5.
Return the drive to operation by doing one of the following tasks:
If you cold-serviced the drive, restore power to the server. Complete the
■
procedure described in
or
"Power On the Server (System Power Button)" on page
■
If you hot-serviced the drive, configure it using the cfgadm -c configure
command. The following example shows the drive at c0::dsk/c1t1d0 being
configured.
# cfgadm -c configure c0::dsk/c1t1d0
Replace c0:dsk/c1t1d0 with the drive name that applies to your situation.
If you hot-serviced an NVMe drive, it should automatically power up and
■
attach. If not, power up and attach the drive manually.
# hotplug enable /SYS/DBP/NVME0
Check that the drive's state has changed to ENABLED.
# hotplug list –lc
6.
Verify the drive functionality.
See
"Verify a Drive" on page
Related Information
"Determine Which Drive Is Faulty" on page 63
■
"Remove a Drive or Drive Filler" on page 63
■
"Verify a Drive" on page 69
■
Verify a Drive
Perform these steps after replacing a drive or installing a new drive.
1.
If the OS is shut down, and the drive you replaced was not the boot device, boot
the OS.
Depending on the nature of the replaced drive, you might need to perform administrative tasks
to reinstall software before the server can boot. Refer to the Oracle Solaris OS administration
documentation for more information.
"Power On the Server (Oracle ILOM)" on page 180
69.
Verify a Drive
181.
Servicing Drives
69