decides not to monitor anything. Changes Prior to 1.1.0 release - add --deamonise flag for --monitor - forks and prints pid to stdout - Fix bug so we REALLY clear dirty flag with -Af - -Db now prints a 'devices=' word for each array. - "mdadm -A /dev/md0" will get info from configfile, even without scan - When assembling multipath arrays, ignore devices which are flagged as having errors. - take --super-minor=dev to mean "use the minor number of the mddev being assembled. - take --config=none to mean "completely ignore config file" - Make --monitor require --scan or a device list. Changes Prior to 1.0.9 release - Documentation updates including kernel parameters documented in md.4 - --assemble --force for raid4/5 will mark clean, needed for 2.5 - --detail prints out the events counter as well - flush device before reading superblock to be sure to get current data - added mdadm.static target to makefile for static linking - --monitor was ignoring /dev/md0 due to off-by-one error - Fix assorted typos - Fix printing of Gibibytes - calc was wrong. - Fix printing of Array Size in --detail when very big. - --monitor no longer tries to work for raid0 or linear as these have nothing to be monitored. - The word 'partitions' on a DEVICE line will cause all partitions listed in /proc/partitions to be considered - If the config file is called 'partitions' then it will be treated as though it contained exactly 'device partitions' so e.g. mdadm -Ebsc partitions will find all raid partitions easily. - successfully assemble multipath devices by ignoring raid_disk value from superblock (it is always the same). - --assemble not tied to MD_SB_DISKS limit quite so much - Support compiling with tcc - Support compiling with uclibc - just skip scan of /dev - Add --update= option for Assemble mode. Either sparc2.2 or super-minor updates are possible. See mdadm.8 Changes Prior to 1.0.1 release - Round off MB/GiB etc values instead of round down. - Add --sparc2.2 option to examine to shift superblock around and --sparc2.2update to rewrite the superblock - Fix assorted typos in online help Changes Prior to 1.0.0 release - Allow --config with Misc mode (for --examine --scan) - Add $(CXFLAGS) to end of CFLAGS in makefile - When making an N disk raid5 array, the Nth drive is moved to the end of the array as a spare rather than being shifted up one place. This means that when the kernel builds onto the last spare and inserts it, the devices will be in the expected order. - Man page improvements Changes Prior to 0.8.2 release - Correct spelling of persist[ae]nce/persist[ae]nt. - Change "disk" to "device" in options and config file - convert array size to "long long" *before* shift-left in -D and -Q Changes Prior to 0.8.1 release - Add "INSTALL" file. - Fix some "i" variables that were not being set properly - Initialise minsize and maxsize so that compilers don't complain. - Tidy up Makefile and mdadm.spec installations - Add "multipath" to documentation of valid levels Changes Prior to 0.8 release - Fix another bug in Assemble.c due to confusing 'i' with 'j' - Minimal, untested, support for multipath - re-write of argument parsing to have more coherent modes, - add --query,-Q option - Update mdadm.8 to reflect arg processing change and --query - Change "long" to "unsigned long" for device sizes - Handle "mailaddr" and "program" lines in config file for follow/scan mode. - --follow --scan will exit if no program or mail found - Add MAILADDR and PROGRAM to mdadm.conf-example - Spell check man pages - consistently use "component devices" instead of "subdevices" - Make -Wall -Werror really work and fix lots of errors. - --detail and --stop can have --scan which chooses devices from /proc/mdstat - --monitor detects 20% changes in resync, failed spares, disappearing arrays, - --monitor --scan will automatically add any devices found in /proc/mdstat - --monitor will move spares between arrays with same spare-group if necessary - Documentation for Monitor Mode - --query notes if the array containing the given device is active or not - Finished md.4 man page. Changes Prior to 0.7.2 release - mdadm.spec updates and ifdef BLKGETSIZE64 from Luca Berra -- bluca@comedia.it - more mdadm.spec updates from Gregory Leblanc - make directory for mdadm.conf configurable in Makefile - Finished mdadm.conf.5. Removed details of conf file from mdadm.8 leaving a reference to mdadm.conf.5. - Fix bug in Assemble.c, thanks to Junaid Rizvi - Get --assemble --force to make sure old major/minor numbers are consistant, as md.c worries about this :-( Changes Prior to 0.7.1 release - update mdadm.spec - use BLKGETSIZE64 if available for array size - give human readable as GiB/MiB and GB and MB, with 2 decimal point precision - Only warn about size variation for raid1/4/5. - Started md.4 man page - Started mdadm.conf.5 man page Changes Prior to 0.7 release - Fix makefile to install binary at /sbin and not /sbin/sbin Also install man page. - Add --zero-superblock based on --destroywithextremeprejudice from Dale Stephenson - change name to mdadm. It is palandromic, and much nicer to pronouce. Changes Prior to 0.6 release - Remove the limit on the number of device names that can be given on the command line. - Fix bug in --assemble --force where it would only update a single superblock. - Fix bogus printing of big numbers not being block devices when given names of devices that don't exist. - When --assemble --force, consider superblocks with an event count that is 1 behind as out-of-date. Normally they are considered up-to-date (as the kernel assumes this too). - When marking drives as not-failed in the superblock, we also mark them as ACTIVE and SYNC. - Don't start arrays for which not all drives are available unless: --scan which implies that all drives were found automatically --run which means the user knows what they want --force which means that we are fixing something broken - Make sure all device numbers passed as 3rd arg of ioctl are passed as unsigned lock, so that it works on SPARC - If HOT_ADD_DISK failes for -a, then only try ADD_NEW_DISK if we cannot read from the array, i.e. if the array is not started yet. - man page update - Taught Examine to handle --scan. It examines all devices listed on DEVICE lines in the config file. - Added --brief (-b) flag for Examine and Detail to print out and mdctl.conf compatible description with uuid=, level=, disks= and - for Examine - devices= --examine --brief collects all devices the make the one array and list them as one entry. - Added level= and disks= options to ARRAY lines in config files so --brief output could be used as-is. - Make parity style ({left,right}-{,a}symmetric) consistantly use -, never _. - Add "Array Size" to --detail output - Change "Size" to "Device Size" and exclude from Detail of arrays that do not have a consistent device size. - Add Human readable MiB or GiB value on size lines of Detail and Examine - --assemble --scan doesn't complain about active drives - require number of spares given in -x to be listed. - Made --build actually work. Changes Prior to 0.5 release --assemble: spare drives are handled properly. --force can be used to recover from 2-drive failures on RAID5 If you belive that /dev/hda1 /dev/hdb1 /dev/hdc1 /dev/hdd1 should make a raid5 array, but it has experienced multiple failures and wont start, then mdctl --assemble --force /dev/md0 /dev/hd[abcd]1 Should update the superblock on the newest failed drive and restart the array in degraded mode. You should then remove the remaining failed drive and re-add it (if you are happy that it might work). Ofcourse whenever you have a 2-drive failure, you have a risk of corruption in data that hasn't be changed for a long time. So this doesn't give you your array back all nice and happy, but it does allow you to recover data that might not be corrupt. More flexibility in identifying a RAID array in the mdctl.conf e.g. array /dev/md4 super-minor=4 assembles /dev/md4 from all devices found that have a raid superblock that says the minor number of the array is 4. If the blocks with the right minor number do not all have the same UUID, an error is flags and no assembly happens. array /dev/md3 devices=/dev/hd[abc]2 Assembles /dev/md3 drom /dev/hda2 /dev/hdb2 and/dev/hdc2. All devices must exist and have raid superblock with the same uuid. If two identity specifiers are used, only devices that match all of them are considered, so array /dev/md2 devices=/dev/hd?2 super-minor=2 will assemble /dev/md2 using all /dev/hd?2 devices which have a raid superblock with minor number 2. --create: When listing devices for --create, the word "missing" can be used to indicate that the respective slot does not have a working drive currently. This is similar to the "failed-disk" directive in mkraid/raidtab. e.g. mdctl --create --level=5 -raid-disks=4 --spare-disks=2 /dev/md0 /dev/sda /dev/sdb missing /dev/sdc /dev/sdd /dev/sde will create a raid5 array with the third slot empty, and two spares. By default, raid5 arrays are created with the last slot empty and drive listed for the last slot added as a spare. If a "missing" slot is given, or if --force is given, then --create does exactly what you ask and doesn't try to be clever. --follow / --monitor: This is a new mode. I couldn't stop my self from picking a name starting with F (as current modes start A,B,C,D,E) but I relented and provided an alternate name that is somewhat more meaningful. In this mode, mdctl does not exit, but runs continuously and periodically polls all the md devices to see if they have had any interested state change. The changes that it currently notices are: Fail - an active disc fails FailSpare - a spare, that was presumably being build, fails ActiveSpare - a spare becomes active, presumably after a rebuild. Options: --mail mailaddress - send Email on any Fail* event --program program - run the program on any event. Args are: eventname mddevice subdevice(if-known) --delay seconds - change from the default 60second pause between polls. I plan to add functionality to this mode to allow sharing of spare drives. If an array is marks "spare-group=fred", and it has a failed drive and no spares, and if some other array is also "spare-group=fred" and it has no failed drives, but does have a spare drive that is big enough, the spare will be moved to the first array. I also have the idea of adding a --grow mode which will re-organise the data on an N disk raid0/4/5 array to be on an N+M disk array. I have no concrete plans for this though. I got rid of the "v" in the archive file name, and include the version number in the directory created by the archive. There is now a man page and mdctl.spec (for rpm) thanks to Danilo Godec . Ofcourse, the man page is now out of date and despite being based on the --help output, is not wholy correct. After I get --follow working properly, I plan to revise the various documentation and/or the code to make sure the two match.