Date: Fri, 14 Apr 2006 13:18:06 -0700 (PDT) From: Bigby Findrake <bigby@ephemeron.org> To: Garrett Cooper <youshi10@u.washington.edu> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Determining whether or not a SCSI disk is in use Message-ID: <20060414130832.Y81702@home.ephemeron.org> In-Reply-To: <443FF97B.6000303@u.washington.edu> References: <443F5CE6.4080107@u.washington.edu> <20060414091338.GY44921@wantadilla.lemis.com> <443FF97B.6000303@u.washington.edu>
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On Fri, 14 Apr 2006, Garrett Cooper wrote: > Yes. Recently accessed or is being accessed. > -Garrett Well, for a shell-script-hack, which (i) requires no new kernel and (ii) could be fairly portable but (iii) could conceivably miss some activity, you could do something like the following: #!/bin/sh DISKDEV=da0 SHUTDOWN_COMMAND="camcontrol stop 0,1,0" SECONDS=60 # check for activity # watch iostat for $SECONDS seconds for anything iostat -d $DISKDEV 1 5 | awk ' NR>2 && $2>0 { print "x" } ' |\ grep x > /dev/null STATUS=$? if [ $STATUS -eq 0 ] then # there was activity, $SHUTDOWN_COMMAND fi /-------------------------------------------------------------------------/ You always miss 100% of the chances you never take. finger://bigby@ephemeron.org http://www.ephemeron.org/~bigby/ irc://irc.ephemeron.org/#the_pub news://news.ephemeron.org/alt.lemurs /-------------------------------------------------------------------------/
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