Thank you to those that responded. In my situation, no command was needed to rebuild the mirror. The 1st replacement disk had some fault that prevented it from being used. It was marked as "incompatible", but I could only see this if I entered the bios. The 2nd replacement disk worked fine, and immediately started to sync when inserted into the system. Now all looks well: # raidctl -l c1t0d0 Volume Size Stripe Status Cache RAID Sub Size Level Disk ---------------------------------------------------------------- c1t0d0 375.1M N/A OPTIMAL ON RAID1 0.0.0 375.1M GOOD 0.1.0 375.1M GOOD Thanks again for the suggestions. On Tue, Nov 30, 2010 at 10:41 AM, Tim Longo <gloomtin@gmail.com> wrote: > I have a v40z system that has two internal disks in a raid 1 config. > One of the two disks failed, so I replaced the failed disk. However > I'm not sure what I need to do to get it to rebuild the mirror? > > OS: Solaris 10 x86 > > Below output is what I see after replacing the failed disk: > > # raidctl -l c1t0d0 > Volume B B B B B B B B B Size B B Stripe B Status B Cache B RAID > B B B B Sub B B B B B B B B B B Size B B B B B B B B B B Level > B B B B B B B B Disk > ---------------------------------------------------------------- > c1t0d0 B B B B B B B B B 375.1M B N/A B B DEGRADED ON B B RAID1 > B B B B B B B B 0.0.0 B 375.1M B B B B B GOOD > B B B B B B B B 0.1.0 B 375.1M B B B B B FAILED _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Thu Dec 2 15:02:33 2010
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