Date: Tue, 26 May 2009 23:34:22 +0200 (CEST) From: Wojciech Puchar <wojtek@wojtek.tensor.gdynia.pl> To: Peter Steele <psteele@webmail.maxiscale.com> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Is this a gmirror bug? Message-ID: <alpine.BSF.2.00.0905262333080.48107@wojtek.tensor.gdynia.pl> In-Reply-To: <B8A480488C0C6849826655761349EA4338D4@owa.webmail.maxiscale.com> References: <B8A480488C0C6849826655761349EA4338D4@owa.webmail.maxiscale.com>
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> I've seen this kind of thing appear in my df output: > linprocfs 4 4 0 100% /proc > > /dev/mirror/gm0d 4058062 -377792 4111210 -10% /tmp > > /dev/mirror/gm0e 15231278 -113942 14126718 -1% /var > > /dev/ad10s3e 121487580 4 111768570 0% /v3 > > /dev/ad8s3e 121487580 4 111768570 0% /v2 > > /dev/ad6s3e 121487580 4 111768570 0% /v1 > > /dev/ad4s3e 121487580 4 111768570 0% /v0 > > > > It's showing that two partitions in my gm0 partition are below 0% > capacity. This is clearly wrong, but what does it mean? > it has nothing to do with gmirror - no matter if it's virtual disk (gm0 that case) or physical, partition or not, it's just block device to UFS. definitely it is some problem but with UFS here. unmount this filesystems and do fsck_ffs -y on them
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