Hard drives: Difference between revisions

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* ext4 by default reserves a certain number of blocks for the super-user (5% by default). You can override that setting with tune2fs /dev/sdd1 -m 1 for example (it would set the number of blocks to 1%).
* ext4 by default reserves a certain number of blocks for the super-user (5% by default). You can override that setting with tune2fs /dev/sdd1 -m 1 for example (it would set the number of blocks to 1%).
* To reboot and check the filesystem (force a fsck), issue:
shutdown -Fr


= Monitoring your hard drives using SMART =
= Monitoring your hard drives using SMART =

Revision as of 20:58, 30 November 2009

This article discusses the monitoring of hard drives, the best way to deal with hard drive failures, and general hard drive information. It explains how to make a complete backup of your Gentoo system into another hard drive.

Filesystems

  • ext4 by default reserves a certain number of blocks for the super-user (5% by default). You can override that setting with tune2fs /dev/sdd1 -m 1 for example (it would set the number of blocks to 1%).
  • To reboot and check the filesystem (force a fsck), issue:
shutdown -Fr

Monitoring your hard drives using SMART

Modern hard drives come with a self monitoring system called SMART. This system will apparently report problems and can detect in advance about 2/3 of hard drive failures. Under Linux, a set of tools, smartmontools, may be used to diagnose your hard drives. You can use the program smartctl manually, or install a daemon that will always run on your system and report failures.

Backing up your data and system

Making a stage4

Under Linux everything is a file so it is easy to create a complete backup of your system. With Gentoo the best way is to generate a personal "stage4" file. Follow this guide on the Gentoo Wiki to do just that.

  • Warning: don't exclude "/usr/src/*" from the stage 4 as stated by the guide! /usr/src contains the kernel source, used by several packages, and more importantly, it also contains the kernel's .config file. If you exclude /usr/src in your stage4, you'll have to reedit your kernel configuration.
  • Be very careful about the /dev/null and /dev/console nodes. They are indeed needed to boot currently, even with udev. So it is mandatory to create these nodes statically, in the "real" /dev of the new hard drive. If you just follow the guide's instructions, you'll create the nodes after /dev points to something, so they won't reside on the real /dev directory of the hard drive. I advise to create them before chrooting and binding the /dev of the LiveCD.

Just copying everything

  • Copying everything using cp -ar will result in a working system. Just exclude dev, proc, sys directories. Even with a recent udev, you still need to create the /dev/null and/dev/console nodes in /dev. This is because they are needed *before* udev is started.

Useful Links