Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Sun T3-1 hardware RAID
Special Forums Hardware Sun T3-1 hardware RAID Post 302526687 by soliberus on Wednesday 1st of June 2011 10:05:07 AM
Old 06-01-2011
What I would like to know is:

1.) If I create the RAID volumes from the OBP, how would the OS know when a disk has failed?

2.) In the event of a disk failure, do I have to bring the server down to the OBP to replace the disk OR is it a case of swapping the drives and OBP is clever enough to update itself with the new device path etc?

---------- Post updated at 03:05 PM ---------- Previous update was at 12:13 PM ----------

Things just got even more interesting. It seems I'm limited to 2 volumes if I configure RAID from OBP. What's that about?

The server can take 16 disks and I'm limited to only 2 RAID 1 volumes, surely that can't be right?
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Hardware RAID

I don't understood why on SPARC-Platforms have not present RAID-Controller ? Sorry for my bad english, but it's crazy always setup software RAID !!! I whanna Hardware RAID and when i can find solution ? (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: jess_t03
7 Replies

2. Solaris

how to hardware RAID 1 on T5120

Hi, I have t5120 sparc and I have 2 146 G drives in the system. I will be installing solaris 10 and also want the system mirrored using Hardware RAID "1" The System did come preinstalled as it comes from sun. I did not do much on it. I booted system using boot cdrom -s gave format... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: upengan78
6 Replies

3. 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

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

RAID software vs hardware RAID

Hi Can someone tell me what are the differences between software and hardware raid ? thx for help. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: presul
2 Replies

5. Solaris

Hardware Raid - LiveUpgrade

Hi, I have a question. Do LiveUpgrade supports hardware raid? How to choose the configuration of the system disk for Solaris 10 SPARC? 1st Hardware RAID-1 and UFS 2nd Hardware RAID-1 and ZFS 3rd SVM - UFS and RAID1 4th Software RAID-1 and ZFS I care about this in the future to take... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bieszczaders
1 Replies

6. Hardware

Hardware RAID on Sun T2000 Server

Hi All I have a Sun T2000 server. Couple of years ago I had configured and mirrored the boot drive with an other drive using hardware RAID 1 using raidctl command. Following is the hardware RAID output. root@oracledatabaseserver / $ raidctl RAID Volume RAID RAID Disk... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tirmazi
0 Replies

7. Solaris

Software RAID on top of Hardware RAID

Server Model: T5120 with 146G x4 disks. OS: Solaris 10 - installed on c1t0d0. Plan to use software raid (veritas volume mgr) on c1t2d0 disk. After format and label the disk, still not able to detect using vxdiskadm. Question: Should I remove the hardware raid on c1t2d0 first? My... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: KhawHL
4 Replies

8. Solaris

Hardware RAID not recognize the new disk [Sun T6320]

We have hardware RAID configured on Sun-Blade-T6320 and one of the disk got failed. Hence we replaced the failed disk. But the hot swapped disk not recognized by RAID. Kindly help on fixing this issue. We have 2 LDOM configured on this server and this server running on single disk. #... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: rock123
8 Replies

9. Solaris

Hardware raid patching

Dear All , we have hardware raid 1 implemented on Solaris Disks. We need to patch the Servers. Kindly let me know how to patch hardware raid implemented Servers. Thanks... Rj (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: jegaraman
7 Replies
volwatch(8)						      System Manager's Manual						       volwatch(8)

NAME
volwatch - Monitors the Logical Storage Manager (LSM) for failure events and performs hot sparing SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/volwatch [-m] [-s] [-o] [mail-addresses...] OPTIONS
Runs volwatch with the mail notification support to notify root (by default) or other specified users when a failure occurs. This option is started by default. Runs volwatch with hot spare support. Specifies an argument to pass directly to volrecover if it is running and hot spare support is enabled. DESCRIPTION
The volwatch command monitors LSM waiting for exception events to occur. When an exception event occurs, the volwatch command uses mailx(1) to send mail to: The root account. The user accounts specified when you use the rcmgr command to set the VOLWATCH_USERS variable in the /etc/rc.config.common file. The user account that you specify on the command line with the volwatch command. The volwatch command uses the volnotify command to wait for events to occur. When an event occurs, there is a 15 second delay before the failure is analyzed and the message is sent. This delay allows a group of related events to be collected and reported in a single mail message. By default, the volwatch command automatically starts when the system boots. You can enter the volwatch -s command to start the volwatch command with hot-spare support. Hot-spare support: Detects LSM events result- ing from the failure of a disk, plex, or RAID5 subdisk. Sends mail to the root account (and other specified accounts) with notification about the failure and identifies the affected LSM objects. Determines which subdisks to relocate, finds space for those subdisks in the disk group, relocates the subdisks, and notifies the root account (and other specified accounts) of these actions and their success or failure. When a partial disk failure occurs (that is, a failure affecting only some subdisks on a disk), redundant data on the failed portion of the disk is relocated and the existing volumes comprised of the unaffected portions of the disk remain accessible. Note Hot-sparing is only performed for redundant (mirrored or RAID5) subdisks on a failed disk. Non-redundant subdisks on a failed disk are not relocated, but you are notified of the failure. Only one volwatch daemon can be running on a system or cluster node at any time. Hot-sparing does not guarantee the same layout of data or the same performance after relocation. You may want to make some configuration changes after hot-sparing occurs. Mail Notification Support The following is a sample mail notification when a failure is detected: Failures have been detected by the Logical Storage Manager: failed disks: medianame ... failed plexes: plexname ... failed log plexes: plexname ... failing disks: medianame ... failed subdisks: subdiskname ... The Logical Storage Manager will attempt to find spare disks, relocate failed subdisks and then recover the data in the failed plexes. The following describes the sections of the mail message: The medianame list under failed disks specifies disks that appear to have com- pletely failed; The medianame list under failing disks indicates a partial disk failure or a disk that is in the process of failing. When a disk has failed completely, the same medianame list appears under both failed disks: and failing disks. The plexname list under failed plexes shows plexes that have been detached due to I/O failures experienced while attempting to do I/O to subdisks they contain. The plex- name list under failed log plexes indicates RAID5 or dirty region log (DRL) plexes that have experienced failures. The subdiskname list specifies subdisks in RAID5 volumes that have been detached due to I/O errors. Enabling Hot-Sparing By default, hot-sparing is disabled. To enable hot-sparing, enter the volwatch command with the -s option, for example: # volwatch -s To use hot-spare support you should configure a disk as a spare, which identifies the disk as an available site for relocating failed sub- disks. Disks that are identified as spares are not used for normal allocations unless you explicitly specify otherwise. This ensures that there is a pool of spare disk space available for relocating failed subdisks and that this disk space is not consumed by normal operations. Spare disk space is the first space used to relocate failed subdisks. However, if no spare disk space is available or if the available spare disk space is not suitable or sufficient, free disk space is used. You must initialize a spare disk and place it in a disk group as a spare before it can be used for replacement purposes. If no disks are designated as spares when a failure occurs, LSM automatically uses any available free disk space in the disk group in which the failure occurs. If there is not enough spare disk space, a combination of spare disk space and free disk space is used. When hot-sparing selects a disk for relocation, it preserves the redundancy characteristics of the LSM object to which the relocated sub- disk belongs. For example, hot-sparing ensures that subdisks from a failed plex are not relocated to a disk containing a mirror of the failed plex. If redundancy cannot be preserved using available spare disks and/or free disk space, hot-sparing does not take place. If relocation is not possible, mail is sent indicating that no action was taken. When hot-sparing takes place, the failed subdisk is removed from the configuration database and LSM takes precautions to ensure that the disk space used by the failed subdisk is not recycled as free disk space. Initializing and Removing Hot-Spare Disks Although hot-sparing does not require you to designate disks as spares, Compaq recommends that you initialize at least one disk as a spare within each disk group; this gives you control over which disks are used for relocation. If no spare disks exist, LSM uses available free disk space within the disk group. When free disk space is used for relocation purposes, it is likely that there may be performance degra- dation after the relocation. Follow these guidelines when choosing a disk to configuring as a spare: The hot-spare feature works best if you specify at least one spare disk in each disk group containing mirrored or RAID5 volumes. If a given disk group spans multiple controllers and has more than one spare disk, set up the spare disks on different controllers (in case one of the controllers fails). For a mirrored volume, the disk group must have at least one disk that does not already contain one of the volume's mirrors. This disk should either be a spare disk with some avail- able space or a regular disk with some free space. For a mirrored and striped volume, the disk group must have at least one disk that does not already contain one of the volume's mirrors or another subdisk in the striped plex. This disk should either be a spare disk with some available space or a regular disk with some free space. For a RAID5 volume, the disk group must have at least one disk that does not already contain the volume's RAID5 plex or one of its log plexes. This disk should either be a spare disk with some available space or a regular disk with some free space. If a mirrored volume has a DRL log subdisk as part of its data plex (for example, volprint does not list the plex length as LOGONLY), that plex cannot be relocated. Therefore, place log subdisks in plexes that contain no data (log plexes). By default, the volassist command creates log plexes. For mirroring the root disk, the rootdg disk group should contain an empty spare disk that satisfies the restrictions Although it is possible to build LSM objects on spare disks, it is preferable to use spare disks for hot-spare only. When relocating subdisks off a failed disk, LSM attempts to use a spare disk large enough to hold all data from the failed disk. To initialize a disk as a spare that has no associated subdisks, use the voldiskadd command and enter y at the following prompt: Add disk as a spare disk for newdg? [y,n,q,?] (default: n) y To initialize an existing LSM disk as a spare disk, enter: # voledit set spare=on medianame For example, to initialize a disk called test03 as a spare disk, enter: # voledit set spare=on test03 To remove a disk as a spare, enter: # voledit set spare=off medianame For example, to make a disk called test03 available for normal use, enter: # voledit set spare=off test03 Replacement Procedure In the event of a disk failure, mail is sent, and if volwatch was configured to run with hot sparing support with the -s option, volwatch attempts to relocate any subdisks that appear to have failed. This involves finding appropriate spare disk or free disk space in the same disk group as the failed subdisk. To determine which disk from among the eligible spare disks to use, volwatch tries to use the disk that is closest to the failed disk. The value of closeness depends on the controller, target, and disk number of the failed disk. For example, a disk on the same controller as the failed disk is closer than a disk on a different controller; a disk under the same target as the failed disk is closer than one under a different target. If no spare or free disk space is found, the following mail message is sent explaining the disposition of volumes on the failed disk: Relocation was not successful for subdisks on disk dm_name in volume v_name in disk group dg_name. No replacement was made and the disk is still unusable. The following volumes have storage on medianame: volumename ... These volumes are still usable, but the redundancy of those volumes is reduced. Any RAID-5 volumes with storage on the failed disk may become unusable in the face of further failures. If non-RAID5 volumes are made unusable due to the failure of the disk, the following is included in the mail message: The following volumes: volumename ... have data on medianame but have no other usable mirrors on other disks. These volumes are now unusable and the data on them is unavailable. These volumes must have their data restored. If RAID5 volumes are made unavailable due to the disk failure, the following message is included in the mail message: The following RAID-5 volumes: volumename ... have storage on medianame and have experienced other failures. These RAID-5 volumes are now unusable and data on them is unavailable. These RAID-5 volumes must have their data restored. If spare disk space is found, LSM attemps to set up a subdisk on the spare disk and use it to replace the failed subdisk. If this is suc- cessful, the volrecover command runs in the background to recover the contents of data in volumes on the failed disk. If the relocation fails, the following mail message is sent: Relocation was not successful for subdisks on disk dm_name in volume v_name in disk group dg_name. No replacement was made and the disk is still unusable. error message If any volumes (RAID5 or otherwise) are rendered unusable due to the failure, the following is included in the mail message: The following volumes: volumename ... have data on dm_name but have no other usable mirrors on other disks. These volumes are now unusable and the data on them is unavailable. These volumes must have their data restored. If the relocation procedure completes successfully and recovery is under way, the following mail message is sent: Volume v_name Subdisk sd_name relocated to newsd_name, but not yet recovered. Once recovery has completed, a message is sent relaying the outcome of the recovery procedure. If the recovery was successful, the follow- ing is included in the mail message: Recovery complete for volume v_name in disk group dg_name. If the recovery was not successful, the following is included in the mail message: Failure recovering v_name in disk group dg_name. SEE ALSO
mailx(1), rcmgr(8), voldiskadm(8), voledit(8), volintro(8), volrecover(8) volwatch(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:43 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy