Setup / Configure RAID
The RAID Configuration Program Screens
When you configure your disk array, or even just view its configuration,
you will be using the IBM RAID configuration program on the IBM SCSI-2
Fast/Wide Streaming-RAID Adapter/A Option Diskette (also called the IBM
RAID controller diskette). The following figure is a compilation of many
of the IBM RAID Controller Disk Array
Configuration (also called the IBM RAID configuration program) screens.
The list below the figure gives explanations of the numbered areas of the
figure.
1. This pop-up allows you to select the RAID level you want to assign
to the logical drive you are defining, and it allows you to select the
logical drive size. You can enter the size, in megabytes, or you can accept
the default value shown. When you need to confirm an action, the Confirm
pop-up appears in this area.
2. You can select any of the choices that appear on the menus.
3. The Bay/Array selection list shows each bay in the server (for each
channel) numbered 1 through 7. The abbreviation in the bay indicates the
status of the drive installed in the bay. Selections are made from this
list
to determine which bays (hard disk drives) are in your arrays. The
letter to the right of the bay, identifies the array in which the hard
disk drive in that bay is grouped. Note: The Channel/Bay/Array area on
the screen does not reflect the physical configuration of the server. In
your server, the hard disk drives are installed in horizontal banks of
bays (in banks C, D, and E there are 6 bays, numbered 1 through 6 from
left to right). See Installing Internal Drives to see the physical location
of the hard disk drives.
4. The Array list shows you the array ID and the size (in megabytes)
of the array. Note: The capacity (size) is shown in binary equivalent.
When a drive is being rebuilt, this area, along with the Logical Drive
list area, shows the progression of the rebuilding process.
5. The Logical Drive list identifies the logical drive (for example,
A1), the size of the logical drive, the RAID level assigned to the logical
drive, the date it was created, and the write policy. The status of the
logical drive also is shown. Good means that all is well with the drive;
Critical means that you must replace the drive or do a rebuild operation.
(You will have received a message telling you the drive is in a Critical
state.) Offline means that the logical drive is nonrecoverable; the data
in that drive is lost. When a drive is being rebuilt, this area, along
with the Array list area, shows the progression of the rebuilding process.
Note: The capacity (size) is shown in binary equivalent. During an initialization
process, the Write Policy area displays the percent initialized; during
a synchronization process, it displays the percent synchronized.
6. The information area tells you the action you can perform on this
screen or pop-up.
Starting the RAID Configuration Program
To start the RAID configuration program, insert the IBM
RAID controller diskette into the primary drive and turn on the system.
If the system already is on, press Ctrl+Alt+Del. If you have more than
one RAID adapter, you will get an adapter selection screen. Otherwise,
the Main Menu appears.
You can select Help from any menu. To return to the previous screen
or to the previous work area of a screen,
press Esc. To select a menu item, press the number of the item or use
the Up Arrow or Down Arrow to highlight the item, then press Enter.
The Main Menu contains the following choices:
o Help: Select this choice when you need additional information.
o View configuration: Select this choice to see the existing disk array
configuration.
o Create/delete array: Select this choice to define a hot-spare drive,
select the drives for an array you want to create, or to delete an existing
array. This choice also has choices for defining a logical drive and formatting
a drive. Whenever you make changes to the disk-array configuration and
select Exit, the Confirm pop-up window will appear. You must select Yes
to save and activate the changes.
o Initialize/synchronize array: Select this choice after creating an
array to:
- Set the drive to a predetermined value. For proper operation of RAID
levels 1 or 5, you must select Initialize/synchronize array. Any data existing
on the drive is overwritten with zeros, and the corresponding
parity information is initialized to the correct value.
You can choose to initialize more than one logical drive at a time.
Also, you can interrupt the initialization process at any time by pressing
Esc. Then, you can either restart the initialization process by pressing
Enter,
or you can end the process by pressing Esc again.
- Synchronize logical drive: This selection recomputes and rewrites
the parity data on the drive. You can select this choice to recompute parity
data for RAID levels 1 or 5. This selection does not alter data on the
drive. The synchronization process can be done on multiple logical drives.
o Rebuild device: Select this choice to rebuild logical drives. The
rebuild operation is supported only for RAID levels 1 and 5.
o Advanced functions: Select this choice to change the write policy
(the way data is written to the drive), to save your configuration information
to a diskette, to restore it from a diskette, or to change RAID parameters.
This choice also allows you to do a low-level format.
o Drive information: Select this choice to view information about the
SCSI devices (hard disk, CD-ROM, tape, and so on) connected to the RAID
adapter.
o Exit: Select this choice to leave the Main Menu.
Viewing the RAID Configuration
Before creating or changing a disk array, you can look at the current
configuration by selecting View Configuration from the Main Menu of the
RAID configuration program.
To view the disk-array configuration:
1. Start the RAID configuration program by inserting the IBM RAID controller
diskette into the primary drive and turning on the system. If the system
already is on, press Ctrl+Alt+Del.
2. Select View configuration. The current disk-array configuration
information appears on the screen.
3. Press Enter to see the stripe order in the Bays Occupied (Ch:Bay)
field.
4. Press any key to continue.
5. Press Esc to return to the Main Menu.
Performing Common Tasks
The Create/Delete Array menu of the RAID configuration program contains
the more common tasks for configuring disk arrays. Procedures to complete
these tasks are contained in the following subtopics.
Subtopics:
o Defining a Hot-Spare Drive
o Deleting a Disk Array
o Creating a Disk Array
o Adding Drives to Create an Additional Array
o Defining Logical Drives
Defining a Hot-Spare Drive
To define a drive as a hot-spare drive:
1. Start the RAID configuration program by inserting the IBM RAID controller
diskette into the primary drive and turning on the system. If the system
already is on, press Ctrl+Alt+Del.
2. Select Create/delete arrayfrom the Main Menu.
3. Select Define hot-spare drive.The cursor will become active in the
Bay/Array selection list. Note: Only SCSI hard disk drives are shown as
RDY, ONL, DDD, OFL, or HSP state. SCSI tape and
CD-ROM drives are not shown. They appear when you select drive information.
Refer to Bay/Array Selection List for the drive status meanings. The numbers
shown on the left are the bay IDs. See Installing Internal Drives for an
explanation of the bay IDs.
4. Use the Up Arrow or Down Arrow to highlight the RDY (ready) drive
you want to define as the hot spare; then press Enter. The RDY changes
to HSP (hot spare). You can press Enter again to toggle between HSP and
RDY.
5. Press Esc when you have finished. The cursor will become active
in the Create/Delete Array menu.
6. If you want to create a disk array, go to Creating a Disk Array.
7. If you are finished:
a. Select Exit or press Esc. A pop-up window will appear asking you
to confirm your change.
Note: The changes you make are not saved until you confirm them by
selecting Yes in the Confirm pop-up window.
b. Select No if you do not want the drive you selected to be a hot
spare; select Yes to define it as a hot-spare drive.
c. Back up the disk-array configuration information to diskette. Refer
to Backing Up Your Disk-Array Configuration for instructions.
Deleting a Disk Array
The last array created must be the first deleted.
Warning:All the data and programs in the array are lost during this
procedure. Before proceeding, back up any data and programs that you want
to save.
To delete a disk array:
1. Start the RAID configuration program by inserting the IBM RAID controller
diskette into the primary drive and turning on the system. If the system
already is on, press Ctrl+Alt+Del.
2. Select Create/delete arrayfrom the Main Menu.
3. Select Delete disk arrayfrom the Create/Delete Array menu. The cursor
will be active in the Array list.
4. Review the Date Created column in the Logical Drive list; then press
the Up Arrow or Down Arrow to highlight the most recently defined array.
Warning:All the data and programs in the array will be lost during this
procedure.
5. Press Del. The Confirm pop-up window appears.
6. If you do not want to delete the array, select No. To delete the
array, select Yes. Note: To use hard disks from the existing array when
creating a new array, you must confirm the deletion of the existing array.
If a defunct drive is still in a bay, the status shows a blank bay,
as though there is no drive in that bay. When you replace the drive, the
status will show RDY after you reconfigure and select Yes in the Confirm
pop-up
window.
Note: In some operating systems, deleting an array and associated logical
drives might change the drive letters assigned to the existing drives.
Creating a Disk Array
To create a disk array:
1. Start the RAID configuration program by inserting the IBM RAID controller
diskette into the primary drive and
turning on the system. If the system already is on, press Ctrl+Alt+Del.
Note: To create an array using hard disks in an existing array, refer
to Redefining Space in an Array.
2. Select Create/delete arrayfrom the Main Menu.
3. Select Create disk arrayfrom the Create/Delete Array menu.
The cursor will be active in the Bay/Array selection list.
Important: In the following step, when you press Enter to select a
drive for an array, you cannot deselect it by
pressing Enter again, as you can with the hot-spare selection process.
Carefully determine which drives you want to include in the array before
beginning the selection process.
If you change your mind after selecting the drives for an array, you
can delete the array (by selecting Delete disk array from the Create/Delete
Array menu) and begin again.
4. Select each drive you want in the array by using the Up Arrow or
Down Arrow to highlight the drive and then pressing Enter. As you select
each drive, the status will change from RDY (Ready) to ONL (Online).
5. When you have selected all the drives you want to include in the
array, press Esc. The cursor will become active in the menu.
6. If you have drives you did not use in this array and you want to
create another array, you can do one of the following:
o Define the logical drive or drives for this array; then create another
array and its logical drives. See Defining Logical Drives.
o Create another array now by repeating steps 2 through 5 in this procedure;
then define logical drives for both arrays.
Note: You must define at least one logical drive for each created array
before you can exit the configuration program.
o Continue with Defining Logical Drives.
Adding Drives to Create an Additional Array
To add storage capacity to your server without disturbing existing
data:
1. Install the additional hard disk drive or drives. (See Installing
Internal Drives.)
2. Start the RAID configuration program by inserting the IBM RAID controller
diskette into the primary drive and turning on the system. If the system
already is on, press Ctrl+Alt+Del.
3. Create a new disk array and define logical drives (see Creating
a Disk Array for detailed instructions).
Defining Logical Drives
After you have created an array, you must define a logical drive. (You
cannot leave the RAID configuration program until you define the logical
drives for any created arrays.)
To define a logical drive:
1. Select Define Logical drivefrom the Create/Delete Array menu. The
cursor is active in the Array list.
2. Use the Up Arrow or Down Arrow to highlight the array you want to
define; then press Enter. The Select RAID
Level pop-up window appears, and the cursor is active in the window.
Note: The system automatically assigns RAID level 0 to any logical
drives defined in an array containing only one hard disk drive. When this
is the case, the Select RAID Level pop-up window will not appear. If you
have only two hard disk drives in the array, the Select RAID Level pop-up
window appears, but RAID level 5 is not selectable because you need at
least three hard disk drives in an array to assign RAID level 5 to one
of the logical drives. You can define more than one logical drive for your
array. The only restriction is that the maximum number of logical drives
you can define is eight.
3. Use the Up Arrow or Down Arrow to highlight the RAID level you want
to assign to these logical drives, then press Enter.
Note: Because the level you assign can influence the space needed for
the drive, you must assign a RAID level before you enter the size of the
logical drive. The Logical Drive list shows you the logical drive ID, the
size of each logical drive, the RAID level you assigned to that logical
drive, and the date that the logical drive was created.
The status of the logical drive also is shown. Good means that all
is well with the drive. Critical means that you must replace the hard disk
drive or do a rebuild operation. (You will have received a message telling
you
what has happened to the drive.) Offline means that the logical drive
is irrecoverable; the data on that drive is lost. The Logical Drive Size
pop-up window shows the space in this array that is available for logical
drives.
4. Type the size, in megabytes, that you want for the logical drive;
then press Enter. A pop-up window appears
asking you to confirm your action.
Information about the new logical drive appears in the Logical Drive
list.
Note: The size appearing in the Logical Drive list might be different
from the size you typed because it appears
in binary equivalent. The size of a logical drive is determined by
a number of factors, but basically the size must be divisible by the number
of drives in the array.
Consider the following scenarios:
Scenario 1: There are three 1GB drives in the array. You assign RAID
level 0 (which uses all the drives in the array with no parity storage),
and type "1000MB". The "Size (MB)" will be 999, which is the number closest
to and lower than 1000 that is divisible by 3.
Scenario 2: There are three 1GB drives in the array, and you assign
RAID level 5. Data is striped across all three drives in the array, but
the space equivalent to that of one drive is used for redundant storage.
Therefore, if you type "1000MB", the "Size (MB)" remains 1000 because
it is divisible by 2 (drives), which is the space available for data.
If you do not use the entire array for this logical drive, you can
create another by assigning either the same or a different RAID level for
an additional logical drive. You can have as many as eight logical drives
among four disk arrays.
5. To return to the Create/Delete Array menu, press Esc. To define
more logical drives, repeat steps 1 through 5 of this procedure.
6. To leave this screen, select Exit or press Esc. A pop-up window
appears asking you to confirm your action.
7. To save your changes, select Yes. To maintain the disk-array configuration
that was in place before you made changes, select No.
8. If you are using RAID level 1 or RAID level 5, you must select Initialize
logical drivefor proper operation. This sets the drive to a predetermined
state. Any data existing on the drive is overwritten with zeros, and corresponding
parity is initialized to the correct value.
a. Select Initialize/synchronize arrayfrom the Main Menu; then select
Initialize logical drive.
b. Select the logical drives you want to initialize from the Logical
Drive list by pressing the Spacebar (the selected drives will appear highlighted).
To start the initialization, press Enter. A pop-up window appears asking
you to confirm your action.
Warning:If you select Yes in the Confirm pop-up window, information
in the logical drive will be overwritten with zeros.
c. Select Yes to confirm that you want to initialize this logical drive.
The initialization process begins, and you can see its progress in
the Pct. Int. (Percent Initialized) column of the Logical Drive list.
d. To stop the initialization at any time, press Esc. Then press Esc
again to return to the menu, or press Enter to continue initializing the
drive.
9. To back up the disk-array configuration to diskette, you will need
a 3.5-inch formatted diskette. To back up the disk-array configuration:
a. Select Advanced functionsfrom the Main Menu.
b. Select Backup config. to diskette.
Follow the instructions on the screen. A pop-up window shows the default
file name of CONFIG. You can change the file name by typing over the default.
The Backup program will assign a file-name extension of .dmc.
Drive Maintenance
The following section provides information about status indicators
for logical and hard disk drives, and the results of a hard disk drive
failure. It also contains procedures for replacing defunct drives and for
redefining the space in an array by replacing logical drives.
Subtopics:
o Obtaining Drive Status
o Results of a Hard Disk Drive Failure
o Logical and Hard Disk Drive Status Indications
o Replacing a Faulty Drive
Obtaining Drive Status
To see the ID, capacity, and other information about each of the hard
disk drives attached to the RAID adapter:
1. Start the RAID configuration program by inserting the IBM RAID controller
diskette into the primary drive and turning on the system. If the system
already is on, press Ctrl+Alt+Del.
2. Select Drive information.
3. Use the Up Arrow or Down Arrow to highlight each of the drives shown
in the Bay/Array selection list. As a drive is highlighted, the information
for that drive is shown at the bottom of the screen.
4. Press Esc to return to the Main Menu.
Note: The status of the hard disk drive determines the status of the
logical drives in the array in which the hard disk is grouped.
Subtopics:
o Bay/Array Selection List
o Blank Status
Bay/Array Selection List
The status of the drives in the Bay/Array selection list is defined
as follows:
Status Meaning
CDR CD-ROM drive installed.
DDD Defunct. The drive is an online or hot-spare drive that does not
respond to commands. (If a RDY drive is defunct or powered down, it shows
an empty bay (a blank status), not a DDD status).
FMT Format. The drive is being reformatted.
HSP Hot spare. The drive will replace a similar drive that becomes
defunct in real time. At that time, its status changes to ONL, and its
array association is displayed.
OFL Offline. The drive is a good drive that has replaced a defunct
drive in a RAID level 1 or level 5 array. It is associated with an array,
but does not contain any valid data. The drive state remains OFL during
the
rebuild phase.
ONL Online. The drive is part of an array. If this drive fails, logical
drives defined in the array in which this
drive is grouped will have a status of offline (if the logical drive
is assigned RAID level 0 with a good status) or Critical (if the logical
drive is assigned RAID level 1 or level 5 with a good status).
RDY Ready. The drive is recognized by the adapter and is available
for definition.
TAP Tape drive installed.
UFM Unformatted. The drive requires a low-level format before it can
be used in an array.
Any of the following circumstances can cause the status area to be blank:
o No hard disk drive is installed in that bay.
o The bay contains a hard disk drive, but the drive is not inserted
correctly.
o An array was deleted and a defunct drive is still in the bay.
o A new drive was installed and the configuration program has not been
restarted. (The status will change to RDY when the RAID configuration program
is restarted.)
Results of a Hard Disk Drive Failure
Depending on the circumstances, there can be several possible results
from a drive failure.
Scenario 1:
o Only one hard disk drive fails.
o A hot-spare drive is defined that is the same or greater size than
the failed drive.
o The logical drives in the array are assigned RAID level 1, level
5, or a combination of these two levels. Then the hot spare will take over
immediately. Data for logical drives assigned RAID levels 1 and 5 is maintained;
however, system performance will be reduced. Hot-spare drive capability
does not apply to logical drives assigned RAID level 0.
Scenario 2:
o Only one hard disk drive fails.
o A hot-spare drive is not defined.
o The logical drives in the array are assigned RAID levels 1, 5, or
a combination of these two levels. Then no data will be lost, but the system
will operate at reduced performance until the defunct drive is replaced
and rebuilt.
Scenario 3:
If more than one drive fails, all data is lost. Therefore, it is important
that you replace and rebuild a defunct drive as soon as possible.
Logical and Hard Disk Drive Status Indications
The status of the hard disk drive determines the status of the logical
drives in the array in which the hard disk is grouped.
o A single hard disk drive failure (indicated by a DDD status in the
Bay/Array selection list) causes logical drives in that array that are
assigned levels 1 and 5 to have a Critical status. Data remains in logical
drives with a Critical status, but you must replace the one defunct hard
disk drive promptly, because if two hard disk drives were to fail, all
of the data in the array would be lost. After you install a new hard disk
drive, the Replace process changes the drive status from DDDto OFL if there
is
a Critical logical drive. After the Rebuild process, the hard disk
drive status changes from OFL to ONL.
o A single or multiple hard disk drive failure causes logical drives
in that array that are assigned level 0 to have an offline status. Data
in logical drives with an offline status is lost. However, with a multipledisk
drive failure, when the defunct drives are part of the same array, logical
drives in that array will have an offline status. This means that data
is lost in all the logical drives in that array, regardless of which RAID
level is assigned.
Replacing a Faulty Drive
The hard disk drive indicator light will blink when the drive has failed
and needs to be replaced (DDD state only). See Removing a Drive from Bank
C, D, or E to locate the faulty hard disk drive.
To replace a faulty drive:
1. Start the RAID configuration program by inserting the IBM RAID controller
diskette into the primary drive and turning on the system. If the system
already is on, press Ctrl+Alt+Del.
If the drive failed while the system was powered down, a screen appears
the next time the system is powered on showing you which drive is defunct.
2. If the drive is not damaged (for example, it is not inserted correctly):
a. Turn off the system.
b. Correct the problem.
c. Remove the diskette or ServerGuide CD from the drive.
d. Restart the system.
3. If the drive is defunct:
a. Press Y (Yes) to reconfigure the system.
b. Press Ctrl+Alt+Delwhen instructed to restart the system. The Main
Menu appears.
c. Select Rebuild device. At this point, the drive status shows DDD.
Warning: Removing the wrong hard disk drive can cause loss of all data
in the array.
d. Replace the defunct drive. Refer to Removing a Drive from Bank C,
D, or E.
e. After you have replaced the drive, press Enter. The system will
reconfigure to include the drive, and the drive’s status will change to
OFL.
f. Allow the system to complete the configuration (the screen displays
a completion message); then select Rebuild drive.
g. Use the Up Arrow or Down Arrow to highlight the OFL (offline) drive
you want to rebuild; then press Enter.
(The progress of the rebuilding process appears on the screen.)
h. When the rebuilding process completes, press Esc to return to the
Main Menu. The new configuration will be saved automatically.
i. Backup the new configuration (see Backing Up Your Disk-Array Configuration).
j. Select Exit to end the RAID configuration program.
k. Remove the diskette and press Ctrl+Alt+Del to restart the system.
Redefining Space in an Array
You can redefine space in a disk array in a number of ways. For example,
you can combine a number of small logical drives to create a larger one
or you can redefine the existing logical drive into several smaller drives.
Also, you can install additional hard disk drives to create a larger logical
drive than was possible with the existing storage capacity.
One method to redefine space in an array is to change the RAID level
assigned to a logical drive. For example, if you assigned RAID level 1
to a logical drive and then decided you needed the capacity offered with
RAID level 5, you can use this procedure to replace the existing logical
drive with a logical drive assigned the new RAID level. To redefine the
space in a disk array, first you must delete the array. The last disk array
defined must be the first deleted.
Warning:In all cases, when you delete an array, all the data and programs
in the array are lost. If you have data and programs that you want to save,
they must be backed up and then restored. It is suggested you use a high-speed
backup device, such as a tape drive. To redefine the space in an array:
1. Back up all data and programs in the array.
2. If needed, install additional hard disk drives.
Refer to the User’s Referencefor information about selecting drive
sizes.
3. Insert the IBM RAID controller diskette; then press Ctrl+Alt+Del
to start the RAID configuration program.
4. Delete the existing array:
a. Select Create/delete arrayfrom the Main Menu. The Create/Delete
Array menu will disappear.
b. Select Delete disk array. The cursor will be active in the Bay/Array
list.
c. Review the Logical Drive List Date Created column; then press the
Up Arrow or Down Arrow to highlight the most recently defined array.
Note: You must delete disk arrays in descending order; the last one
created must be the first one deleted.
d. Press Del. The Confirm pop-up window appears.
Warning:All the data in the array will be lost during this procedure.
Be sure to back up all data and programs that you want to save.
e. If you do not want to delete the array, select No. To delete the
array select, Yes. Note: To use the hard disks from the existing array
when creating a new array, you must confirm the deletion of the existing
array. After you make your selection, the Confirm pop-up window will disappear,
and the cursor will be active in the menu.
5. If you want a drive defined as a hot spare, refer to Defining a
Hot-Spare Drive for step-by-step instructions.
6. Create a new disk array and define logical drives.
See Creating a Disk Array for instructions on creating a disk array
and defining logical drives.
7. After you have established the new array and logical drive or drives,
select Initialize/synchronize array from the Main Menu; then select Initialize
logical driveto prepare the drives in the array to receive data. This sets
the drive to a predetermined state. Any data existing in the drive is overwritten
with zeros, and corresponding
parity is initialized to the proper value.
8. Insert a 3.5-inch formatted diskette in the primary drive, select
Advanced functionsfrom the Main Menu; then select Backup config. to diskette.Follow
the instructions on the screen.
9. Exit the RAID configuration program by pressing Esc or selecting
Exit while on the Main Menu. A pop-up window will appear asking you to
confirm your action.
10. Reinstall your operating system and device drivers, then restore
your data and programs.
Advanced Functions
You can select several utilities from the Advanced Functions menu.
They include:
o Backup configuration to diskette
o Restore configuration to diskette
o Change the write policy
o Change the RAID parameters
o Format a drive
Subtopics:
o Backing Up Your Disk-Array Configuration
o Restoring the Disk-Array Configuration
o Using the Advanced Functions
Backing Up Your Disk-Array Configuration
The RAID adapter maintains a record of the disk-array configuration
information in its EEPROM (electronically erasable programmable read-only
memory) module. The disk-array configuration is vital information. To protect
this information, back up the information to diskette as soon as you have
completed your tasks. You need a blank, formatted, 3.5-inch diskette.
To back up the disk-array configuration information to diskette:
1. Label the blank diskette "Disk Array Configuration Backup," and
date it.
2. Start the RAID configuration program by inserting the IBM RAID controller
diskette into the primary drive and turning on the system. If the system
already is on, press Ctrl+Alt+Del.
3. Select Advanced functionsfrom the Main Menu.
4. Select Backup config. to diskette.
5. Remove the RAID controller diskette from the drive and insert the
blank diskette.
6. Follow the instructions on the screen.
Restoring the Disk-Array Configuration
To restore the disk-array configuration information in the RAID adapter
EEPROM module, use the RAID controller diskette and an up-to-date Disk
Array Configuration Backup diskette.
Note: Because dynamic changes in the configuration of your disk array
occur due to hot-spare drive replacement or other drive maintenance activity,
the configuration backup information on the diskette might be different
from that in the adapter. It is important that you back up the disk-array
configuration information frequently, to keep the backup information on
the diskette current. To restore the RAID configuration information:
1. Start the RAID configuration program by inserting the IBM RAID controller
diskette into the primary drive and
turning on the system. If the system already is on, press Ctrl+Alt+Del.
2. Select Advanced functionsfrom the Main Menu.
3. Select Restore config. from diskette.
4. Follow the instructions on the screen.
Using the Advanced Functions
This section gives the procedures for using the advanced functions,
such as changing the write policy, changing the RAID parameters, and formatting
a drive. Warnings appear throughout this section to alert you to potential
loss of data and should be heeded before answering yes to the confirmations
requested by the RAID configuration program.
Subtopics:
o Changing the Write Policy
o Formatting Drives
o Changing the RAID Parameters
Changing the Write Policy
When you configure a logical drive, the RAID adapter automatically
sets the write policy to write-through(WT) mode, where the completion status
is sent after the data is written to the hard disk drive. To improve
performance, you can change this write policy to write-back(WB) mode,
where the completion status is sent after the data is copied to cache memory,
but beforethe data is actually written to the storage device.
Although you gain performance with write-back mode, it creates a greater
risk of losing data due to a power
failure. This is because the system gets a completion status message
when the data reaches cache memory, but beforedata is actually written
to the storage device.
To change the write policy:
1. Start the RAID configuration program by inserting the IBM RAID controller
diskette into the primary drive and turning on the system. If the system
already is on, press Ctrl+Alt+Del.
2. Select Advanced functionsfrom the Main Menu.
3. Select Change write policyfrom the Advanced Functions menu. The
cursor will be active in the Logical Drive list.
4. Select the logical drive whose write policy you want to change.
The Logical Drive list shows you the logical drive ID, the size in megabytes
of each logical drive, the RAID level you assigned to that logical drive,
and the date you created it. The status of the logical drive is also shown.
Good means that all is well with the drive. Critical means that you
must replace the hard disk drive and rebuild the logical drive. (You will
have received a message telling you what has happened to the drive.)
Offline means that the logical drive is irrecoverable; the data in
that drive is lost.
5. Locate the Wrt pol (Write Policy) field in the Logical Drive list.
The write policy is shown as either WT (write-through, which is the
default setting) or WB (write-back).
6. Use the Up Arrow or Down Arrow to select the logical drive whose
write policy you want to change.
Warning:If you change the write policy to write-back, wait at least
10 seconds after your last operation before you turn off the server. It
takes that long for the system to move the data from the cache memory to
the storage device. Failure to follow this practice can result in lost
data.
7. Press Enter to change the write policy. (Notice that WT changes
to WB. You can press Enter to alternate between WT and WB.)
8. When you have made your choice, press Esc to return to the Advanced
Functions menu.
9. Select Exit. The Confirm pop-up window appears asking you to confirm
your action.
10. To return the setting to its original state, select No. To save
your changes, select Yes.
11. Back up the disk-array configuration information to diskette. Refer
to Backing Up Your Disk-Array Configuration for more information.
Formatting Drives
You can perform a low-level format on drives with RDY (ready), OFL
(offline), or UNF (unformatted) status.
The Format drivechoice on the Advanced Functions menu provides a low-level
format. If you install a new hard disk drive that requires a standard format,
use the Format command provided by your operating system. The Format program
works like the low-level format program in the advanced diagnostics portion
of the system programs. It is provided in the IBM RAID configuration program
so that you can perform a low-level format on a drive controlled by the
RAID adapter.
To perform a low-level format:
1. Start the RAID configuration program by inserting the IBM RAID controller
diskette into the primary drive and turning on the system. If the system
already is on, press Ctrl+Alt+Del.
2. Select Advanced functionsfrom the Main Menu.
Warning:A low-level format erases all data and programs from the drive.
3. Select Format drive. The low-level format program starts.
4. Follow the instructions on the screen.
You can perform a low-level format on more than one drive at a time.
Changing the RAID Parameters
You can change the RAID parameters using the advanced functions by
selecting Change RAID parameters.
The default settings are:
o Stripe unit size - 8K
The stripe unit size is the amount of data written on a given disk
before writing on the next disk. To maximize the overall performance, this
stripe unit should be chosen such that the stripe-unit size is close to
the size of the system I/O request. The default is set to 8K data bytes.
Warning:Once the stripe unit is chosen and data is stored in the logical
drives, the stripe unit cannot be changed without destroying data in the
logical drives.
o Rebuild priority - Equal
Rebuild priority can be set to equal, high, or low. When set to equal,
the rebuild I/O request and system I/O request get equal priority in the
execution order. When set to high, the rebuild I/O request will get a higher
priority than a system I/O request. In a heavily loaded system (with a
high rate of system I/O requests), the high-priority rebuild can significantly
reduce the disk rebuild time at the expense of degraded handling of I/O
requests. When the rebuild priority is set to low, the rebuild I/O requests
can execute only if there is no pending system I/O requests. In a moderate
to heavily loaded system, low rebuild priority will increase the disk rebuild
time significantly and provide better system performance.
Note: Rebuild priority can be changed without affecting data in the
logical drives.
o Parity placement - RA
Warning:Once a parity placement scheme is chosen and data stored, it
cannot be changed without destroying data.
Parity placement defines how parity is placed in the disk array with
respect to data. The following illustration shows both the Left Symmetric
(LS) and Right Asymmetric (RA) parity placement in a four-drive disk array.
Here AAA, BBB, and CCC are the data stripe units, and PP0 is the corresponding
parity. Similarly DDD, EEE, and FFF are the data stripe units, and PP1
is the corresponding parity.
Right Asymmetric (RA) Left Symmetric (LS)
Disk Disk Disk Disk Disk Disk Disk Disk
1 2 3
4 1 2
3 4
PP0 AAA BBB CCC AAA BBB
CCC PP0
DDD PP1 EEE FFF EEE FFF
PP1 DDD
GGG HHH PP2 III III PP2
GGG HHH
JJJ KKK LLL PP3 PP3 JJJ
KKK LLL
In some situations you may want to try LS parity placement to improve
performance. The default parity placement is RA.
o Read ahead - On
Normally the IBM SCSI-2 Fast/Wide Streaming-RAID Adapter/A transfers
data from disk to its local cache in steps of stripe-unit size. This provides
excellent overall performance when workloads tend to be sequential. However,
if the workload is random and system I/O requests are smaller than stripe-unit
size, reading ahead to the end of the stripe unit will result in a wasted
SCSI bus bandwidth and wasted disk utilization. When read-ahead is set
to Off, the size of data transfer from the disk to local cache is equal
to the system I/O request size, and no read-ahead to the end of the stripe
unit is performed.
Notes:
1. The Read-ahead setting can be changed without destroying data in
a logical drive.
2. When the configuration is saved on a diskette, the RAID parameters
are saved also.
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