Cannot mount guarded filesystem The filesystem is potentially mounted on another node

Cannot mount guarded filesystem The filesystem is potentially mounted on another node



JFS2 Filesystem Concurrent Mount Protection (Mount Guard)


This new feature implemented for JFS2 filesystems to prevent simultaneous mounting. While AIX PowerHA can give concurrent access of volume groups to multiple systems, mounting a JFS2 filesystem on multiple nodes simultaneously will cause filesystem corruption. These simultaneous mount events can also cause a system crash, when the system detects a conflict between data or metadata in the filesystem and the in-memory state of the filesystem. The only exception to this is mounting the filesystem read-only, where files or directories can't be changed.


In AIX 7100-01 and 6100-07 a new feature called "Mount Guard" has been added to prevent simultaneous or concurrent mounts. If a filesystem appears to be mounted on another server, and the feature is enabled, AIX will prevent mounting on any other server. Mount Guard is not enabled by default, but is configurable by the system administrator. The option is not allowed to be set on base OS filesystems such as /, /usr, /var etc.

Using Mount Guard


To turn on Mount Guard on a filesystem you can permanently enable it via /usr/sbin/chfs:

# chfs -a mountguard=yes /mountpoint
/mountpoint is now guarded against concurrent mounts.

To turn off mount guard:

# chfs -a mountguard=no /mountpoint
/mountpoint is no longer guarded against concurrent mounts.

To determine the mount guard state of a filesystem:

# lsfs -q /mountpoint
Name            Nodename   Mount Pt               VFS   Size    Options    Auto Accounting
/dev/fslv34     --         /mountpoint            jfs2  4194304 rw         no   no
  (lv size: 4194304, fs size: 4194304, block size: 4096, sparse files: yes, inline log: no, inline log size: 0, EAformat: v1, Quota: no, DMAPI: no, VIX: yes, EFS: no, ISNAPSHOT: no, MAXEXT: 0, MountGuard: yes)


Error: Cannot mount guarded filesystem. The filesystem is potentially mounted on another node:

After a system crash the filesystem may still have mount flags enabled and refuse to be mounted. In this case the guard state can be temporarily overridden by the "noguard" option to the mount command:

# mount -o noguard /mountpoint
mount: /dev/fslv34 on /mountpoint:
Mount guard override for filesystem.
The filesystem is potentially mounted on another node.
  

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