metastat(1M) System Administration Commands metastat(1M)NAMEmetastat - display status for metadevice or hot spare pool
SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/metastat -h
/usr/sbin/metastat [-a] [-B] [-D] [-c] [-i] [-p] [-q]
[-s setname] [-t] [metadevice...] [hot_spare_pool...]
/usr/sbin/metastat [-a] [-B] [-D] [-c] [-i] [-p] [-q]
[-s setname] component...
DESCRIPTION
The metastat command displays the current status for each metadevice
(including stripes, concatenations, concatenations of stripes, mirrors,
RAID5, soft partitions, and trans devices) or hot spare pool, or of
specified metadevices, components, or hot spare pools.
It is helpful to run the metastat command after using the metattach
command to view the status of the metadevice.
metastat displays the state of each Solaris Volume Manager RAID-1 vol‐
ume on the system. The possible states include:
Okay The device reports no errors.
Needs maintenance A problem has been detected. This requires that
the system administrator replace the failed physi‐
cal device. Volumes displaying Needs maintenance
have incurred no data loss, although additional
failures could risk data loss. Take action as
quickly as possible.
Last erred A problem has been detected. Data loss is a possi‐
bility. This might occur if a component of a sub‐
mirror fails and is not replaced by a hot spare,
therefore going into Needs maintenance state. If
the corresponding component also fails, it would
go into Last erred state and, as there is no
remaining valid data source, data loss could be a
possibility.
Unavailable A device cannot be accessed, but has not incurred
errors. This might occur if a physical device has
been removed with Solaris Dynamic Reconfiguration
(DR) features, thus leaving the Solaris Volume
Manager volume unavailable. It could also occur if
an array or disk is powered off at system initial‐
ization, or if a >1TB volume is present when the
system is booted in 32-bit mode.
After the storage has been made available, run the
metastat command with the -i option to update the
status of the metadevices. This clears the
unavailable state for accessible devices.
See the for instructions on replacing disks and handling volumes in
Needs maintenance or Last erred states.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-a Display all disk sets. Only metadevices in disk sets that
are owned by the current host are displayed.
-B Display the current status of all of the 64-bit metade‐
vices and hot spares.
-c Display concise output.
There is one line of output for each metadevice. The out‐
put shows the basic structure and the error status, if
any, for each metadevice.
The -c output format is distinct from the -p output for‐
mat. The -p option does not display metadevice status and
is not intended as human-readable output.
-D Display the current status of all of the descriptive name
metadevices and hotspares.
-h Display usage message.
-i Check the status of RAID-1 (mirror) volumes, RAID-5 vol‐
umes, and hot spares. The inquiry checks each metadevice
for accessibility, starting at the top level metadevice.
When problems are discovered, the metadevice state data‐
bases are updated as if an error had occurred.
-p Display the list of active metadevices and hot spare
pools in the same format as md.tab. See md.tab(4).
The -p output is designed for snapshotting the configura‐
tion for later recovery or setup.
-q Display the status for metadevices without the device
relocation information.
-s setname Specify the name of the disk set on which metastat works.
Using the -s option causes the command to perform its
administrative function within the specified disk set.
Without this option, the command performs its function on
metadevices and hot spare pools in the local disk set.
-t Display the current status and timestamp for the speci‐
fied metadevices and hot spare pools. The timestamp pro‐
vides the date and time of the last state change.
OPERANDS
The following operands are supported:
component Display the status of the component hosting a soft
partition, including extents, starting blocks, and
block count.
hot_spare_pool Display the status of the specified hot spare
pool(s).
metadevice Display the status of the specified metadevice(s). If
a trans metadevice is specified, the status of the
master and log devices is also displayed. Trans
metadevices have been replaced by UFS logging. See
NOTES.
EXAMPLES
Example 1 Output Showing Mirror with Two Submirrors
The following example shows the partial output of the metastat command
after creating a mirror, opt_mirror, consisting of two submirrors,
opt_sub1 and opt_sub2.
# metastat opt_mirror
opt_mirror: Mirror
Submirror 0: opt_sub1
State: Okay
Submirror 1: opt_sub2
State: Resyncing
Resync in progress: 15 % done
Pass: 1
Read option: roundrobin (default)
Write option: parallel (default)
Size: 2006130 blocks
.
.
.
Example 2 Soft Partition on Mirror with Submirror
The following example shows the partial output of the metastat command
after creating a soft partition, d3, on concat d2, which is built on a
soft partition.
# metastat
d2: Concat/Stripe
Size: 204800 blocks
Stripe 0:
Device Start Block Dbase State Hot Spare
d0 0 No Okay
d0: Soft Partition
Component: c0t3d0s0
Status: Okay
Size: 204800 blocks
Extent Start Block Block count
0 129 204800
d3: Soft Partition
Component: d2
Status: Okay
Size: 202752 blocks
Extent Start Block Block count
0 129 202752
Example 3 Trans Metadevice
The following example shows the output of the metastat command after
creating a trans metadevice.
# metastat
d2: Concat/Stripe
Size: 204800 blocks
Stripe 0:
Device Start Block Dbase State Hot Spare
d0 0 No Okay
d0: Soft Partition
Component: c0t3d0s0
Status: Okay
Size: 204800 blocks
Extent Start Block Block count
0 129 204800
d3: Soft Partition
Component: d2
Status: Okay
Size: 202752 blocks
Extent Start Block Block count
0 129 202752
Example 4 Multi-owner disk set
The following example shows the output of the metastat command with a
multi-owner disk set and application-based mirror resynchronization
option. Application-based resynchronization is set automatically if
needed.
# metastat-s oban
oban/d100: Mirror
Submirror 0: oban/d10
State: Okay
Submirror 1: oban/d11
State: Okay
Pass: 1
Read option: roundrobin (default)
Write option: parallel (default)
Resync option: application based
Owner: None
Size: 1027216 blocks (501 MB)
oban/d10: Submirror of oban/d100
State: Okay
Size: 1027216 blocks (501 MB)
Stripe 0:
Device Start Block Dbase State Reloc Hot Spare
c1t3d0s0 0 No Okay
oban/d11: Submirror of oban/d100
State: Okay
Size: 1027216 blocks (501 MB)
Stripe 0:
Device Start Block Dbase State Reloc Hot Spare
c1t4d0s0 0 No Okay
WARNINGSmetastat displays states as of the time the command is entered. It is
unwise to use the output of the metastat-p command to create a
md.tab(4) file for a number of reasons:
o The output of metastat-p might show hot spares being used.
o It might show mirrors with multiple submirrors. See
metainit(1M) for instructions for creating multi-way mirrors
using metainit and metattach.
o A slice may go into an error state after metastat-p is
issued.
EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned:
0 Successful completion.
>0 An error occurred.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
│ ATTRIBUTE TYPE │ ATTRIBUTE VALUE │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│Availability │storage/svm │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│Interface Stability │Committed │
└─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘
SEE ALSOmdmonitord(1M), metaclear(1M), metadb(1M), metadetach(1M), metahs(1M),
metainit(1M), metaoffline(1M), metaonline(1M), metaparam(1M), metare‐
cover(1M), metarename(1M), metareplace(1M), metaroot(1M), metaset(1M),
metassist(1M), metasync(1M), metattach(1M), md.tab(4), md.cf(4),
mddb.cf(4), md.tab(4), attributes(5), md(7D)NOTES
Trans metadevices have been replaced by UFS logging. Existing trans
devices are not logging--they pass data directly through to the under‐
lying device. See mount_ufs(1M) for more information about UFS logging.
SunOS 5.11 26 Mar 2006 metastat(1M)