In the command output, you should see a message that the system ID has changed on the impaired node,
showing the correct old and new IDs. In the following example, node2 has undergone replacement and has
a new system ID of 151759706.
node1> storage failover show
Ê Takeover
Node Partner Possible State Description
------------ ------------ --------
-------------------------------------
node1 node2 false System ID changed on
partner (Old:
Ê 151759755, New:
151759706), In takeover
node2 node1 - Waiting for giveback
(HA mailboxes)
4. From the healthy node, verify that any coredumps are saved:
a.
Change to the advanced privilege level:
set -privilege advanced
You can respond Y when prompted to continue into advanced mode. The advanced mode prompt
appears (*>).
b.
Save any coredumps:
system node run -node local-node-name partner savecore
c. Wait for savecore command to complete before issuing the giveback.
You can enter the following command to monitor the progress of the savecore command:
system
node run -node local-node-name partner savecore -s
d.
Return to the admin privilege level:
set -privilege admin
5. Give back the node:
a.
From the healthy node, give back the replaced node’s storage:
storage failover giveback
-ofnode replacement_node_name
the replacement node takes back its storage and completes booting.
If you are prompted to override the system ID due to a system ID mismatch, you should enter
y.
If the giveback is vetoed, you can consider overriding the vetoes.
Find the High-Availability Configuration Guide for your version of ONTAP 9
b. After the giveback has been completed, confirm that the HA pair is healthy and that takeover is
possible:
storage failover show
The output from the storage failover show command. should not include the System ID changed
on partner message.
6. Verify that the disks were assigned correctly: storage disk show -ownership
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