Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: X4100 Bios RAID question
Operating Systems Solaris X4100 Bios RAID question Post 302097399 by hcclnoodles on Friday 24th of November 2006 05:19:48 AM
Old 11-24-2006
X4100 Bios RAID question

Hi there

the Sunfire X4100 has a great tool that you can get to from BIOS called the configuration utility which allows you to set up Disk mirroring (RAID 1) before the OS sees it, which is great and it works a treat, however, we have a large datacentre across multiuple sites and I need to find out if there is a way remotely that I can check if a disk has failed and switched over to the mirror or indeed just to confirm the mirror is up and stable and everything is ok? ...obviously it is not feasible to visit each machine with a monitor and keyboard then reboot it, just to check if all is OK

I know IPMI tool is used to probe hardware on x86 boxes and maybe this is what I could use? but thats just a guess

Does anybody know how I can proactively monitor the mirroring situation of these boxes remotely? the Sun documentation for these boxes gives no indication of a command line utility to check this stuff

Any help would be greatly appreciated

Cheers
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. AIX

RS6000 SSA Raid question

Hi Can I add disks on the fly to extend the capacity of an existing RAID 5 volume? It's created on a 4P Advanced SSA Raid Adapter. I need to extend a volume group, so I figured it would be easiest to extend the "physical disk" which is a RAID5 volume. Thanks. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: osee
1 Replies

2. Solaris

T2000 RAID Question

New to the boards here so please bear with me! I have a T2000 server with Solaris 10 installed on it. Disk 0 is the only disk currently being used, as I do NOT have a RAID set up. Disk 1 is just sitting there looking pretty. I'd like to set up a mirrored RAID in order to fully utilize both... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: phi148
5 Replies

3. SuSE

openSuse 11.1 RAID 0 Question

Hello, I have a file server running openSuse 11.1, that has two HDDs running in RAID 0 (mirroring) using the md software RAID linux driver. I was considering removing this RAID, using one of the drives as the OS and the other as a data drive. Is there any way to stop using this as a RAID set to do... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: vwgtiturbo
4 Replies

4. Solaris

Sun T5120 hardware RAID question

Hi everyone I've just purchased a Sun T5120 server with 2 internal disks. I've configured hardware RAID (mirror) and as a result the device tree in Solaris only contains 1 hard drive. My question is, how would I know when one of the drives become faulty? Thanks (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: soliberus
2 Replies

5. AIX

SCSI PCI - X RAID Controller card RAID 5 AIX Disks disappeared

Hello, I have a scsi pci x raid controller card on which I had created a disk array of 3 disks when I type lspv ; I used to see 3 physical disks ( two local disks and one raid 5 disk ) suddenly the raid 5 disk array disappeared ; so the hardware engineer thought the problem was with SCSI... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: filosophizer
0 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

RAID on Solaris Question

Hello folks; I'm trying to install Solaris 10 x86 on SUN X4150 box with 6 disks in it, the question is how can i create a Virtual disk like RAID 0 before i install Solaris. When i boot up i don't see any option to go and create my raid before the installation begin. Thanks in advance for any... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Katkota
2 Replies

7. Solaris

Sun V240 Raid Question

Hi All, I'm new to this site. I have a few question since I'm in the process how to to repair my raid on Sun V240 Server. 1. How can we create RAID in Sun Sparc v240? 2. What utility can help people create RAID in Sun Sparc v240? 3. Do we need any special software to create the... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: angkor
12 Replies

8. Red Hat

RAID Configuration for IBM Serveraid-7k SCSI RAID Controller

Hello, I want to delete a RAID configuration an old server has. Since i haven't the chance to work with the specific raid controller in the past can you please help me how to perform the configuraiton? I downloaded IBM ServeRAID Support CD but i wasn't able to configure the video card so i... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: @dagio
0 Replies

9. SCO

Rebuild RAID 1 from BIOS only option?

SCO UNIX 5.0.7, IBM x-series 235 w/ LSI controller. I can't for the life of me find any documentation for an OS level application, or an entry in scoadmin to rebuild the array or even find logs within the OS. Is my only option to rebuild the array from the BIOS tool before boot up? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: psytropic
2 Replies
CCDCONFIG(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					      CCDCONFIG(8)

NAME
ccdconfig -- configuration utility for the concatenated disk driver SYNOPSIS
ccdconfig [-cv] ccd ileave [flags] dev ... ccdconfig -C [-v] [-f config_file] ccdconfig -u [-v] ccd ... ccdconfig -U [-v] [-f config_file] ccdconfig -g [ccd ...] DESCRIPTION
The ccdconfig utility is used to dynamically configure and unconfigure concatenated disk devices, or ccds. For more information about the ccd, see ccd(4). The options are as follows: -c Configure a ccd. This is the default behavior of ccdconfig. -C Configure all ccd devices listed in the ccd configuration file. -f config_file When configuring or unconfiguring all devices, read the file config_file instead of the default /etc/ccd.conf. -g Dump the current ccd configuration in a format suitable for use as the ccd configuration file. If no arguments are specified, every configured ccd is dumped. Otherwise, the configuration of each listed ccd is dumped. -u Unconfigure a ccd. -U Unconfigure all ccd devices listed the ccd configuration file. -v Cause ccdconfig to be verbose. A ccd is described on the command line and in the ccd configuration file by the name of the ccd, the interleave factor, the ccd configuration flags, and a list of one or more devices. The flags may be represented as a decimal number, a hexadecimal number, a comma-separated list of strings, or the word ``none''. The flags are as follows: CCDF_UNIFORM 0x02 Use uniform interleave CCDF_MIRROR 0x04 Support mirroring CCDF_NO_OFFSET 0x08 Do not use an offset CCDF_LINUX 0x0A Linux md(4) compatibility The format in the configuration file appears exactly as if it were entered on the command line. Note that on the command line and in the configuration file, the flags argument is optional. # # /etc/ccd.conf # Configuration file for concatenated disk devices # # ccd ileave flags component devices ccd0 16 none /dev/da2s1 /dev/da3s1 The component devices need to name partitions of type FS_BSDFFS (or ``4.2BSD'' as shown by disklabel(8)). If you want to use the Linux md(4) compatibility mode, please be sure to read the notes in ccd(4). FILES
/etc/ccd.conf default ccd configuration file EXAMPLES
A number of ccdconfig examples are shown below. The arguments passed to ccdconfig are exactly the same as you might place in the /etc/ccd.conf configuration file. The first example creates a 4-disk stripe out of four scsi disk partitions. The stripe uses a 64 sector interleave. The second example is an example of a complex stripe/mirror combination. It reads as a two disk stripe of da4 and da5 which is mirrored to a two disk stripe of da6 and da7. The last example is a simple mirror. The 2nd slice of /dev/da8 is mirrored with the 3rd slice of /dev/da9 and assigned to ccd0. # ccdconfig ccd0 64 none /dev/da0s1 /dev/da1s1 /dev/da2s1 /dev/da3s1 # ccdconfig ccd0 128 CCDF_MIRROR /dev/da4 /dev/da5 /dev/da6 /dev/da7 # ccdconfig ccd0 128 CCDF_MIRROR /dev/da8s2 /dev/da9s3 The following are matching commands in Linux and FreeBSD to create a RAID-0 in Linux and read it from FreeBSD. # Create a RAID-0 on Linux: mdadm --create --chunk=32 --level=0 --raid-devices=2 /dev/md0 /dev/hda1 /dev/hdb1 # Make the RAID-0 just created available on FreeBSD: ccdconfig -c /dev/ccd0 32 linux /dev/ada0s1 /dev/ada0s2 When you create a new ccd disk you generally want to fdisk(8) and disklabel(8) it before doing anything else. Once you create the initial label you can edit it, adding additional partitions. The label itself takes up the first 16 sectors of the ccd disk. If all you are doing is creating file systems with newfs, you do not have to worry about this as newfs will skip the label area. However, if you intend to dd(1) to or from a ccd partition it is usually a good idea to construct the partition such that it does not overlap the label area. For example, if you have A ccd disk with 10000 sectors you might create a 'd' partition with offset 16 and size 9984. # disklabel ccd0 > /tmp/disklabel.ccd0 # disklabel -Rr ccd0 /tmp/disklabel.ccd0 # disklabel -e ccd0 The disklabeling of a ccd disk is usually a one-time affair. If you reboot the machine and reconfigure the ccd disk, the disklabel you had created before will still be there and not require reinitialization. Beware that changing any ccd parameters: interleave, flags, or the device list making up the ccd disk, will usually destroy any prior data on that ccd disk. If this occurs it is usually a good idea to reini- tialize the label before [re]constructing your ccd disk. RECOVERY
An error on a ccd disk is usually unrecoverable unless you are using the mirroring option. But mirroring has its own perils: It assumes that both copies of the data at any given sector are the same. This holds true until a write error occurs or until you replace either side of the mirror. This is a poor-man's mirroring implementation. It works well enough that if you begin to get disk errors you should be able to backup the ccd disk, replace the broken hardware, and then regenerate the ccd disk. If you need more than this you should look into external hardware RAID SCSI boxes, RAID controllers (see GENERIC), or software RAID systems such as geom(8) and gvinum(8). SEE ALSO
dd(1), ccd(4), disklabel(8), fdisk(8), gvinum(8), rc(8) HISTORY
The ccdconfig utility first appeared in NetBSD 1.0A. BUGS
The initial disklabel returned by ccd(4) specifies only 3 partitions. One needs to change the number of partitions to 8 using ``disklabel -e'' to get the usual BSD expectations. BSD
October 1, 2013 BSD
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:06 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy