LSI SAS2008 mps driver preferred firmware version
Slawa Olhovchenkov
slw at zxy.spb.ru
Wed Nov 18 16:54:20 UTC 2015
On Wed, Nov 18, 2015 at 08:15:15AM -0800, Freddie Cash wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 18, 2015 at 2:25 AM, Slawa Olhovchenkov <slw at zxy.spb.ru> wrote:
>
> > On Mon, Nov 16, 2015 at 01:19:55PM -0800, Freddie Cash wrote:
> >
> > > On Mon, Nov 16, 2015 at 12:57 PM, Slawa Olhovchenkov <slw at zxy.spb.ru>
> > wrote:
> > > Did the original disk get labelled automatically? No, you had to do
> > that
> > > when you first started using it. So, why would you expect a
> > > replaced disk
> >
> > Initial labeling is problem too.
> > For new chassis with 36 identical disk (already installed) -- what is
> > simple way to labeling disks?
> >
>
> That's the easy part. Boot with all the drives pulled out a bit, so they
> aren't connected/detected.
>
> Insert first disk, wait for it to be detected and get a /dev node, then
> partition/label it. Repeat for each disk. Takes about 5 minutes to label
> a 45-bay JBOD chassis.
Hmm, from me to server more then 1700km, how I can do this?
> No different than how you would get the serial number off each disk before
> inserting them into the chassis, so you'd know for sure which slot they're
> in.
This is do by manufacturer.
Or in DC after service ordering.
I am don't assemble servers, in general.
And I am don't see servers and don't know how they look.
> "Replace disk in bay with blinked led"
> >
> > Author: bapt
> > Date: Sat Sep 5 00:06:01 2015
> >
>
> And, how did you manage to do that before Sep 5, 2015?
Deteched disk don't blink activity LED.
> Usaly serial number can be read w/o pull disk (for SuperMicro cases
> > this is true, remote hand replaced disk by S/N for me w/o pull every disk).
> >
>
> How? We have all SuperMicro storage chassis (SC2xx, SC8xx, and JBODs) and
> server chassis in our data centre here. None of them allow you to read the
> serial number off the physical disk without pulling the disk out
> completely. You'd have to manually label each bay with the serial number
> before inserting the disk into the chassis ... which is no different from
> labelling the device in the OS. Except it's much faster to find a 3D
> co-ordinate (enc0a6) than to scan every bay looking for a specific serial
> number.
For SC847A this do for me in NL DC (as I understand -- through holes
at an angle).
> But, to each their own. :) Everyone has their "perfect" system that works
> for them. :D
>
> --
> Freddie Cash
> fjwcash at gmail.com
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