Hindsight: had you used persistent superblocks, this would not have
been a problem. The kernel would know the correct ordering from the
superblocks, not the device names.
Solution 1: Write to the RAID mailing list and have one of the mdadm
gurus give you a one-liner to initialize the array with the proper
ordering.
Solution 2: Edit your /etc/raidtab to reflect the new device naming and
run raidstart.
If you start up the array with a bad ordering, no amount of magic is
going to bring back you data (after parity has been "reconstructed" on
various chunks of your existing data).
>
> I hope this is not too off topic... Please excuse that.
>
linux-raid is a better place.
Cheers,
--
................................................................
: jakob@unthought.net : And I see the elder races, :
:.........................: putrid forms of man :
: Jakob Østergaard : See him rise and claim the earth, :
: OZ9ABN : his downfall is at hand. :
:.........................:............{Konkhra}...............:
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