USER’S GUIDE ADAPTEC EMBEDDED SERIAL ATA RAID
Copyright © 2003 Adaptec, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written consent of Adaptec, Inc., 691 South Milpitas Blvd., Milpitas, CA 95035. Trademarks Adaptec, Adaptec Storage Manager, HostRAID, and the Adaptec logo are trademarks of Adaptec, Inc., which may be registered in some jurisdictions.
Contents 1 Introduction Overview 1-1 What is HostRAID? 1-1 Operating System Compatibility 1-2 Storage Requirements 1-2 Features 1-2 Storage Management Software Overview 1-3 2 Installing the Driver Installing the Driver in a New Windows System 2-2 Installing the Driver in an Existing Windows System 2-3 Installing Red Hat Linux 7.3 or 8.0 2-3 Installing the Red Hat Driver in a New Linux System 2-3 Installing or Updating the Driver in an Existing Linux System 2-4 Installing SuSE Linux 8.0 or 8.
Contents 4 Using Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition Overview 4-2 Architecture Overview 4-3 Logging In 4-4 Installing a Security Certificate 4-5 Registering Your Software 4-6 The Basics 4-6 Pop-Up Tool Tips 4-8 Physical Devices 4-8 Logical Devices 4-10 A Adaptec RAID Configuration Utility Using the Array Configuration Utility A-2 Managing Arrays A-2 Creating Arrays A-4 Initializing Disk Drives A-6 Using the Disk Utilities A-7 Glossary iv
1 Introduction In this Chapter... Overview 1-1 Operating System Compatibility 1-2 Storage Requirements 1-2 Features 1-2 Storage Management Software Overview 1-3 Overview Adaptec Embedded Serial ATA RAID with HostRAID adds RAID functionality to the Serial ATA I/O controller by supporting RAID levels 0 and 1. What is HostRAID? HostRAID adds entry level RAID support to the Serial ATA I/O controller. With HostRAID, you can add reliable performance and full data protection.
Introduction Operating System Compatibility ■ ■ Microsoft® Windows® 2000, Windows Server® 2003, and Windows XP Linux ■ Red Hat 7.3 and 8.0 ■ SuSE 8.0 and 8.1 Storage Requirements Device drivers and storage management software require approximately 20 MB of disk space. Features Adaptec Embedded Serial ATA RAID Software RAID supports: ■ RAID levels 0, 1, and simple volume using Adaptec’s HostRAID technology.
Introduction Storage Management Software Overview Adaptec Embedded Serial ATA RAID includes the following software tools to manage your storage subsystem: ■ Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition—Browser-based storage management software that provides all of the creation, management, and data logging needed to manage arrays. Arrays may be set up and managed on systems using the following operating systems: ■ Windows 2000, Windows Server 2003, and Windows XP ■ Red Hat Linux 7.3 and 8.
2 Installing the Driver In this Chapter... Installing the Driver in a New Windows System 2-2 Installing the Driver in an Existing Windows System 2-3 Installing Red Hat Linux 7.3 or 8.0 2-3 Installing SuSE Linux 8.0 or 8.1 2-4 This chapter describes installing the driver and setting up the new array for the drives attached to your controller.
Installing the Driver Installing the Driver in a New Windows System In this scenario, you are installing the driver in a new system that has no operating system. To install the driver: 1 Create a driver disk by following the instructions from the Web site or the product CD. 2 Restart the computer. 3 If creating an array, press Ctrl-A when prompted to enter the ARC utility. For instructions on creating an array from the BIOS, see Appendix A, Adaptec RAID Configuration Utility.
Installing the Driver Installing the Driver in an Existing Windows System In this scenario, you are installing a driver in a system that already has a Windows operating system. To install the driver: 1 Create a driver disk by following the instructions from the Web site or the product CD. 2 Start Windows. Windows launches the Found New Hardware Wizard, which searches for the controller driver. 3 Insert the driver disk you created in Step 1. Select the floppy disk drive as the source and click Next.
Installing the Driver 4 When the array is finished building, or if you are continuing from Step 3, insert the Red Hat CD Disk 1 in the CD-ROM drive and restart the system. 5 When the Red Hat Welcome screen appears, type expert or linux dd at the boot prompt. 6 When prompted, insert the driver disk (see Step 1) and select OK. 7 Follow the prompts to set up your preferred environment. 8 If you intend to install other third-party devices, proceed with the installation of those devices. Otherwise, select Done.
Installing the Driver 4 When the array is finished building, or if you are continuing from Step 3, insert the SuSE CD Disk 1 in the CD-ROM drive and restart the system. 5 When the SuSE Installation menu appears, press the Alt key, then select one option from the Menu and press Enter. 6 When prompted, insert the driver disk you created (see Step 1) and press any key to continue. 7 Follow the prompts to set up your preferred environment.
Installing the Driver Installing or Updating the Driver in an Existing Linux System To install the driver in an existing Linux system, type: rpm -Uvh xxx.yyy.rpm To update the driver in an existing Linux system, type: rpm -Uvh --force xxx.yyy.rpm where xxx is the name of the driver file and yyy is the processor type.
3 Installing Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition In this Chapter... Overview 3-1 Supported Browsers 3-2 Typical, Custom, and Compact Installations 3-2 Installing Adaptec Storage Manager on Windows 3-3 Installing Adaptec Storage Manager on Linux 3-7 Overview This chapter discusses the installation procedure for installing Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition to enable remote and local management of arrays. For instructions on using this application, see Chapter 4.
Installing Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition Supported Browsers To run Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition, your computer must have a Web browser supporting JavaScript and cookies only. The following versions are supported: ■ ■ On Windows ■ Internet Explorer (IE) 5.0 or later ■ Netscape 7 or later On Linux ■ Adaptec-supplied and installed version of Mozilla ■ Netscape 7 or later When using Adaptec Storage Manager, you need to log on to your system with administrator privileges.
Installing Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition ■ Compact—Installs only the components required on a remotely managed system. See Managed System Components, above. Note: When you perform a Typical or Compact installation, components needed for communication and remote management are installed automatically. Installing Adaptec Storage Manager on Windows Note: When installing on a FAT 32 file system, the folder being installed is automatically hidden.
Installing Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition 9 When you see the Setup Information, click Next. The Setup Status window shows progress using a scroll bar. Before the scroll bar shows the installation is completed, another window pops up indicating that a security certificate has been generated. 10 Click OK. The Root Certificate Store window appears. 11 Click Yes. The security certificate generated during installation is added to the Certificate Store.
Installing Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition Configuring Internet Explorer for Local Management When using the High security setting, you must enable the following settings manually: ■ JavaScript ■ Cookies (not stored) You do not need to enable the following custom level security settings for the local Intranet in Internet Explorer 5 and 5.5. Select Tools > Internet Options to access these settings: ■ Active Scripting ■ Allow per session cookies (not stored) Note: In Internet Explorer 6.
Installing Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition Configuring Internet Explorer for Remote Management If you know the IP address of the system you want to manage remotely: 1 Choose Tools > Internet Options > Connections > LAN Settings. 2 Select Use a proxy server for your LAN > Advanced. 3 In the Exceptions section, type the managed system’s IP address. Configuring Netscape Navigator for Local Management Note: These instructions apply specifically to version 7 and may differ in later versions.
Installing Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition Installing Adaptec Storage Manager on Linux Note: When performing this installation, keep in mind that Linux is case sensitive. To install Adaptec Storage Manager on a Linux computer and configure the desired Internet browser: 1 Insert the product installation CD. 2 Install the software by typing: sh /install.sh. The differs among computers, but /mnt/cdrom, /media/cdrom, or cdrom usually works. A Welcome window appears.
Installing Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition 9 Click OK. The Shell window you used to launch the installation indicates that some daemons are being started. The installation creates a shortcut to Adaptec Storage Manager in the System tab. This shortcut launches Adaptec Storage Manager using Mozilla. Unless the controller driver was installed as part of this installation, you do not need to restart your computer. 10 Remove the product installation CD.
4 Using Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition In this Chapter...
Using Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition Overview This chapter describes how to use Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition to manage arrays. Once you are logged in, you will find convenient online help to guide you through the details of creating, configuring, and managing arrays. Note: Your controller may not support all of the features described. In most cases if a feature is not supported by your controller the feature does not appear in the interface.
Using Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition Architecture Overview A locally managed system requires all of these components: ■ A supported Web browser, which should already be installed on the system. ■ The Adaptec Web service which supplies content displayed on the Web browser. ■ An Adaptec-supplied storage agent. A remotely managed system requires all of these components: ■ The remote system must contain a browser.
Using Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition Logging In To login: 1 Start Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition. ■ In Windows, click Start > Programs > Adaptec Storage Manager > Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition. ■ In Linux, click Start > System > Adaptec Storage Manager. The Login screen appears. 2 Enter the host name or IP address of the system you want to manage and the username and password you would use to log into that system. 3 Click Login.
Using Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition To log in from any system with a Web browser: 1 Start the Web browser application and type the IP address for the system you want to access in the address bar and press Enter. For example, https://10.6.3.14:3513/adaptec. When connection to the remote system is established, the System Login screen appears. Note: If you are using a proxy server to access the Internet, you must bypass the proxy server to access the Adaptec Storage Manager Web server.
Using Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition 6 Click OK. The Certificate window mentioned in Step 2 reappears. 7 Click OK. You are returned to the Security Alert window from Step 1. 8 Click Yes to finish the creation and storage of the certificate. Registering Your Software After installing and creating a security certificate, you are asked to register the product. If you want click Register Now, your computer must have an Internet connection. If you need to delay registration, click Register Later.
Using Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition The action buttons are: ■ Logout—Selecting Logout ends your session and returns you to the Login screen. ■ Rescan—Used to rescan the configuration of the system. Typically, when a rescan is required, it occurs automatically, for example, after an array is created. However, the system configuration can change without Adaptec Storage Manager being notified.
Using Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition Pop-Up Tool Tips If you position the cursor over a device or button a pop-up tool tip appears. For buttons, the tips contain helpful information about the function of the button, while for devices they display additional information. Physical Devices The Physical Devices view displays information about the drives and enclosures attached to the Adaptec RAID controller.
Using Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition If you change the display mode by selecting one of the other view buttons, a yellow arrow flashes to the left of any devices where the condensed display prevents omits information. An icon is always the first entry on each device line. The icon is used to represent a hard disk drive. If a + symbol appears with the hard disk drive icon , the drive is a hot spare. Different icons are used to represent other devices.
Using Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition This is done because hard disk drives of apparently the same capacity from different manufacturers, or even different models from the same manufacturer, actually vary slightly in the true capacity available. Although, in normal operation this is not an issue, it can be when assigning hot spares or replacing a failed drive.
Using Adaptec Storage Manager – Browser Edition If a global hot spare exists, all arrays that the hot spare is large enough to protect will show as protected. In the expanded view, the icons for the arrays are arranged vertically and alongside them are the capacity, name, and type of array. Selecting an array by clicking on it will highlight the following in amber: ■ All the drives or segments that form the array in the Physical Devices view.
A Adaptec RAID Configuration Utility In this Appendix Using the Array Configuration Utility A-2 Using the Disk Utilities A-7 The Adaptec RAID Configuration (ARC) utility is an embedded BIOS utility that includes: ■ Array Configuration Utility (ACU)—Used to create, configure, and manage arrays. ■ Disk Utilities—Used to format or verify disks.
Adaptec RAID Configuration Utility To run ARC, press Ctrl+A when prompted by the following message during the system startup: Press for Adaptec RAID Configuration Utility The ARC menu appears, presenting these options: ■ Array Configuration Utility (ACU) ■ Disk utilities To select an option from this menu, or from any of the menus within ARC, browse with the arrow keys and then press Enter. In some cases, selecting an option displays another menu.
Adaptec RAID Configuration Utility Deleting Arrays ! Caution: Back up the data on an array before you delete it. Otherwise, all data on the array is lost. Deleted arrays cannot be restored. To delete an existing array: 1 Turn on your computer and press Ctrl+A when prompted to access the ARC utility. 2 From the ARC menu, select Array Configuration Utility (ACU). 3 From the ACU menu, select Manage Arrays. 4 Select the array you wish to delete and press Delete.
Adaptec RAID Configuration Utility Creating Arrays Before creating arrays, make sure the disks for the array are connected and installed in your system. Note that disks with no usable space, or disks that are uninitialized are shown in gray and cannot be used. See Initializing Disk Drives on page A-6. To create an array: 1 Turn on your computer and press Ctrl+A when prompted to access the ARC utility. 2 From the ARC menu, select Array Configuration Utility (ACU). 3 From the ACU menu, select Create Array.
Adaptec RAID Configuration Utility 4 Create RAID via allows you to select between the different creation methods for RAID 0 and RAID 1. The following table gives examples of when each is appropriate. RAID level Create via RAID 0 No Init When appropriate Creating a RAID 0 on new drives. Creating a RAID 0 from one new drive and one drive with data you wish to preserve.
Adaptec RAID Configuration Utility Adaptec does not recommend that you migrate or build an array on Windows dynamic disks (volumes), as it will result in data loss. ■ ! Caution: Do not interrupt the creation of a RAID 0 using the Migrate option. If you do, there is no way to restart, and no way to recover the data that was on the source drive. 5 When you are finished, press Done.
Adaptec RAID Configuration Utility Using the Disk Utilities The Disk Utilities enable you to format or verify the media of your Serial ATA hard disks. To access the disk utilities: 1 Turn on your computer and press Ctrl+A when prompted to access the ARC utility. 2 From the ARC menu, select Disk Utilities. 3 Select the desired disk and press Enter. You are offered the following options: ■ Format Disk—Simulates a low-level format of the hard drive by writing zeros to the entire disk.
Glossary A activity See task. ACU Array Configuration Utility. An application used to create, configure, and manage arrays from the controller’s BIOS or MS-DOS. array A logical disk created from available space and made up of one or more segments on one or more physical disks. Arrays are typically used to provide data redundancy or enhanced I/O performance. See also volume, spanned volume, RAID 0, RAID 1. Also known as a container. array initialization See initialize. ATA AT Bus Attachment.
Glossary B background consistency check Option that forces the controller to constantly check all portions of disks used by all arrays to see if the disks can return data from the blocks. See also consistency check command. bad segment Segment that is in an unknown state. bootable array Array configured as the boot device. build Background initialization of a redundant array. The array is accessible throughout. RAID 1 copies the contents of the primary drive to a secondary drive. See also clear.
Glossary clear Foreground initialization of a fault-tolerant array. A clear operation zeros all blocks of the array. The array is not accessible until the clear task is complete. concatenation Joining of physical or logical drives in sequential order. consistency check command Command that reads all the blocks of a RAID 1 to determine if the blocks are consistent. Any inconsistent blocks are fixed. D dead partition See failed.
Glossary E event Notification or alert from the system, indicating that a change has occurred. event log File used to maintain information about prior controller activities or errors. event notification Process for transmitting events. F failed State of a nonredundant array that has suffered a single drive failure, or a redundant array that has suffered multiple drive failures. A failed array is inaccessible and data is lost.
Glossary I impacted An impacted array is one which has been created but for some reason the initial build operation did not complete. All member drives are present and operational, and all data written to the array is protected. To optimize the array, run a Verify with Fix Task. initialize Process of preparing a disk for use by the controller. When a disk is initialized, the controller records the RAID signature on the disk. initialized array An array that is ready for data reads and writes.
Glossary O offline array Array that can no longer be accessed. optimal The state of an array when it is fully operational. For redundant arrays, the entire array is protected. P partition A section of a disk storage device created by the operating system disk management program, in which data and/or software programs are stored. Computers have a primary operating system partition that contains the special files needed to boot the computer.
Glossary RAID 0 A single-level array consisting of two or more equal-sized segments residing on different disks. RAID 0 distributes data evenly across its respective drives in equal-sized sections called stripes. RAID 0 arrays are not redundant. RAID 1 Single-level array consisting of two equal segments residing on two different drives. Provides redundancy by storing identical copies on two drives. See also mirrored array/mirroring.
Glossary single-level array Array created from one or more segments. See also volume, spanned volume, RAID 0, RAID 1. snapshot Instantaneous read-only copy of an array at a precise point in time. spanned volume A simple volume that spans two or more drives. stripe Contiguous set of data distributed across all the disks in an array. A striped array distributes data evenly across all members in equalsized sections called stripes. stripe size The amount of data in each section of a striped array.
Glossary volume See simple volume, spanned volume.
R Adaptec, Inc. 691 South Milpitas Boulevard Milpitas, CA 95035 USA ©2003 Adaptec, Inc. All rights reserved. Adaptec and the Adaptec logo are trademarks of Adaptec, Inc. which may be registered in some jurisdictions. Part Number: 513661-06, Ver.