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 12. Troubleshooting
238 3ware Serial ATA RAID Controller User Guide
Background Information
The 3ware RAID controller supports a feature called dynamic sector repair
that allows the unit to recover from certain drive errors that would normally
result in a degraded unit situation. For redundant units such as RAID 1, 5, 6,
10, and 50, the 3ware RAID controller essentially has two copies of your data
available. If a read command to a sector on a disk drive results in an error, it
reverts to the redundant copy in order to satisfy the host’s request. At this
point, the 3ware RAID controller has a good copy of the requested data in its
cache memory. It will then use this data to force the failing drive to reallocate
the bad sector, which essentially repairs the sector.
Action
Sector repairs are an indication of the presence of grown defects on a
particular drive. While typical modern disk drives are designed to allow
several hundred grown defects, special attention should be paid to any drive in
a unit that begins to indicate sector repair messages. This may be an indication
of a drive that is beginning to fail. You may wish to replace the drive,
especially if the number of sector repair errors exceeds 3 per month.
0024 Buffer integrity test failed
Event Type
Error.
Cause
The 3ware RAID controller performs diagnostics on its internal RAM devices
as part of its data integrity features. Once a day, a non-destructive test is
performed on the cache memory. Failure of the test indicates a failure of a
hardware component on the 3ware RAID controller. This message is sent to
notify you of the problem.
Action
You should replace the 3ware RAID controller.
If the controller is still under warranty, contact 3ware Technical Support for a
replacement controller.










