Use the lsarraysyncprogress command
to display how synchronized a RAID array is.
Syntax
lsarraysyncprogress [ -nohdr ] [ -filtervalue attribute_value ] [ -filtervalue? ] [ -delim delimiter ] [ { mdisk_id | mdisk_name } ]
Parameters
- -nohdr
- (Optional) By default, headings are displayed for each column
of data in a concise style view, and for each item of data in a detailed
style view. The -nohdr parameter suppresses the
display of these headings.
Note: If there is no data to be displayed,
headings are not displayed.
- -filtervalueattribute=value
- (Optional) Specifies a list of one or more filters. Only objects
with a value that matches the filter attribute value are displayed.
Note: Some
filters allow the use of a wildcard when you enter the command. The
following rules apply to the use of wildcards:
- The wildcard character is the asterisk (*).
- The command can contain a maximum of one wildcard.
- When you use a wildcard, enclose the filter entry within double
quotation marks (""): lsarraysyncprogress -filtervalue mdisk_id="1*"
- -filtervalue?
- (Optional) Displays the valid filter attributes for the -filtervalue parameter:
- estimated_completion_time
- mdisk_id
- mdisk_name
- progress
- -delim delimiter
- (Optional) By default in a concise view, all columns of data are space-separated. The width of
each column is set to the maximum width of each item of data. In a detailed view, each item of data
has its own row, and if the headers are displayed, the data is separated from the header by a space.
The -delim parameter overrides this behavior. Valid input for the
-delim parameter is a 1-byte character. If you enter -delim :
on the command line, the colon character (:) separates all items of data in a concise view; for
example, the spacing of columns does not occur. In a detailed view, the data is separated from its
header by the specified delimiter.
- mdisk_id
- (Optional) The ID of the MDisk you want to view.
- mdisk_name
- (Optional) The user-defined name of the MDisk you want to view.
Description
This
command shows you how synchronized a RAID array is. It includes internal
activity that is working toward a fully synchronized array.
lsarraysyncprogress output provides
the potential output.
Table 1. lsarraysyncprogress
outputAttribute |
Value |
progress |
The percentage of the array that is synchronized. |
estimated_completion_time |
The expected synchronization completion time
(YYMMDDHHMMSS; blank if completion time unknown). |
A concise invocation example
lsarraysyncprogress –delim :
The
resulting output:
mdisk_id:mdisk_name:progress:estimated_completion_time
0:mdisk0:50:070301120000
1:mdisk1:51:070301130000
2:mdisk2:32:070301153500
A concise view (qualified with mdisk id for mdisk2)
invocation example
lsarraysyncprogress –delim : mdisk2
The
resulting output:
mdisk_id:mdisk_name:progress:estimated_completion_time
2:mdisk2:32:070301153500
A concise view (qualified with mdisk id for in sync
mdisk10) invocation example
lsarraysyncprogress –delim : mdisk_10
The
resulting output:
mdisk_id:mdisk_name:progress:estimated_completion_time
0:mdisk10:100: