Users Guide
Table Of Contents
- Dell EMC PowerEdge RAID Controller S150 User’s Guide
- Contents
- Overview
- Physical Disks
- Virtual Disks
- Cabling the drives for the S150
- BIOS Configuration Utility
- Entering the BIOS configuration utility
- Exiting the BIOS Configuration Utility
- Initializing the physical disks
- Creating the virtual disks
- Deleting the virtual disks
- Swapping two virtual disks
- Managing the hot spare disks
- Viewing the physical disks details
- Viewing the virtual disks details
- Rescan disks
- Controller Options
- Continue to boot
- UEFI RAID configuration utility
- Installing the drivers
- Troubleshooting your system
- Precautions for hot removal or hot insertion of NVMe drives
- Unable to configure Linux RAID using UEFI Configuration Utility
- Performance degradation after disabling SATA physical disk write cache policy
- Unable to modify any feature settings in UEFI or OPROM
- Extra reboot during OS installation
- OS installation failing on NVMe PCIe SSD with third-party driver
- Server performance is slow and crashes during OS installation on the SATA configuration
- Server performance is slow during OS installation on the NVMe configuration
- System startup issues
- System does not boot
- Controller mode is set incorrectly at System Setup
- Boot mode, boot sequence, and or boot sequence retry are set incorrectly
- Bootable virtual disk is in a failed state
- The boot order is incorrect for a bootable virtual disk
- A Non-RAID virtual disk is no longer in first position in the BIOS configuration utility list after a system reboot
- The BIOS configuration utility option does not display
- Configuring RAID using the Option ROM Utility is disabled
- Warning Messages
- Other errors appearing on the BIOS screen
- BSOD is observed while booting on the NVMe configuration server
- S150 controller lists M.2 drives
- Error in displaying the CD/DVD-ROM while in legacy mode
- Unavailable error under UEFI boot settings
- S150 does not display greater than ten virtual disks in the BIOS Configuration Utility or CTRL R
- Unable to delete virtual disks when there are more than 30 virtual disks present in the system
- Virtual disk rebuild status in the BIOS Configuration Utility (
) or in UEFI HII
- Physical disk - related errors
- The physical disk fails
- Cannot initialize a physical disk
- Status LED is not working
- Cannot update NVMe PCIe SSD firmware by using Dell Update Package or DUP
- NVMe drive error when inserted for the first time
- Third-party driver installation for NVMe PCIe SSD failing
- Unable to find the NVMe PCIe SSD for operating system installation
- Virtual disks - related errors
- Stale partitions are listed on creating a virtual disk for Linux
- Rebuilding a virtual disk the global hot spare is not listed as online in HII or iDRAC
- S150 displays 22 virtual disks on POST instead of 30 virtual disks
- S150 displays 43 virtual disks on POST instead of 30 virtual disks
- Display of failed virtual disk in HII
- Virtual disk size in decimals is not supported while creating a VD
- Cannot create a virtual disk
- A virtual disk is in a degraded state
- Cannot assign a dedicated hot spare to a virtual disk
- Cannot create a global hot spare
- A dedicated hot spare fails
- Failed or degraded virtual disk
- Cannot create a virtual disk on selected physical disks
- RAID disk created from the NVMe PCIe SSDs not appearing in operating system environment, showing as partitioned disks
- Cannot perform an Online Capacity Expansion or Reconfigure on a virtual disk
- Unable to configure RAID on NVMe PCIe SSD using a third party RAID configuration utility
- Getting help
The RAID level does not allow a dedicated hot spare to be created
Hot spares cannot be created for Volume or RAID 0 virtual disks.
The designated physical disk does not have sufficient capacity to be a
dedicated hot spare
The capacity of the physical disk selected to be a dedicated hot spare must be equal to or larger than the capacity of the
smallest physical disk in the virtual disk. For example, if the physical disk selected for a dedicated hot spare is 160 GB, and the
physical disks in the virtual disk are 80 GB, 160 GB, and 500 GB, a dedicated hot spare can be assigned. That is because the
physical disk selected for the dedicated hot spare is larger than the smallest (80 GB) physical disk in the virtual disk.
The physical disk is already part of a virtual disk
A dedicated hot spare cannot be assigned to another virtual disk.
The physical disk are of different types
The physical disk used as a dedicated hot spare must be the same type as the physical disks that are already part of the virtual
disk. For example, if a virtual disk consists of SATA-II physical disks, the dedicated hot spare must be a SATA-II physical disk.
Cannot create a global hot spare
If you cannot create a global hot spare, check the following causes:
1. There are no empty physical disks available or the physical disks have not been converted to RAID-capable disks.
2. The physical disk is already part of a virtual disk.
3. The physical disk assigned as the global hot spare has failed.
4. The physical disk assigned as the global hot spare is missing.
There are no empty physical disks available or the physical disks have not
been converted to RAID-capable disks
Install additional physical disks and convert them to a RAID-capable disk, If existing physical disks are Non-RAID they need to
be converted to RAID-capable disks.
WARNING: When a physical disk is converted to RAID Capable disks, all data on the physical disk is lost.
NOTE: A physical disk with a Non-RAID status can be converted to a RAID-Capable disk, if desired, but it is no longer
Non-RAID (Converting to RAID-Capable adds PERC S150 configuration information to the physical disk).
The physical disk is already part of a virtual disk
A dedicated hot spare cannot be assigned to another virtual disk.
The physical disk assigned as the global hot spare has failed
When prompted at system startup, press Ctrl+R to access the BIOS Configuration Utility Ctrl+R. In the BIOS
Configuration Utility Ctrl+R, select View Virtual Disk Details and press Enter. Determine whether the physical disk that is
designated as the global hot spare has a status of Failed.
1. Check to see if the physical disk is malfunctioning or is physically disconnected.
2. Select another physical disk as the global hot spare.
Troubleshooting your system
53