One of the HDDs in my server's RAID config failed, so I took it out of the array and had the data center hot-swap it. They've done that, but now the new drive is /dev/sdc rather than /dev/sda. I suspect that if I reboot the server, it will be /dev/sda again, so I'm hesitant to add it back to the array as /dev/sdc because I don't want to lay a trap for myself to fall into on the next reboot. I'd just as soon not reboot the server if I don't need to (if I do need to, well, too bad for me).
If I add it as /dev/sdc, will there be a problem on reboot? Or is there some way to change the device name from /dev/sdc to /dev/sda without rebooting?
This is on Ubuntu 10.04 LTS. It's an md array ("Linux Software RAID"), where currently one of the devices (there are a couple of them) looks like this ("degraded" because I've removed the old /dev/sda from it):
# mdadm --detail /dev/md0
/dev/md0:
Version : 00.90.03
Creation Time : Sun Oct 11 21:07:54 2009
Raid Level : raid1
Array Size : 97536 (95.27 MiB 99.88 MB)
Used Dev Size : 97536 (95.27 MiB 99.88 MB)
Raid Devices : 2
Total Devices : 1
Preferred Minor : 0
Persistence : Superblock is persistent
Update Time : Thu Jun 30 09:31:16 2011
State : clean, degraded
Active Devices : 1
Working Devices : 1
Failed Devices : 0
Spare Devices : 0
UUID : 496be7a5:ab9177ed:7792c71e:7dc17aa4
Events : 0.112
Number Major Minor RaidDevice State
0 8 17 0 active sync /dev/sdb1
1 0 0 1 removed