Relink a chunk to a device after a disk failure
On UNIX™, if the disk on which the actual mirror file or raw device is located goes down, you can relink the chunk to a file or raw device on a different disk. If you do this, you can recover the mirror chunk before the disk that failed is brought back online. Typical UNIX™ commands that you can use for relinking are shown in the following examples.
The original setup consists
of a primary root chunk and a mirror root chunk, which are linked
to the actual raw disk devices, as follows:
ln -l
lrwxrwxrwx 1 informix 10 May 3 13:38 /dev/root@->/dev/rxy0h
lrwxrwxrwx 1 informix 10 May 3 13:40 /dev/mirror_root@->/dev/rsd2b
Assume
that the disk on which the raw device /dev/rsd2b is
located has gone down. You can use the rm command
to remove the corresponding symbolic link, as follows:
rm /dev/mirror_root
Now
you can relink the mirror chunk path name to a raw disk device, on
a disk that is running, and proceed to recover the chunk, as follows:
ln -s /dev/rab0a /dev/mirror_root