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Asset ID: 1-71-1013116.1
Update Date:2010-01-19
Keywords:

Solution Type  Technical Instruction Sure

Solution  1013116.1 :   How to Verify the LSI RAID Controller is Functional on Sun Fire[TM] V215/V245, Sun Fire[TM] V440/V445, Sun Fire[TM] T1000/T2000.  


Related Items
  • Sun Fire V245 Server
  •  
  • Sun Fire V440 Server
  •  
  • Sun Fire T2000 Server
  •  
  • Sun Fire V215 Server
  •  
  • Sun Fire V445 Server
  •  
  • Sun Fire T1000 Server
  •  
Related Categories
  • GCS>Sun Microsystems>Servers>CMT Servers
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  • GCS>Sun Microsystems>Servers>Entry-Level Servers
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PreviouslyPublishedAs
217968


Description
This document describes how to determine that the LSI RAID controller for the internal hardware RAID is functioning properly. This applies to Sun Fire[TM] V215/V245, Sun Fire[TM] V440/V445, and Sun Fire[TM] T1000/T2000.



Steps to Follow
To Verify the LSI RAID Controller is Functional:

The Sun Fire V215/V245, Sun Fire V440/V445 and Sun Fire T1000/T2000 servers support the following RAID configurations:

  • Integrated Stripe, or IS volumes (RAID 0)

  • Integrated Mirror, or IM volumes (RAID 1)

The internal LSI RAID disk controllers LSI1064E (V215/V245, T1000/T2000), as well as LSI1068X/E (V445)  support up to 2 hardware RAID volumes (IM or IS) of the same RAID-level at any one time. Prior to volume creation, ensure that the member disks are available and that there are not two volumes already created.

The on-board controller LSI1030 on V440 supports only RAID1 (integrated mirror) between any 2 internal disks. Creating a second RAID1 volume is not possible.

There are several ways to verify that the raid controller is functional:

a) Using the OBP commands 'probe-scsi-all', for proper usage of this command refer to <Document: 1005013.1> probe-scsi-all may fail without 'reset-all' on all Sun Systems .

In the following example (for Sun Fire T2000 with the onboard LSI1064E controller), the 'probe-scsi-all' output has 2 internal drives and one RAID volume:

{0} ok probe-scsi-all
/pci@780/pci@0/pci@9/scsi@0
MPT Version 1.05, Firmware Version 1.09.00.00
Target 0
Unit 0   Disk  FUJITSU MAY2073RCSUN72G 0501  143374738 Blocks, 73 GB
SASAddress 500000e013cadaa2  PhyNum 0
Target 1
Unit 0   Disk  FUJITSU MAY2073RCSUN72G 0501  143374738 Blocks, 73 GB
  SASAddress 500000e013caf5d2  PhyNum 1
Target 2 Volume 0
Unit 0   Disk  LSILOGICLogical Volume  3000  143112591 Blocks, 73 GB

b) Using the 'raidctl' command, which is the Solaris tool to manage RAID operations. This command allows you to verify both the RAID status and the DISK status:

# raidctl
RAID    Volume  RAID            RAID            Disk
Volume  Type    Status          Disk            Status
------------------------------------------------------
c0t2d0  IM      OK              c0t2d0          OK
c0t3d0          OK

There is a new version of the 'raidctl' utility introduced with Solaris 10 8/07. The command usage and output changed. It now requires "raidctl -l <volumename>  to get volume and disk status (see example below):

# raidctl -l Controller: 1        Volume:c1t0d0  <--- new RAID volume        Disk: 0.0.0        Disk: 0.1.0        Disk: 0.2.0        Disk: 0.3.0

# raidctl -l c1t0d0    <----- to get the details
Volume                  Size    Stripe  Status   Cache  RAID
Sub                     Size                    Level
Disk
----------------------------------------------------------------
c1t0d0                  273.3G  64K     OPTIMAL  N/A    RAID0
0.0.0   136.6G          GOOD
0.1.0   136.6G          GOOD

c) Using the OBP procedure to select the RAID controller path (node) and display the existing volumes and their status:

{0} ok setenv auto-boot?  false
{0} ok setenv fcode-debug?  true
{0} ok reset-all
{1} ok select <raid controller path>
{0} ok show-volumes  (to display the volume status)

Example (for T2000):

{0} ok select /pci@780/pci@0/pci@9/scsi@0
{0} ok show-volumes
Volume 0 Target 2  Type IM (Integrated Mirroring)
Optimal  Enabled
2 Members               143112591 Blocks, 73 GB
Disk 1
Primary  Online
Target 4        SEAGATE ST973401LSUN72G 0556
Disk 0
Secondary  Online
Target 3        SEAGATE ST973401LSUN72G 0556
{0} ok unselect-dev
{0} ok reset-all

Here is a summary of the device paths for the LSI disk controller on the different servers listed in this document:

V440:  /pci@1f,700000/scsi@2

V445:  /pci@1f,700000/pci@0/pci@2/pci@0/pci@8/LSILogic,sas@1

V215:  /pci@1e,600000/pci@0/pci@a/pci@0/pci@8/scsi@1

V245:  /pci@1e,600000/pci@0/pci@a/pci@0/pci@8/scsi@1

T1000:  /pci@7c0/pci@0/pci@8/scsi@2

T2000 systems using factory installed PCI-X card (370-7696): /pci@7c0/pci@0/pci@1/pci@0,2/LSILogic,sas@2

T2000 systems with on-board controller: /pci@780/pci@0/pci@9/scsi@0

For more details refer to <Document: 1007109.1>



Product
Sun Fire V445 Server
Sun Fire V440 Server
Sun Fire V245 Server
Sun Fire V215 Server
Sun Fire T2000 Server
Sun Fire T1000 Server

Internal Comments
This document contains normalized content and is managed by the the Domain Lead(s) of the respective domains. To notify content owners of a knowledge gap contained in this document, and/or prior to updating this document, please contact the domain engineers that are managing this document via the "Document Feedback" alias(es) listed below:


VSP-SPARC-Normalization@sun.com
normalized, raid volume, lsi, boot, T1000, T2000, V215, V245, V440, V445, Problem Solved = Functional RAID controller
Previously Published As
91381

Change History
Date: 2010-01-19
User name: 106061
Action: added "?" to obp settings in Steps-to-follow (update requested by Josh Freeman)
Comments: Currency check, audited by Dencho Kojucharov, Entry-Level SPARC Content Lead

Date: 2007-12-20
User Name: 7058
Action: Approved
Comment: Cleared up unnecessary double-spacing in preformated text.
Tested links - all OK.
Added Normalization Lead: Jim Robbins Domain Engineer/Lead : Josh Freeman to internal section.
No further edits required.
OK to publish.
Version: 3

Date: 2007-12-18
User Name: 71396
Action: Reassign
Comment: Called for you.. here you go
Version: 0

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