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The server must of course have some disks configured. Let's say we have this simple server with disks as a few sparse host files: main() { rump_init(); rump_pub_etfs_register("/disk1", "./disk1.img", RUMP_ETFS_BLK); rump_pub_etfs_register("/disk2", "./disk2.img", RUMP_ETFS_BLK); rump_pub_etfs_register("/disk3", "./disk3.img", RUMP_ETFS_BLK); rump_pub_etfs_register("/disk4", "./disk4.img", RUMP_ETFS_BLK); pause(); } And we run the server: mainbus0 (root) Kernelized RAIDframe activated /disk1: hostpath ./disk1.img (97 GB) /disk2: hostpath ./disk2.img (97 GB) /disk3: hostpath ./disk3.img (97 GB) /disk4: hostpath ./disk4.img (97 GB) We can then configure the raid against the server: > ./raidctl -c theraid.conf raid0 And lo, we have evidence of a level1 raid in the server dmesg: raid0: RAID Level 1 raid0: Components: /disk1 /disk2 /disk3 /disk4 raid0: Total Sectors: 409599744 (199999 MB) yea, i initialized it already in a previous run: > ./raidctl -S raid0 Reconstruction is 100% complete. Parity Re-write is 100% complete. Copyback is 100% complete. |
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.. | ||
Makefile | ||
raidctl.8 | ||
raidctl.c | ||
rf_configure.c | ||
rf_configure.h |