Removing Hard Disks Or Responding To A Disk Failure - Intel D39172-003 User Manual

Table of Contents

Advertisement

Removing Hard Disks or Responding to a Disk Failure

Note: In a linear configuration, the Hotplug Indicator is RED for all the disks because
Note: If you remove two or more disks, you must re-install them in the reverse order to help
www.DataSheet4U.com
Caution: Reconfiguring your disks will delete all the data on your storage system.
Intel® Entry Storage System SS4000-E User Guide
The effect of removing hard disks from your storage system or a disk failure varies,
depending on the disk configuration you chose when you configured the system and the
current state of the existing disks.
For example, in a linear configuration, when you remove a disk or a disk fails, the data
associated with that disk is no longer available, but the data on all the other disks remains
available.
In a RAID configuration, the effect of disk removal/failure varies, depending on the RAID
level and whether the RAID is in a normal or degraded state. You can determine the effect
of disk removal/failure by looking at the Hotplug Indicator on the Disks page. If this
indicator is GREEN, disk removal/failure will have no effect on the RAID. If this
indicator is YELLOW, disk removal/failure will cause RAID degradation, but you will
still be able to access all the data. If the indicator is RED, disk removal/failure will cause
the entire RAID to fail.
For example, in a RAID 5 configuration, all the disks are YELLOW. Removing any one
of them will cause the RAID to be degraded, but all the data will still be available.
However, after you remove one disk, all the other disks become RED, since removing any
one of them at this point will cause the entire RAID to fail.
removing any one of them will remove data from the storage system. However, this will not
adversely affect any of the other disks.
In addition, while a disk is being rebuilt, all the other disks are RED, since removing any
one of them at this point will cause the RAID to fail.
If you remove a viable disk and cause only RAID degradation, you can re-install the same
disk and resume normal operation. (For information about adding a disk, refer to
Hard Disks" on page
127.)
maintain data integrity. For example, if you remove disk A from slot 1 and then remove
disk B from slot 2, you must re-install disk B first, then disk A.You can put the disks back
into different slots, but they must be re-installed in the opposite order from which they
were removed.
If you remove one or more viable disks and cause the entire RAID to fail, you can shut
down the storage system, re-install the same disks, and then restart the storage system. As
long as you re-install the original disks, the storage system should be able to resume
proper operation, although the integrity of the data cannot be guaranteed. However, if you
replace the removed disks with new disks, you must reconfigure your disks (as described
in
"Reconfiguring Your Storage System Disks" on page
Adding or Replacing Hard Disks
68).
"Adding
131

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Entry storage system ss4000-e

Table of Contents