Supermicro X13SWA-TF User Manual page 119

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3. When asked to confirm deletion of the RAID volume, select Yes to delete the RAID
volume.
Note: When deleting a RAID volume, all data on the disks will be deleted as well.
Rebuild (a RAID Volume)
To rebuild a degraded RAID volume, take the steps below after replacing a failed hard
drive:
1. Select Advanced -> Intel(R) VROC SATA Controller.
2. Select the RAID volume to be rebuilt and then select Rebuild.
3. Select a disk from the list. Then you will return to the previous screen displaying the
volume in rebuilding mode.
Non-RAID Physical Disks
After selecting Advanced -> Intel(R) VROC SATA Controller, the Non-RAID Physical Disks
section lists the disks which have not been added to a RAID volume. Select a non-RAID
physical disk and you can take the following actions.
Mark as Spare
A spare disk is used for automatic RAID volume rebuilds when the status of "failed",
"missing", or "at risk" is detected on the array disk. For a RAID0 volume, only the status
of "at risk" will trigger automatic RAID volume rebuilds. Marking a disk as a spare one
will remove all data on the disk.
Mark as Journaling Drive
A journaling drive is used as an error event log to record an event when an error occurs
to a RAID5 volume. Marking a disk as a journaling drive will remove all data on the disk.
Locate LED
The feature is not applicable to this motherboard. Please ignore this feature.
Reset to Non-RAID
For a spare or journaling disk or a disk which has been added to a RAID array, you can
reset it to a non-RAID disk by taking the steps below:
1. Select Advanced -> Intel(R) VROC SATA Controller.
2. To reset a spare or journaling drive, select the desired drive from the disk list.
To reset a RAID member disk, select the RAID volume which contains the disk to
be reset and then select the desired member disk.
119
Chapter 4: UEFI BIOS

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