User guide
Table Of Contents
- Title Page
- Table of Contents
- About this User Guide
- Introducing the 3ware® SATA RAID Controller
- Getting Started with Your 3ware RAID Controller
- First-Time RAID Configuration Using 3BM
- Driver Installation
- Driver Installation Under Windows
- Driver Installation Under Linux
- Obtaining 3ware Linux Drivers
- Driver Installation Under Red Hat Linux or Fedora Core 5
- Materials required
- Creating a Red Hat Linux Driver Diskette
- Installing the 3ware Kernel Driver Module while Installing Red Hat Linux on a New Unit
- Installing the 3ware Kernel Driver Module on a Red Hat or Fedora Core Linux System that Boots From a Different Device
- About Variables In the Kernel Driver Module Installation Instructions
- Driver Installation Under SuSE Linux
- Compiling a 3ware Driver for Linux
- Driver Installation Under FreeBSD
- 3ware BIOS Manager 2 (3BM 2) Introduction
- 3DM 2 (3ware Disk Manager) Introduction
- Configuring Your Controller
- Configuring Units
- Configuring a New Unit
- Creating a Hot Spare
- Naming a Unit
- Setting Unit Policies
- Changing An Existing Configuration by Migrating
- Deleting a Unit
- Removing a Unit
- Moving a Unit from One Controller to Another
- Adding a Drive
- Removing a Drive
- Rescanning the Controller
- Maintaining Units
- Checking Unit and Drive Status through 3DM
- About Degraded Units
- About Inoperable Units
- Alarms, Errors, and Other Events
- Background Tasks
- Scheduling Background Tasks
- Locating a Drive by Blinking Its LED
- Maintaining Your Controller
- Determining the Current Version of Your 3ware Driver
- Updating the Firmware and Driver
- Downloading the Driver and Firmware
- Updating the Firmware Through 3DM 2
- Updating the 3ware Driver and Firmware Under Windows
- Using the Update Utility With Multiple Controllers
- Updating the 3ware Driver Under Windows XP
- Updating the 3ware Driver Under Red Hat or Fedora Core
- Updating the 3ware Driver Under SuSE
- Updating the 3ware Driver Under FreeBSD
- Updating the Firmware Under Linux and FreeBSD
- Viewing Battery Information
- Testing Battery Capacity
- 3DM 2 Reference
- Troubleshooting
- Appendices
- Index

Chapter 7. Configuring Your Controller
90 3ware Serial ATA RAID Controller User Guide
Exporting JBOD Disks
By default, JBOD disks (unconfigured disks) connected to the 3ware RAID
controller are not exported to the operating system. This means that any drives
you leave unconfigured are not seen by the operating system, and cannot be
used for storage. When Export JBOD Disks is set to No, you make individual
disks available for use by configuring them as Single Disks.
If you want unconfigured disks to be available on your computer, you can
change this setting in 3BM or using the CLI.
If JBOD disks are not exported to the operating system, they will appear as
available drives in 3DM, and can be configured as single disks or spares, and
included in other RAID configurations. If you change the policy to allow
JBOD disks to be exported to the operating system, they will appear as units
in 3DM if those drives were previously used as JBODs on another controller.
AMCC recommends that new drives be configured as Singles and not JBODs.
To enable or disable the export of unconfigured disks
1 At the main 3BM screen,
Tab to Policy and press Enter.
2On the
Policy Control screen, Tab to Export Unconfigured Disks, press
Enter to display the choices, use the arrow keys to select Yes (to enable),
or
No (to disable) and press Enter again to choose it.
3
Tab to the OK button and press Enter.
You will notice a short delay as 3BM makes the policy changes.
Note: It is recommended that JBODs not be made available to the operating
system. The advantages of working with configured Single Disks over JBOD are:
If interrupted, a single disk media scan will continue from where it left off, while a
JBOD media scan must restart from the beginning.
Single disks can take advantage of the controller caching and configuration is
persistent.
Single disks will be able to be migrated to redundant units in the future (e.g. A single
disk will be able to be mirrored to another drive, creating a RAID 1 array).
Note: If you enable the Export JBOD Disks option, the controller recognizes and
displays as JBODs any drives that were previously connected to 3ware 7000/8000-
series controllers as JBODs. Drives that were previously connected to a 9000-
series controller and configured will not be seen as JBODs.










