Software Support

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Quick Access To Storage Status And Tasks
This section describes various methods to determine the status or health of the storage components on your system and
how to quickly launch the available controller tasks.
Related Links
Storage Health
Hot Spare Protection Policy
Storage Component Severity
Storage Properties And Current Activity
Alerts Or Events
Monitoring Disk Reliability On RAID Controllers
Using Alarms To Detect Failures
Using Enclosure Temperature Probes
Rescanning To Update Storage Configuration Changes
Time Delay In Displaying Configuration Changes
Storage Health
The Storage Dashboard displays the combined status for each controller and lower-level storage components. For
example, if the health of the storage system has been compromised due to a degraded enclosure, both the enclosure
Health and the controller severity on the Storage Dashboard display a yellow exclamation mark to indicate a Warning
severity. If a controller on the Storage Dashboard displays a Warning or Critical status, perform the following actions to
investigate the cause:
Click Check Alert Log to display the Alerts Log. Review the Alert Log for alerts relating to the status of the
controller and its lower-level components. The Check Alert Log link is only displayed when the controller
displays a Warning or Critical status.
Select the controller and investigate the status of the lower-level components. For more information, see
Storage Component Severity.
Click the virtual disk that is in degraded state to display the Physical Disk Properties page.
NOTE: The virtual disk link is displayed only if the physical disks that are part of the virtual disk, are in a
Warning or Critical state.
For more information on how the status of lower-level components is
rolled up
into the status displayed for the
controller, see Determining The Health Status For Storage Components.
Related Links
Health
Hot Spare Protection Policy
The Set Hot Spare Protection Policy task allows you to set or modify the number of hot spares to be assigned to the
virtual disks.
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