75 lines
3.2 KiB
Groff
75 lines
3.2 KiB
Groff
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I am pleased to announce the availability of
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mdadm version 3.2.1
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It is available at the usual places:
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countrycode=xx.
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http://www.${countrycode}kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/raid/mdadm/
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and via git at
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git://neil.brown.name/mdadm
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http://neil.brown.name/git/mdadm
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Many of the changes in this release are of internal interest only,
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restructuring and refactoring code and so forth.
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Most of the bugs found and fixed during development for 3.2.1 have been
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back-ported for the recently-release 3.1.5 so this release primarily
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provides a few new features over 3.1.5.
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They include:
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- policy framework
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Policy can be expressed for moving spare devices between arrays, and
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for how to handle hot-plugged devices. This policy can be different
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for devices plugged in to different controllers etc.
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This, for example, allows a configuration where when a device is plugged
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in it is immediately included in an md array as a hot spare and
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possibly starts recovery immediately if an array is degraded.
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- some understanding of mbr and gpt paritition tables
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This is primarly to support the new hot-plug support. If a
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device is plugged in and policy suggests it should have a partition table,
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the partition table will be copied from a suitably similar device, and
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then the partitions will hot-plug and can then be added to md arrays.
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- "--incremental --remove" can remember where a device was removed from
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so if a device gets plugged back in the same place, special policy applies
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to it, allowing it to be included in an array even if a general hotplug
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will not be included.
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- enhanced reshape options, including growing a RAID0 by converting to RAID4,
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restriping, and converting back. Also convertions between RAID0 and
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RAID10 and between RAID1 and RAID10 are possible (with a suitably recent
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kernel).
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- spare migration for IMSM arrays.
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Spare migration can now work across 'containers' using non-native metadata
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and specifically Intel's IMSM arrays support spare migrations.
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- OLCE and level migration for Intel IMSM arrays.
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OnLine Capacity Expansion and level migration (e.g. RAID0 -> RAID5) is
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supported for Intel Matrix Storage Manager arrays.
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This support is currently 'experimental' for technical reasons. It can
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be enabled with "export MDADM_EXPERIMENTAL=1"
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- avoid including wayward devices
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If you split a RAID1, mount the two halves as two separate degraded RAID1s,
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and then later bring the two back together, it is possible that the md
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metadata won't properly show that one must over-ride the other.
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mdadm now does extra checking to detect this possibilty and avoid
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potentially corrupting data.
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- remove any possible confusion between similar options.
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e.g. --brief and --bitmap were mapped to 'b' and mdadm wouldn't
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notice if one was used where the other was expected.
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- allow K,M,G suffixes on chunk sizes
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While mdadm-3.2.1 is considered to be reasonably stable, you should
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only use it if you want to try out the new features, or if you
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generally like to be on the bleeding edge. If the new features are not
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important to you, then 3.1.5 is probably the appropriate version to be using
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until 3.2.2 comes out.
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NeilBrown 28th March 2011
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