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 array from 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 array from the Main Menu.
3. Select Delete disk array from 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 array from the Main Menu.
3. Select Create disk array from 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 drive from 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 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 Create/Delete Array menu, press Esc.
To define more logical drives, repeat steps 1 to 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 changes, select Yes. To keep 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 drive for 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 array from 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 functions from 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.
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