Users Guide
Canceling A Rebuild
Does my controller support this feature? See Supported Features.
Select the Cancel Rebuild task to cancel a rebuild that is in progress. If you cancel a rebuild, the virtual disk remains in a Degraded state.
The failure of an additional physical disk can cause the virtual disk to fail and may result in data loss. It is recommended that you rebuild the
failed physical disk as soon as possible.
NOTE: If you cancel the rebuild of a physical disk that is assigned as a hot spare, reinitiate the rebuild on the same
physical disk in order to restore the data. Canceling the rebuild of a physical disk and then assigning another physical
disk as a hot spare does not cause the newly assigned hot spare to rebuild the data. Reinitiate the rebuild on the
physical disk that was the original hot spare.
Assigning And Unassigning Global Hot Spare
CAUTION: The SAS 6/iR controller enables you to assign two physical disks as global hot spare. Assigning a physical
disk as a global hot spare on a SAS 6/iR controller is likely to cause data loss from the physical disk. If the system or
boot partition resides on the physical disks, it may be destroyed. You should only assign physical disks that do not
contain critical data.
Does my controller support this feature? See Supported Features.
A global hot spare is an unused backup disk that is part of the disk group. Hot spares remain in standby mode. When a physical disk that is
used in a virtual disk fails, the assigned hot spare is activated to replace the failed physical disk without interrupting the system or requiring
your intervention. When a hot spare is activated, it rebuilds the data for all redundant virtual disks that were using the failed physical disk.
You can change the hot spare assignment by unassigning a disk and choosing another disk as needed. You can also assign more than one
physical disk as a global hot spare.
NOTE: On SAS 6/iR controllers, you cannot assign physical disks that have boot partitions, as hot spares.
NOTE: On PERC S100 and S300 controllers, if there is free space available on the global hot spare, it continues to
function as a spare even after replacing a failed physical disk.
Global hot spares must be assigned and unassigned manually. They are not assigned to specific virtual disks. If you want to assign a hot
spare to a virtual disk (it replaces any physical disk that fails in the virtual disk), then use the Assign and Unassign Dedicated Hot
Spare.
NOTE:
When deleting virtual disks, all assigned global hot spares may be automatically unassigned when the last virtual
disk associated with the controller is deleted. When the last virtual disk of a disk group is deleted, all assigned dedicated
hot spares automatically become global hot spares.
NOTE: For PERC H310, H700, H710, H710P, H800, H810, H330, H730, H730P, H830, and PERC FD33xD/FD33xS
controllers, if any of the drives you selected are in the Spun Down state, the following message is displayed: The
current physical drive is in the spun down state. Executing this task on this drive takes
additional time, because the drive needs to spun up.
You should be familiar with the size requirements and other considerations associated with hot spares.
Related concepts
Protecting Your Virtual Disk With A Hot Spare
Considerations For Hot Spares On PERC 6/E And PERC 6/I Controllers
Considerations For Hot Spares On PERC S100 And PERC S300 Controllers
Global Hot Spare Considerations On A SAS 6/iR
Setting The Physical Disk Online Or Offline
Does my controller support this feature? See Supported Features.
The Online and Offline tasks apply only to physical disks that are included in a redundant virtual disk and attached to a PERC controller.
Select the Offline task to deactivate a disk before removing it. Select the Online task to reactivate an offline disk. In some cases, you
may want to use the Online task on a failed disk in an attempt to recover data from the disk.
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Physical Disks Or Physical Devices