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Dell Computer Drive Computer Drive User Manual

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1. Viewing or Ending an iSCSI Session Contents Viewing iSCSI Statistics and Setting Baseline Statistics 264 ee bt oO PS 37 Edit Remove or Rename Host Topology 38 4 Event Monitor 41 Enabling the Event Monitor 41 Disabling the Event Monitor 42 5 About Your Host 43 Configuring Host Access 43 Automatic Configuration 44 Manual Configuration using SAS HBA 44 Manual Configuration using iSCSI 45 Removing Host Access 46 HostGroups 0000 47 CreatingaHostGroup 47 Adding aHosttoaHostGroup 41 Removing a Host From a Host Group 48 Moving a Host to a Different Host Group 48 Removing a Host Group 49 Host Topology aoaaa aaa 49 HostContextAgent 50 1 0 Data Path Protection 51 Failover with Red Hat Enterprise Linux 51 Contents 6 Disk Groups and Virtual Disks 53 Creating Disk Groups and Virtual Disks 54 Automatic Configuration 55 Manual Configuration 55 Hot Spare Drive Protection 58 Automatically Configuring Hot Spares 58 Manually Configuring Hot Spares 59 Host to Virtual Disk Mapping 60 Creating Host to Virtual Disk Mappings 60 Modifying and Removing Host to Virtual
2. Virtual Disk Copy 93 94 Virtual Disk Copy Firmware Downloads You can download the following types of firmware images with MD Storage Manager e RAID controller module firmware that manages the storage array controllers e RAID nonvolatile static random access memory NVSRAM images that specify the default settings for the storage array controllers e Physical disk firmware that controls the operation of the disks in the storage array e Enclosure Management Modules EMMs firmware that manages data transfer between the drives and a RAID enclosure To download firmware for any of these components click the Support tab and then click Download firmware MD Storage Manager displays links to specify the components for which firmware is available Before downloading any firmware verify that the storage arrays are in Optimal status When you download new firmware MD Storage Manager checks the operating status of the storage array controllers If any controllers are not in the Optimal status an error message appears and you can stop or continue the download Before continuing correct any non Optimal conditions K NOTE Virtual disks that do not have all their member drives at controller startup are reported as Optimal The firmware reports this to prevent disks failing as a result of disconnected enclosures Downloading RAID Controller and NVSRAM Packages The following sections describe the downloading process for RAID Co
3. At the SERIAL INTERFACE MODE MENU press lt 1 gt and lt Enter gt then lt Q gt and lt Enter gt At the BOOT OPERATIONS MENU press lt R gt and lt Enter gt to restart the controller Text scrolls across the screen as the controller reboots Once Controller 0 has fully booted look for sodMain complete inthe HyperTerminal or MINICOM window press lt Enter gt At the prompt type clearSYMbolPassword must use exact case and press lt Enter gt The return value 0 0x0 indicates that the password has been reset deleted Close HyperTerminal or MINICOM Remove password reset cable To set a new password go to the Modular Disk Storage Manager software under the Tools tab and click Set Or Change Password Link Leave the Current Password blank enter the new password twice and click OK Storage Array K NOTE If you require help with this procedure contact Dell for technical assistance For more information on contacting Dell see the Getting Help chapter of the Hardware Owners Manual Changing Expansion Enclosure ID Numbers When an MD1000 expansion enclosure is attached to an MD3000 MD3000i storage array for the first time an enclosure ID number is assigned and maintained by the MD1000 This enclosure ID number is also shown in the MD Storage Manager but it is not an indicator of the enclosure s physical location It may appear that MD Storage Manager is reporting the expansion enclosures in improper
4. K NOTE The initiator name entered must match the name on a host server that will connect to the storage array Click Next Indicate whether the host is part of a host group cluster If the host is not part of a host group select No If the host is part of a host group select Yes To create a new host group enter a name in the Enter new host group name text box To add the host to an existing host group select the host group from the Select existing host group box Click Next Click Finish to configure the host Removing Host Access Use the following procedure to remove a host s access to a storage array 46 1 2 Click the Modify tab then click Edit topology In the host topology list click the plus sign to the left of the host group name The host group expands to show the hosts in the group In the list click the name of the host whose access you want to remove and then click Remove located to the right of the list Click Yes to remove access Repeat step 3 for each host whose access you want to remove When the list contains only those hosts you want to access the storage array click Close beneath the list About Your Host Host Groups A host group is a logical entity of two or more hosts that share access to specific virtual disks on the storage array You create host groups with MD Storage Manager All hosts in a host group must have the same host type operating system
5. the same virtual disks Configuring Host Access Configuring host access allows you to either permit or deny access to a storage array for specific hosts When you permit host access that host can then be mapped to a virtual disk on the storage array On the Summary tab the Hosts amp Mappings area indicates how many hosts are configured to access the array Click Configured Hosts in this area to see the names of these hosts Host access configuration is the first step in setting up your storage array You must complete this task during initial setup and anytime you connect a new host After you configure host access the host does not yet have the ability to write data to the storage array You must map hosts to the virtual disks and register virtual disks with the host s operating system before a host can write to the storage array See Disk Groups and Virtual Disks on page 53 for information on these tasks About Your Host 43 To begin configuring host access click the Configure tab and then click either Configure Host Access Automatic or Configure Host Access Manual See the appropriate section for manual configuration depending on whether you are using SAS HBA or iSCSI Automatic Configuration To automatically configure a host for access to the storage array 1 Click the Configure tab and then click Configure Host Access Automatic 2 To see hosts that already have access to the storage array click View c
6. NOTE If you ordered this feature you received a Premium Feature Activation card shipped in the same box as your Dell PowerVault MD storage array Follow the directions on the card to obtain a key file and to enable the feature A snapshot virtual disk is a point in time image of a virtual disk in a storage array It is not an actual virtual disk containing data rather it is a reference to the data that was contained on a virtual disk at a specific time A snapshot virtual disk is the logical equivalent of a complete physical copy However you can create a snapshot virtual disk much faster than a physical copy using less disk space The virtual disk on which the snapshot is based called the source virtual disk must be a standard virtual disk in your storage array Typically you create a snapshot so that an application such as a backup application can access the snapshot and read the data while the source virtual disk remains online and accessible K NOTE No I O requests are permitted on the source virtual disk while the virtual disk snapshot is being created A snapshot repository virtual disk containing metadata and copy on write data is automatically created when a snapshot virtual disk is created The only data stored in the snapshot repository virtual disk is that which has changed since the time of the snapshot After the snapshot repository virtual disk is created I O write requests to the source virtual disk resume Before a
7. Restarting the Host Agent Software in Linux on page 28 Storage Array 17 e To adda storage array that uses out of band management specify the host name or IP address of each controller in the storage array K NOTE It can take several minutes for MD Storage Manager to connect to the specified storage array Naming Storage Arrays Each storage array should be assigned a unique name A storage array name has a 30 character limit All leading and trailing spaces are deleted from the name A name can consist of letters numbers and the special characters underscore _ dash and pound sign No other special characters are allowed To physically locate a storage array 1 Click the Tools tab 2 Click Blink and then click Blink Storage Array or Enclosures 3 Select the storage array from the displayed list and click Blink The indicator light on the front of the storage array flashes 4 Click Stop after you locate the array To rename the selected storage array 1 Click the Tools tab 2 Click Rename Storage Array 3 Type a unique meaningful name that is easy to understand and remember 4 Click OK K NOTE Avoid arbitrary names or names that might lose meaning in the future Removing Storage Arrays You can remove a storage array from the list of managed arrays if you no longer want to manage it from a specific storage management station Removing a storage array does not affect the storage array or its data in
8. Simple Path on page 71 to create the snapshot using the simple path If you want to use a snapshot regularly such as for backups use the Disable Snapshot and Re create Snapshot options to reuse the snapshot Disabling and re creating snapshots preserves the existing virtual disk to host mappings to the snapshot virtual disk Creating the Snapshot Using the Simple Path K NOTE Removing the drive letter of the associated virtual disk in Windows or unmounting the virtual drive in Linux will help to guarantee a stable copy of the drive for the Snapshot After first preparing the host server s as specified in the preceding procedure complete the following steps to create a virtual disk snapshot using the simple path 1 In MD Storage Manager click the Configure tab and then click Create Snapshot Virtual Disks 2 The Additional Instructions dialog appears click Close in this dialog to continue 3 Click the plus sign to the left of the disk group to expand it then click the virtual disk from which you want to create a snapshot 4 Click Next A No Capacity Exists warning appears if there is not enough space in the disk group of the source virtual disk to create the snapshot Snapshot Virtual Disks 71 10 11 12 13 14 72 On the Create Snapshot Virtual Disks Select Path screen select the Simple path K NOTE A snapshot repository virtual disk requires 8 MB of free space If the required free space
9. Virtual Disks Specify Repository Virtual Disk Capacity screen enter how much space you want to allocate for the snapshot repository virtual disk in the Specify capacity box then click Next In the Notify me when the repository disk becomes x full box specify at what percentage MD Storage Manager should consider the snapshot repository virtual disk to be full Specify what should happen if the snapshot repository virtual disk becomes full Select Fail the snapshot virtual disk to leave the source disk available Select Fail writes to the source virtual disk to leave the snapshot virtual disk available and stop data from writing to the source virtual disk Choose whether to map the virtual disk to a host or host group now or later To map now select Map now select a host or host group by clicking it then assign a LUN Snapshot Virtual Disks 71 15 16 17 18 To map later select Map later Click Finish to create the snapshot virtual disk and the associated snapshot repository virtual disk After you have created one or more snapshot virtual disks mount or reassign a drive letter of the source virtual disk If needed assign host to virtual disk mapping between the snapshot virtual disk and the host operating system that accesses it K NOTE In some cases depending on the host type and any virtual disk manager software in use the software prevents you from mapping the same host to both a source virtual d
10. You must satisfy the requirements of your host operating system for creating snapshot virtual disks Failure to meet the requirements of your host operating system results in an inaccurate point in time image of the source virtual disk or the target virtual disk in a virtual disk copy NOTICE Before you create a new point in time image of a source virtual disk stop any data access 1 0 activity or suspend data transfer to the source virtual disk to ensure that you capture an accurate point in time image of the source virtual disk Close all applications including Windows Internet Explorer to make sure all 1 0 activity has stopped NOTE Removing the drive letter of the associated virtual disk s in Windows or unmounting the virtual drive in Linux will help to guarantee a stable copy of the drive for the Snapshot Before creating a snapshot virtual disk the host server has to be in the proper state Perform the following steps to prepare your host server 1 2 Stop all I O activity to the source Using your Windows system flush the cache to the source At the host prompt type SMrepassist f lt filename identifier gt and press lt Enter gt See SMrepassist Utility on page 102 for more information Remove the drive letter s of the source in Windows or unmount the virtual drive s in Linux to help guarantee a stable copy of the drive for the Snapshot If this is not done the snapshot operation will report that it has comp
11. You must stop and restart the host context agent to see the changes to the host topology if any of the following situations occur e Anew storage array is attached to the host server e A host is added while turning on power to the RAID controller modules Linux In Linux you can stop and start the host context agent from the command line Use the following syntax SMagent start or SMagent stop You will stop and then restart SMagent after performing either of the two following maintenance tasks e Moving a controller offline or replacing a controller e Removing host to array connections from or attaching host to array connections to a Linux host server Windows In Windows you can stop and start the host context agent from the Services option of the Administrative Tools To access the host context agent 1 Select Start Settings Control Panel gt Administrative Tools gt Services or Select Start Administrative Tools gt Services 2 From the list of services select Modular Disk Storage Manager Agent 50 About Your Host 1 0 Data Path Protection You can have multiple host to array connections for a host Make sure to select all of the connections to the array when configuring host access to the storage array NOTICE Refer to the Installation Guide for more information on cabling configurations K NOTE For maximum redundancy you must select all host connections to the array when manually de
12. a Windows based volume indicate a RAW file system one that has not been formatted you must reboot the system so that Windows can recognize the correct virtual target disk c In Linux mount the virtual disk 4 Enable I O activity to the source virtual disk and the target virtual disk Removing Copy Pairs Removing copy pairs permanently removes any virtual disk copy related information for the source virtual disk and target virtual disk in the Virtual Disk Properties and the Storage Array Profile dialogs After you remove the virtual disk copy you can select the target virtual disk as a source virtual disk or a target virtual disk for a new virtual disk copy Removing a virtual disk copy also permanently removes the Read Only attribute for the target virtual disk Removing copy pairs does not delete the data on the source virtual disk or target virtual disk This merely breaks the copy relationship between the two virtual disks When you remove a virtual disk copy from the storage array the target write attribute for the target virtual disk is also removed If the virtual disk copy is in In Progress status you must stop the virtual disk copy before you can remove the copy pair To remove a copy pair perform the following steps 1 Click the Modify tab and then click Manage virtual disk copies 2 Select one or more copy pairs in the table and click Remove The Remove Copy Pairs dialog appears 3 Click Yes to remove the copy pair
13. associated with the target virtual disk if any exist 90 Virtual Disk Copy Preparing Host Servers to Recopy a Virtual Disk K NOTICE Before you create a new copy of a source virtual disk stop any data access I O activity or suspend data transfer to the source virtual disk and if applicable the target disk to ensure that you capture an accurate point in time image of the source virtual disk Close all applications including Windows Internet Explorer to make sure all I O activity has stopped NOTE Removing the drive letter of the associated virtual disk s in Windows or unmounting the virtual drive in Linux will help to guarantee a stable copy of the drive for the virtual disk copy Before creating a new virtual disk copy for an existing copy pair both the host server and the associated virtual disk you are recopying have to be in the proper state Perform the following steps to prepare your host server and virtual disk 1 2 Stop all I O activity to the source and target virtual disk Using your Windows system flush the cache to both the source and the target virtual disk if mounted At the host prompt type SMrepassist f lt filename identifier gt and press lt Enter gt See SMrepassist Utility on page 102 for more information Click the Summary tab then click Disk Groups amp Virtual Disks to ensure that the virtual disk is in Optimal or Disabled status Remove the drive letter s of the source
14. at least 60 seconds between the removal of drives from a storage array e Wait at least 60 seconds between the insertion of drives into a storage array In a large configuration storage management software may take up to 10 seconds to detect hardware changes MD3000 Maintenance Considerations For Linux kernels stop and then restart the SMagent after performing one of the following maintenance tasks e Move a controller offline or replace a controller Remove SAS cables from or attach SAS cables to host servers running Red Hat Enterprise Linux version 4 SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 9 or SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 operating systems K NOTE If a Resolve Topology Conflicts message appears in the Status portlet of the Summary page after restarting the SMagent it may be necessary to restart the host server to clear this message Do not select the Resolve selection in the Topology Conflict wizard The MD3000 will continue to service 1 0 requests but the array could become partially managed if only in band management is used Stop all 1 0 operations on any host servers that were involved in the maintenance operation and restart the system 108 Hardware Considerations MD3000 Cluster Configuration Guidelines for Standalone Host Servers If one of the standalone host servers you are planning to configure into a cluster environment is running MD Storage Manager and has a virtual disk mapped to the array use that host to
15. can access the Recovery Guru by clicking Storage Array Needs Attention on the Summary page or by clicking Recover from failure on the Support page You can detect a problem using the following indicators e Non Optimal status icons e Alert notification messages that are sent to the appropriate destinations e Hardware indicator lights The status icons return to Optimal status as problems are resolved Storage Array Profile The Storage Array Profile provides an overview of your configuration including firmware versions and the current status of all devices on the storage array You can access the storage array profile by clicking View storage array profile from either the Summary or Support pages Device Health Conditions The storage array establishes communication with each managed device and determines the current device status Before you configure or troubleshoot your device always make sure the enclosures in the storage array are in Optimal status Troubleshooting 101 A storage array is always in one of six possible health status conditions which you can identify by the status icon e Optimal status Every component in the managed device is in the desired working condition e Needs Attention status A problem exists with the managed device that requires intervention If the storage array has a Needs Attention status contact Technical Assistance for resolution e Fixing status A Needs Attention condition ha
16. controller module s management Ethernet port including its Internet Protocol IP address subnetwork mask subnet mask and gateway If you are using a Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol DHCP server you can enable automatic network configuration but if you are not using a DHCP server you must enter the network configuration manually K NOTE RAID controller module network configurations can be assigned using a DHCP server the default setting However if a DHCP server is not available and the 10 second selection period times out the RAID controller modules use the 192 168 128 101 static IP address for controller 0 For controller 1 the RAID controller modules use the 192 168 128 102 static IP address For in band management commands events and data travel through the host to controller interface Unlike out of band management commands and events are mixed with data For detailed information on setting up in band and out of band management see the Installation Guide K NOTE in band management is not supported on systems running the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3 operating system 16 Storage Array Adding Storage Arrays To add a storage array to MD Storage Manager click New in the Array Selector area A window is displayed that allows you to choose the automatic or manual process to add a new storage array K NOTE Verify that your host or management station network configuration including station IP addres
17. data block on the source virtual disk is modified however the contents of the block to be modified are copied to the snapshot repository virtual disk for safekeeping Because the snapshot repository virtual disk stores copies of the original data in those data blocks further changes to those data blocks write only to the source virtual disk The snapshot repository uses less disk space than a full physical copy because the only data blocks that are stored in the snapshot repository virtual disk are those that have changed since the time of the snapshot Snapshot Virtual Disks 67 When you create a snapshot virtual disk you specify where to create the snapshot repository virtual disk its capacity and other parameters You can disable or delete the snapshot virtual disk when you no longer need it such as when the backup is complete If you disable a snapshot virtual disk you can re create and reuse it the next time you perform a backup see Re creating Snapshot Virtual Disks on page 80 for more information If you delete a snapshot virtual disk you also delete the associated snapshot repository virtual disk K NOTE Deleting a snapshot does not affect data on the source virtual disk The information that follows will better prepare users for using the snapshot virtual disk premium feature of the Dell PowerVault systems K NOTE The following host preparation sections also apply when using the snapshot feature through the CLI int
18. disk group and then you define the parameters for the first virtual disk in the new disk group e Create a new virtual disk in the free capacity of an existing disk group You only need to specify the parameters for the new virtual disk A disk group has a set amount of free capacity that was configured when the disk group was created You can use that free capacity to subdivide the disk group into one or more virtual disks You can create disk groups and virtual disks using an automatic configuration procedure or using a manual configuration procedure Automatic configuration provides the fastest method but with limited configuration options Manual configuration is a more involved process but provides more configuration options When creating a virtual disk consider all of the possible uses for that virtual disk and select an appropriate capacity for those uses For example if a disk group has a virtual disk that stores multimedia files which tend to be large and another virtual disk that stores text files which tend to be small the multimedia file virtual disk requires more capacity than the text file virtual disk A disk group should be organized according to its related tasks and subtasks For example if you create a disk group for the Accounting Department you can create virtual disks that match the different types of accounting 54 Disk Groups and Virtual Disks performed in the department Accounts Receivable AR A
19. enter the HBA host port and Alias in the Enter New HBA Host Port dialog box and then click Add 5 Click Next 6 Indicate whether the host is part of a host group cluster If the host is not part of a host group select No If the host is part of a host group select Yes Tocreate a new host group enter a name in the Enter new host group name text box To add the host to an existing host group select the host group from the Select existing host group box 7 Click Next 8 Click Finish to configure the host Manual Configuration using iSCSI Configure the host to make it available to the storage array for volume mapping by following these steps 1 Click the Configure tab and then click Configure Host Access Manual 2 Type a name of your choice in the Enter host name text box This can be an informal name not necessarily a name used to identify the host to the network 3 Select the operating system of your host in the Select host type drop down box and then click Next 4 Specify the iSCSI initiators by choosing known initiators or by manually defining initiators To select an initiator that is already recognized by MD Storage Manager click an initiator in the Known iSCSI Initiators list and then click Add About Your Host 45 7 8 To manually define an initiator click New enter the iSCSI initiator name and iSCSI initiator label in the Enter new iSCSI initiator dialog box and then click Add
20. highlight disks in either list and click Add or Remove When you are satisfied with the size of the disk group click Next at the bottom of the page Specify the size of the first virtual disk to be created in the new disk group in the New virtual disk capacity box Enter a name for the virtual disk in the Name text box Specify the type of files that will be stored on the virtual disk MD Storage Manager will optimize the virtual disk based on your selection Your choices include File system typical Database Multimedia When you are satisfied with the parameters of the virtual disk click Next Disk Groups and Virtual Disks 14 15 To map the new virtual disk to a host now select Map now and assign a logical unit number LUN to the virtual disk in the drop down box To map the new virtual disk to a host later select Map later Click Finish to create the new disk group and the first virtual disk in the group Creating a Virtual Disk From Free Capacity To manually create a virtual disk within an existing disk group first decide in which disk group you want to create the new virtual disk Then use the following procedure to create the new virtual disk 1 2 Click the Configure tab then click Create Virtual Disks Select Free capacity on the Create Virtual Disks Select Capacity Type page Click the plus sign at the left of the disk group to display the virtual disks and free capacity in
21. is not available in the disk group of the source virtual disk the Create Snapshot Virtual Disks feature defaults to the advanced path Click Next Type a name for the snapshot in the Snapshot virtual disk name text box Type a name for the snapshot repository virtual disk in the Snapshot repository virtual disk name text box Click Next Choose whether to map the virtual disk to a host or host group now or later To map now select Map now select a host or host group by clicking it and then assign a LUN To map later select Map later Click Finish to create the snapshot virtual disk and the associated snapshot repository virtual disk After you have created one or more snapshot virtual disks mount or reassign a drive letter of the source virtual disk If needed assign host to virtual disk mapping between the snapshot virtual disk and the host operating system that accesses it K NOTE In some cases depending on the host type and any virtual disk manager software in use the software prevents you from mapping the same host to both a source virtual disk and its associated snapshot virtual disk If you are using a Linux based system run the hot_add utility to register the snapshot virtual disk with the host operating system K NOTE The hot_add utility is not needed for Windows Snapshot Virtual Disks Creating a Snapshot Virtual Disk Using the Advanced Path About the Advanced Path Use the advanced path to c
22. order You can change the enclosure ID numbers in the MD Storage Manager by clicking the Tools menu and then clicking Change Enclosures ID Numbers Any ID number you assign will not conflict with the enclosure IDs Configuring Alert Notifications MD Storage Manager can send an alert for any condition on the storage array that requires your attention such as the failure of a storage array component or the occurrence of an adverse environmental condition Alerts can be sent as e mail messages or as SNMP messages You can verify whether alerts are currently set by looking at the Alert status line in the Status area of the Summary tab Configuring E mail Alerts To configure e mail alerts click the Tools tab and then click Set up e mail alerts The Content Area displays two links Configure Sender E mail Settings and Add or Edit E mail Addresses K NOTE These settings apply to all storage arrays currently managed by the management station Storage Array 25 Sender e mail settings include the SMTP and e mail address information MD Storage Manager uses to send e mail alerts To configure sender e mail settings 1 Click the Tools tab then click Set Up Email Alerts 2 Enter the following information e Sender email address The e mail address that appears as the sender on every e mail alert such as that of the network administrator e Mail SMTP server The name of the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol SMTP gateway of th
23. the same group Percent Full When the snapshot repository virtual disk reaches the user specified repository full percentage level the event is logged in the Major Event Log MEL The default snapshot repository full percentage level is 50 of the source virtual disk Snapshot Virtual Disks 73 Snapshot Repository Virtual Disk Full Conditions You can choose whether to fail writes to the source virtual disk or fail the snapshot virtual disk when the snapshot repository virtual disk becomes full Host to Virtual Disk Mapping Choose whether to map the snapshot virtual disk to a host or host group now or to map the snapshot virtual disk later The default setting is Map later Preparing Host Servers to Create the Snapshot Using the Advanced Path NOTICE Before using the Snapshot Virtual Disks Premium Feature in a Microsoft Windows clustered configuration you must first map the snapshot virtual disk to the cluster node that owns the source virtual disk This ensures that the cluster nodes correctly recognize the snapshot virtual disk Mapping the snapshot virtual disk to the node that does not own the source virtual disk before the Snapshot enabling process is completed can result in the operating system mis identifying the snapshot virtual disk This in turn can result in data loss on the source virtual disk or an inaccessible snapshot For details on mapping the snapshot virtual disk to the secondary node refer to t
24. virtual disk copy operation has a status of Pending or In Progress or if the operation fails before completing the copy Keep the target virtual disk Read Only enabled if you want to preserve the data on the target virtual disk for reasons such as the following e Ifyou are using the target virtual disk for backup purposes e If you are using the data on the target virtual disk to copy back to the source virtual disk of a disabled or failed snapshot virtual disk If you decide not to preserve the data on the target virtual disk after the virtual disk copy is complete change the write protection setting for the target virtual disk to Read Write To set the target virtual disk read write permissions complete the following steps 1 Click the Modify tab and then click Manage Virtual Disk Copies 2 Select one or more copy pairs in the table and click Permissions to the right of the table The Set Target Virtual Disk Permissions dialog box appears 3 In the Set Target Virtual Disk Permissions dialog box select either Read Only or Read Write 4 Click OK in the dialog box If you select Read Only write requests to the target virtual disk will be rejected If you select Read Write the host can read and write to the target virtual disk after the virtual disk copy is complete Virtual Disk Copy 85 Virtual Disk Copy Restrictions Before you perform any virtual disk copy tasks understand and adhere to the restrictions listed in t
25. 8 NOTE Dell recommends stopping all 1 0 to the array when downloading physical disk firmware NOTE Due to a limitation with Linux physical disk firmware updates must be performed using out of band management only Failure to do so may result in the host server becoming unresponsive and it may require a reboot Click the Support tab then click Download firmware From the Download firmware display click Download Physical Disk Firmware A dialog box lists the current physical disk firmware version in use Click Add to browse to the file that you want to download By default only firmware images that are compatible with physical disks in the storage array appear Click the file in the File Selection area and then click OK If the file you selected is not valid or is incompatible with the physical disks in the storage array an error message appears Click OK to close it and select a compatible file Click Transfer Firmware Downloads 7 A Confirm Download dialog box appears listing the current versions and the versions you selected of physical disk firmware To complete the download click Yes Downloading EMM Firmware NOTICE Do not make any configuration changes to the storage array while you are downloading the EMM firmware Doing so could cause the firmware download to fail damage the storage array or cause loss of data accessibility K NOTE Due to a limitation with Linux EMM firmware updates must be perform
26. Dell PowerVault Modular Disk Storage Manager User s Guide www dell com support dell com Notes and Notices K NOTE A NOTE indicates important information that helps you make better use of your computer NOTICE A NOTICE indicates either potential damage to hardware or loss of data and tells you how to avoid the problem Information in this document is subject to change without notice 2008 Dell Inc All rights reserved Reproduction in any manner whatsoever without the written permission of Dell Inc is strictly forbidden Trademarks used in this text Dell the DELL logo PowerEdge and PowerVault are trademarks of Dell Inc Microsoft Windows Windows Server MS DOS and Internet Explorer are either trademarks or registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and or other countries Red Hat and Red Hat Enterprise Linux are registered trademarks of Red Hat Inc SUSE is a registered trademark of Novell Inc Other trademarks and trade names may be used in this document to refer to either the entities claiming the marks and names or their products Dell Inc disclaims any proprietary interest in trademarks and trade names other than its own February 2008 Contents 1 About This Guide aaau 11 Userlnterface 11 SummaryTab 00 12 Configure Tab 004 12 Modify Tab onau 12 Tools Tabs ser 34 6 kon a a ea a 13 ISSN TaD ies Santee aha
27. Disk Mapping 0 4 60 Changing Controller Ownership of the VirtualDiskk 2 2 2005 61 Storage Partitioning 61 Disk Group and Virtual Disk Expansion 62 Disk Group Expansion 62 Virtual Disk Expansion 62 Storage Array Media Scan 63 Changing Media Scan Settings 63 Suspending the MediaScan 64 Microsoft Services 64 Virtual Disk Service 0 4 64 Volume Shadow Copy Service 65 7 Premium Feature Snapshot Virtual Disks 67 Creating a Snapshot Virtual Disk Using the Simple Path 0 4 About the Simple Path Preparing Host Servers to Create the Snapshot Using the Simple Path Creating the Snapshot Using the Simple Path Creating a Snapshot Virtual Disk Using the Advanced Path About the Advanced Path Preparing Host Servers to Create the Snapshot Using the Advanced Path Creating the Snapshot Using the Advanced Patha i en te i a E ela ton eee Specifying Snapshot Virtual Disk Names Snapshot Repository Capacity Re creating Snapshot Virtual Disks Disabling a Snapshot Virtual Disk Preparing Host Servers to Re create a Snapshot Virtual Disk Re creating a Snapshot Virtual Disk 8 Premium Fea
28. I host ports View or end iSCSI sessions View iSCSI statistics NOTE The iSCSI tab is shown only in the MD Storage Manager when the controllers contain iSCSI host ports Support Tab Recover from a failure Gather support information View the storage array profile Download RAID controller NVSRAM and physical disk firmware Manage RAID controllers About This Guide 13 e View online help View the event log Other Information You May Need A CAUTION For complete regulatory and safety information see your Product Information Guide Warranty information may be included within this document or as a separate one Setting Up Your Dell PowerVault MD provides an overview of setting up and cabling your storage array e Dell PowerVault MD Installation Guide provides installation and configuration instructions for both software and hardware e Dell PowerVault MD Hardware Owner s Manual provides information about the enclosure hardware e Dell PowerVault MD Storage Manager CLI Guide provides information about using the command line interface CLI e Dell PowerVault MD Resource CD contains all system documentation and management tools e Dell PowerVault MD Systems Support Matrix provides information on supported software and hardware for MD systems The document is available at support dell com Dell PowerEdge Cluster Documentation is available at support dell com A link to clustering docume
29. In addition all hosts in the host group must have special software such as clustering software to manage virtual disk sharing and accessibility If a host is part of a cluster every host in the cluster must be connected to the storage array and every host in the cluster must be added to the host group Use the following procedures to create a host group to add or remove hosts from a host group or to delete a host group Creating a Host Group 1 Click the Configure tab and then click Create Host Group 2 Type a name for the new host group in the Enter new host group name text box 3 In the Select hosts to add list click the name of a host you want to add to the host group then click Add The host moves to the Hosts in group list 4 Repeat step 3 until all the hosts you want to add to the host group are moved into the Hosts in group list 5 Click OK Adding a Host to a Host Group 1 Click the Modify tab then click Edit Host Topology A list of hosts and host groups appears 2 In the host topology list click the plus sign to the left of the host group name The host group expands to show the hosts in the group 3 Click the host you want to move and click Move About Your Host 47 4 5 Select the host group to which you want to move the host Click OK The host is moved into the host group The host retains the virtual disk mappings assigned to it and inherits the virtual disk mappings assigned to t
30. Monitor Disable the event monitor if you do not want the system to send alert notifications If you are running the event monitor on multiple systems disabling the event monitor on all but one system prevents the sending of duplicate messages Windows 1 Select Start Settings Control Panel gt Administrative Tools gt Services or Select Start Administrative Tools gt Services 2 From the list of services select Modular Disk Storage Manager Event Monitor 3 Select Action gt Properties In the Service Status area click Stop Linux At the command prompt type SMmonitor stop and press lt Enter gt When the program shutdown is complete the system displays the following message Stopping Monitor process 42 Event Monitor About Your Host This chapter covers basic information about configuring host groups and host access host topology and I O data path protection A host is a system that accesses a storage array and is mapped to the virtual disks through one or more host connections Hosts have the following attributes Host name A name that uniquely identifies the host e Host type The operating system running on the host e Host connection A physical connection to the host server Host connections can be automatically detected by MD Storage Manager and can be identified by an alias assigned by the user e Host group A host may be associated with other hosts to share access to
31. a disk group or virtual disk Creating a Disk Group and Virtual Disk From Unconfigured Capacity Use the following procedure to manually create a disk group 1 Click the Configure tab then click Create Virtual Disks 2 Select Unconfigured capacity on the Create Virtual Disks Select Capacity Type page then click Next Disk Groups and Virtual Disks 55 56 3 10 11 12 13 Select Manual on the Create Virtual Disks Physical Disk Selection Choices page then click Next Select the RAID level for the new disk group To select one physical disk to add to the disk group click the disk of your choice in the Unselected physical disks list To select more than one physical disk to add to the disk group press lt Ctrl gt while clicking the disks of your choice in the Unselected physical disks list K NOTE When adding more than one physical disk to a disk group it is recommended to use disks with the same capacity You can choose to use disks of differing capacities however the overall capacity of the disk group will be based on the smallest capacity physical disk This means that additional capacity on larger physical disks will not be available for use Click Add to add the disk s you selected in step 5 to the Selected physical disks list Click Calculate Capacity beneath the list of selected disks to see the capacity of the disk group you are creating To add or remove capacity for the proposed disk group
32. a snapshot virtual disk Capacity Allocation The snapshot repository virtual disk is created using free capacity on the same disk group where the source virtual disk resides Host to Virtual Disk Mapping The default setting is Map now Percent Full When the snapshot repository virtual disk reaches the specified repository full percentage level the event is logged in the Main Event Log MEL The default snapshot repository full percentage level is 50 percent of the source virtual disk Snapshot Repository Virtual Disk Full Conditions When the snapshot repository virtual disk becomes full you are given a choice of failing write activity to the source virtual disk or failing the snapshot virtual disk Preparing Host Servers to Create the Snapshot Using the Simple Path NOTICE Before using the Snapshot Virtual Disks Premium Feature in a Microsoft Windows clustered configuration you must first map the snapshot virtual disk to the cluster node that owns the source virtual disk This ensures that the cluster nodes correctly recognize the snapshot virtual disk Mapping the snapshot virtual disk to the node that does not own the source virtual disk before the Snapshot enabling process is completed can result in the operating system mis identifying the snapshot virtual disk This in turn can result in data loss on the source virtual disk or an inaccessible snapshot For details on mapping the snapshot virtual disk to
33. ach tab Summary Tab e See the status of a storage array See the hardware components in a storage array See storage array capacity See hosts mappings and storage partitions See virtual disk groups and virtual disks Access links to online help FAQs and a tutorial about storage concepts Configure Tab Configure host access Create a host group Create hot spares Create virtual disks Create snapshot virtual disks if enabled Create virtual disk copies if enabled Create host to virtual disk mappings Modify Tab 12 Modify the host topology Rename and delete virtual disks Add free capacity to a disk group Change virtual disk ownership and the preferred path of virtual disks Modify a snapshot virtual disk if enabled Manage virtual disk copies if enabled Edit host to virtual disk mappings About This Guide Tools Tab Rename a storage array Set or change a password View or enable premium features Turn on indicator lights Change enclosure ID numbers Set or change enclosure tags Set up e mail alerts and SNMP alerts Synchronize controller clocks change the network configuration or reset the battery age Inherit system settings Change media scan settings iSCSI Tab Set the authentication method supported by the target Define permissions for mutual authentication Set an alias for the target for identification Modify the discovery method for iSCSI targets Set the parameters for iSCS
34. ake sure that the controllers are installed and that the power is turned on to the storage array Correct any existing problems before continuing If you have an in band storage array use the following procedure Click Refresh after each step to check the results a Make sure that the host agent software is installed and running If you started the host before the host was connected to the controllers in the storage array the host agent software will not be able to find the controllers If so make sure that the connections are tight and restart the host agent software Troubleshooting Make sure that the network can access the host by using the ping command in the following syntax ping lt host name or IP address of the host gt If the network can access the host continue to step c If the network cannot access the host skip to step d Remove the host with the unresponsive status from the MD Storage Manager and add that host again If the host returns to optimal status you have completed this procedure Make sure that the power to the host is turned on and that the host is operational If applicable make sure that the host bus adapters have been installed in the host Examine all external cables and switches or hubs to make sure that you cannot see any damage and that they are tightly connected If you have recently replaced or added the controller restart the host agent software so that the new controller
35. also can refresh the DHCP b Type the IPv4 or IPv6 address to activate the target discovery After you manually enter an IP address you also can click Advanced to set the customized TCP listening ports 3 If you do not want to allow discovery sessions that are not named select Disallow un named discovery sessions Un named discovery sessions are discovery sessions that are permitted to run without a target name With an un named discovery session the target name or the target portal group tag is not available to enforce the iSCSI session identifier ISID rule For more information on un named discovery sessions click the Support tab then click View Online Help 34 Using iSCSI Configuring the MD3000i iSCSI Host Ports Use the configuration dialog for the iSCSI host ports to set up the MD3000i iSCSI host ports to use with storage arrays in a storage area network SAN 1 Click the iSCSI tab and then click Configure iSCSI Host Ports 2 Select the controller in the iSCSI host port field and then use one of these methods to configure the port Automatically obtain the configuration using one of the following methods IPv4 Obtain the configuration from the DHCP server or refresh DHCP IPv6 Obtain the configuration automatically from a router Manually specify the configuration using one of the following methods IPv4 Enter the IP address subnet mask and gateway for the host port e Pv6 Enter t
36. and if mounted virtual disk in Windows or unmount the virtual drive s in Linux to help guarantee a stable copy of the drive for the virtual disk If this is not done the copy operation will report that it has completed successfully but the copied data will not be updated properly Follow any additional instructions for your operating system Failure to follow these additional instructions can create unusable virtual disk copies K NOTE If your operating system requires additional instructions you can find those instructions in your operating system documentation Virtual Disk Copy 91 Recopying the Virtual Disk After first preparing the host server s as specified in the preceding procedure complete the following steps to create a new virtual disk copy for an existing copy pair 1 Click the Modify tab and then click Manage virtual disk copies You can only select one copy operation at a time to be recopied 2 Select the copy operation in the list displayed by the Manage Virtual Disk Copies page and then click Recopy at the right of the list 3 The Recopy dialog box appears Set the copy priority Type yes and click OK 5 Ifyou approve of the parameters type yes in the text box and click Finish to confirm the copy settings and start the virtual disk copy A The Copy Started page appears verifying that the virtual disk copy has started This dialog also enables you to exit the Create virtual disk copies feature or cr
37. and Virtual Disks coverage for the storage array The number and type of hot spare drives is determined based on the number type and capacity of physical disks in the storage array To add hot spare drive protection using automatic configuration 1 Click the Configure tab then click Configure Hot Spares 2 To automatically assign hot spare drives click Configure Hot Spares Automatic 3 Click Assign To remove hot spare drive protection using automatic configuration 1 Click the Configure tab then click Configure Hot Spares 2 Click Configure Hot Spares Automatic 3 Click Unassign 4 Click OK in the dialog box Manually Configuring Hot Spares You can choose to manually configure hot spare drives for the drive sets in your storage array With manual configuration you assign the type and capacity of hot spare protection for individual drives 1 Click the Configure tab then click Configure Hot Spares 2 To manually assign hot spare drives click Configure Hot Spares Manual 3 In the Drive sets list click the drive you wish to protect then click Assign The Assign Hot Spares dialog box appears 4 Inthe Assign Hot Spares dialog box click the unassigned drive you want to configure into a hot spare physical disk then click OK K NOTE When manually configuring a hot spare physical disk you must use a physical disk type that matches the other physical disks in the disk group Using a SAS physical disk to replac
38. ansfer A Confirm Download dialog box appears listing the current versions and the versions you selected of the RAID controller and NVSRAM firmware To complete the download click Yes Downloading Non redundant MSCS NVSRAM Firmware K NOTE For non redundant MCSC Cluster configurations download an updated NVSRAM to avoid Virtual Disk Not on Preferred Path conditions Use the following procedure to download non redundant NVSRAM firmware 1 2 Click the Support tab then click Download firmware From the Download firmware display click Download RAID Controller Module NVSRAM A dialog box lists the current controller firmware and NVSRAM versions in use Firmware Downloads 97 Click Select File to browse to the file that you want to download By default only firmware images that are compatible with the current storage array configuration appear Click the non redundant MSCS NVSRAM file in the File Selection area and then click OK If the file you selected is not valid or is incompatible with the current storage array configuration an error message appears Click OK to close it and select a compatible file Click Transfer A Confirm Download dialog box appears listing the current versions and the versions you selected of the RAID controller and NVSRAM firmware To complete the download click Yes Downloading Physical Disk Firmware Use the following procedure to download physical disk firmware Es K 9
39. any way Removing a storage array simply removes it from the list of storage arrays that appear in the drop down list in the Array Selector If a storage array is accidentally removed it can be added again see Adding Storage Arrays on page 17 18 Storage Array To remove a storage array 1 Click Remove located to the right of the drop down menu in the Array Selector 2 Click OK in the Remove dialog box You can still manage the storage array from other storage management stations where it has been added Setting Up Your Storage Array The Perform Initial Setup Tasks link located on the Summary tab provides links to the basic steps you should follow when initially setting up a storage array in MD Storage Manager Following these steps ensures that you complete all the basic steps to configure your storage array Initial setup tasks include 1 Blink the Storage Array Find the physical location of the storage array on your network The storage array can then be identified with a label 2 Rename the Storage Array Provide a unique and memorable name to help you easily identify the storage array 3 Set a Storage Array Password Set a unique password to prevent unapproved manipulation of the storage array such as deletion of a virtual disk 4 Set up alert notifications Enable e mail and SNMP alerts to notify administrators about storage array conditions that require attention See Configuring Alert Notificatio
40. array e Event Monitor A feature that when enabled monitors activity on managed storage arrays and notifies a host or remote system when critical problems occur e SNMP Alert Alert SNMP trap that is sent from the event monitor to an SNMP enabled host Access Virtual Disk Each RAID controller in an MD Storage Array maintains an access virtual disk The host agent software uses the access virtual disk to communicate management requests and event information between the storage management station and the RAID controller module in an in band managed storage array The access virtual disk is not available for application data storage The default LUN is 31 Storage Array 15 NOTICE Removing or manipulating an access virtual disk can cause a loss of management access If you remove an access virtual disk mapping from an in band managed storage array MD Storage Manager can no longer access the storage array Do not modify the access virtual disk either in the operating system or with MD Storage Manager Out of Band and In Band Management You can manage a storage array in two ways Out of band management In band management For out of band management data is separate from commands and events Data travels through the host to controller interface while commands and events travel through the management port Ethernet cables When you use out of band management you must set the network configuration for each RAID
41. as the Dell IT Assistant Storage Array 27 Starting or Restarting the Host Agent Software in Windows The SMagent software automatically starts after you reboot the host If you add a storage array after the host server has started or if iSCSI sessions are created while the SMagent is running you must restart the SMagent software manually using the following procedure 1 Click Start Settings gt Control Panel gt Administrative Tools gt Services or Click Start gt Administrative Tools gt Services 2 In the Services dialog select Modular Disk Storage Manager Agent If the Modular Disk Storage Manager Agent is running click Action gt Stop then wait approximately 5 seconds 4 Click Action gt Start Starting or Restarting the Host Agent Software in Linux The SMagent software automatically starts after you reboot the host If you add a storage array after the host server has started or if iSCSI sessions are created while the SMagent is running you must restart the SMagent software manually using the following procedure To start or restart the host agent software enter the following command at the prompt SMagent start The SMagent software might take a little time to initialize The cursor is shown but the terminal window does not respond When the program starts the following message is displayed SMagent started 28 Storage Array After the program completes the startup process text si
42. ccounts Payable AP internal billing and so forth In this scenario the AR and AP virtual disks probably need more capacity than the internal billing virtual disk K NOTE In Linux the host must be rebooted after deleting virtual disks to reset the dev entries K NOTE Before you can use a virtual disk you must register the disk with the host systems This process is described in Host to Virtual Disk Mapping on page 60 Automatic Configuration If you want to set up virtual disks quickly click the Configure tab and then click Automatic Configuration With this option you do not need to configure individual options for each virtual disk When you use automatic configuration e All available unconfigured capacity on the array is used e All disk groups have the same RAID level e All virtual disks have equal capacity The number of virtual disks created is based on the selected RAID level and available unconfigured capacity e Fora RAID level 1 or 5 disk group hot spare drives are selected automatically based on the number of drives and types of drives available in the storage array Manual Configuration To create individual virtual disks or disk groups click the Configure tab and then click Create Virtual Disks You create one disk group and virtual disk at a time but have control over the RAID level and capacity for each virtual disk and disk group Use this method if you have unique capacity requirements for
43. ce 4 hake a deg 2 om acs 13 Support Tab 0 0 13 Other Information YouMayNeed 14 2 About Your Storage Array 15 Access Virtual Disk 15 Out of Band and In Band Management 16 Adding Storage Arrays 17 Automatic Discovery of Storage Arrays 17 Manual Addition of a Storage Array 17 Naming Storage Arrays 18 Removing Storage Arrays 18 Setting Up Your Storage Array 19 Storage Array SupportData 21 Contents SettingaPassword Password Guidelines ResettingaPassword Connecting the Serial Cable System Setup for Password Reset Reset Password Changing Expansion Enclosure ID Numbers Configuring Alert Notifications Configuring E mail Alerts Configuring SNMP Alerts Starting or Restarting the Host Agent Software in Windows Starting or Restarting the Host Agent Software in Link OE et RE a ee Se 3 USING ISCO sete ee te toot eS x oe Using the iSCSI Tab Changing the iSCSI Target Authentication Entering Mutual Authentication Permissions Creating CHAP Secrets Changing the iSCSI Target Identification Changing the iSCSI Target Discovery Configuring the MD3000i iSCSI Host Ports Advanced iSCSI Host Ports Settings
44. create the Host Group and quorum virtual disk mapping K NOTE Failure to follow this mapping protocol can cause the host server to lose communication with the array if the server is using only in band management and only one of the servers has a virtual disk mapped to the array If communication is lost restore in band management to the other host server and complete the cluster setup using the following procedure 1 Using MD Storage Manager from either the host server with restored in band management or from a management station select Configure gt Create Host to Virtual Disk Mappings Select the host server name that does not have a virtual disk mapped Click Access to access the virtual disk Assign a logical unit number LUN of 31 Click Finish oF WwW N Hardware Considerations 109 110 Hardware Considerations Index A alert e mail 27 SNMP 27 B backup 84 c Configure tab 12 copy pairs removing 93 copy priority 89 D disk expansion 62 disk group 12 53 55 80 documentation 14 download firmware 13 E e mail alert 27 event monitor 15 F free capacity 53 H HBA port 43 host 15 access 12 configuration 43 59 group 47 name 43 type 43 host group 15 43 host to virtual disk mapping 12 60 69 74 hot spare drive 58 79 automatic configuration 59 in use 53 manual configuration 59 standby 53 hot_add utility 58 Index 111 iSCSI advanc
45. d or disabled snapshot virtual disk After the virtual disk copy is complete the source virtual disk becomes available to host applications for write requests To prevent error messages do not attempt to access a source virtual disk that is participating in a virtual disk copy while the virtual disk copy is in progress Virtual Disk Copy 83 Reasons to use virtual disk copy include the following K Copying data for improved access As your storage requirements for a virtual disk change you can use a virtual disk copy to copy data to a virtual disk in a disk group that uses drives with larger capacity within the same storage array Copying data for larger access capacity enables you to move data to greater capacity physical disks for example 61 GB to 146 GB Restoring snapshot virtual disk data to the source virtual disk The Virtual Disk Copy feature enables you first to restore the data from a snapshot virtual disk and then to copy the data from the snapshot virtual disk to the original source virtual disk Creating a backup copy The Virtual Disk Copy feature enables you to create a backup of a virtual disk by copying data from one virtual disk the source virtual disk to another virtual disk the target virtual disk in the same storage array minimizing the time that the source virtual disk is unavailable to host write activity You can then use the target virtual disk as a backup for the source virtual disk as a res
46. dit the host topology Use one of the following actions to correct the host topology Table 3 3 Host Topology Actions Desired Action Steps to Complete Action Move the host the host group or the iSCSI initiator Manually change the host type Manually delete the host the host group or the iSCSI initiator Rename the host the host group or the iSCSI initiator 38 Using iSCSI 1 Click the Modify tab and then click Edit Host Topology 2 Select the item that you want to move and then click Move 3 Select a host group to move the host to and click OK 1 Click the Modify tab and then click Edit Host Topology 2 Select the host that you want to change and click Change 3 Select a new host type or operating system and click OK 1 Click the Modify tab and then click Edit Host Topology 2 Select the item that you want to remove and click Remove 1 Click the Modify tab and then click Edit Host Topology 2 Select the item that you want to rename and click Rename 3 Type a new label for the host and click OK Table 3 3 Host Topology Actions continued Desired Action Steps to Complete Action Add an iSCSI Initiator 1 Click the Modify tab and then click Edit Host Topology 2 Select the host you want to add an iSCSI initiator to and click Add 3 Type or select an iSCSI initiator name and label for the iSCSI initiator and click OK UsingiSCSI 39 40 Using
47. during removal and or inadvertent removal of its redundant data path Removing an EMM from the Expansion Enclosure 1 Check the Recovery Guru to confirm that there is no loss of physical disk path redundancy e If there is no loss of redundancy check the channel If it matches the EMM you are removing you can safely remove it now e If redundancy is lost run the following command Note that channel 1 is the degraded channel set physicalDiskChannel channel 1 status optimal 2 Verify that the path to the channel is restored The Recovery Guru may take several minutes to update Inserting an EMM into an Expansion Enclosure 1 Make sure to always insert the EMM without SAS cables attached After the EMM is inserted wait at least 30 seconds before attaching the SAS cables Hardware Considerations 107 2 After attaching the SAS cables wait at least three minutes for the EMM to reach optimal state K NOTE You may experience a transitional failure on multiple EMMs in the MEL log while the system updates Removing and Inserting Physical Disks Refer to the following guidelines to ensure that physical disks are safely removed from and inserted into the MD3000 MD3000i RAID storage array e Wait at least 60 seconds between removing a drive and inserting a replacement e When pulling a drive from a storage array to move it to a different slot wait 60 seconds before inserting the drive into the new slot e Wait
48. e a SATA II physical disk or a SATA II physical disk to replace a SAS physical disk is not supported Also the hot spare physical disk must be as large as or larger than the largest physical disk in the disk group Disk Groups and Virtual Disks 59 Host to Virtual Disk Mapping After you create virtual disks you must map them to the host s connected to the array When you configure host to virtual disk mapping consider these guidelines e Each virtual disk in the storage array can be mapped to only one host or host group e Host to virtual disk mappings are shared between controllers in the storage array Aunique LUN must be used by a host group or host to access a virtual disk Not every operating system has the same number of LUNs available Creating Host to Virtual Disk Mappings Create host to virtual disk mappings by clicking the Configure tab then clicking Create Host to Virtual Disk Mappings When you click this link the Storage Manager displays a series of pages in which you select the hosts and virtual disks to be mapped After you complete this configuration verify the mapping by clicking Host to Virtual Disk Mappings on the Summary tab to ensure the configuration was created correctly Modifying and Removing Host to Virtual Disk Mapping You might choose to modify or remove a host to virtual disk mapping for several reasons such as an incorrect mapping or reconfiguration of the storage array Modifying o
49. e mail server from which e mail alerts will be sent For example smtp mycompany com e Edit Sender Contact Information Optional Additional information about the sender such as the sender s name company and phone number This information is optional e mail alerts will work if contact information is not provided To specify to whom alerts are sent 1 Click the Tools tab then click Set Up Email Alerts 2 Type an e mail address in the Recipient email addresses text box and click Add to add it to the list of configured e mail addresses 3 Specify the following for each e mail address in the list to choose a different setting click the down arrow to the right of the field Information To Send Select one of the following options from the drop down list e Event Only The alert e mail contains only the event information This alert type is the default e Event Profile The alert e mail contains the event information and the storage array profile Event Support The alert e mail contains the event information and a compressed file that contains complete support information for the storage array that has generated the alert Frequency Select one of the following options from the drop down list Every event Sends an e mail whenever an event occurs This option is the default 26 Storage Array 4 Every x hours Sends an e mail at the specified interval if an event occurred during t
50. eate another new virtual disk copy 6 Choose one of the following options based on whether you want to create another virtual disk copy or modify the one you just created e Yes Create a new virtual disk copy e No Exit the Create virtual disk copies dialog e Manage Virtual Disk Copies Recopy stop the copy process set permissions or priority or remove virtual disk copies You can view the progress of a virtual disk copy in the Manage virtual disk copies page For each copy operation in progress the list displays a sliding scale in the Status field showing the percentage of the operation that is complete Once the virtual disk copy is complete perform the following actions 1 In Linux if you created the target virtual disk with unconfigured capacity run the hot_add utility 2 If you created the target virtual disk with unconfigured capacity you must map the virtual disk to a host in order to use it See Host to Virtual Disk Mapping on page 60 for more information 92 Virtual Disk Copy 3 You must register the target virtual disk with the operating system before you can use the new virtual disk Perform the following steps a Enable write permission on the target virtual disk by either removing the virtual disk copy pair see Removing Copy Pairs on page 93 or explicitly setting write permission b In Windows assign a drive letter to the virtual disk K NOTE Following a disk copy if the properties of
51. ed using out of band management only Failure to do so may result in the host server becoming unresponsive and it may require a reboot 1 Click the Support tab then click Download firmware 2 From the Download firmware display click Download Environmental EMM Card Firmware A list of expansion enclosures appears with the corresponding version of the current EMM firmware file 3 Select where to download the EMM firmware by clicking an individual expansion enclosure to highlight it or by clicking the Select All checkbox to highlight all the expansion trays 4 Click Select File to locate the directory in which the EMM firmware file to download resides Select the file to download by double clicking the file and then click Start to start the download The Start button is disabled until you select a firmware file If you click Stop while a firmware download is in progress the download completes before the operation stops When the status field for the remaining expansion enclosures changes to Canceled restart the firmware upgrade process Firmware Downloads 99 100 Firmware Downloads Troubleshooting Problems The following sections provide information to assist you in resolving problems that may occur with your MD Storage Array Recovery Guru The Recovery Guru is a component of MD Storage Manager that diagnoses critical events on the storage array and recommends step by step recovery procedures for problem resolution You
52. ed host port settings 35 changing target discovery 34 changing target identification 34 configuring host ports 35 edit remove or rename host topology 38 iSCSI tab 13 viewing or ending a session 36 viewing or setting statistics 37 L logical unit number 15 M Modify tab 12 N NVSRAM file 13 P password 22 physical disk 15 R RAID level 54 55 89 112 Index S safety information 14 SMrepassist utility 102 snapshot repository virtual disk 53 67 capacity 79 snapshot virtual disk 12 53 67 84 advanced path 73 SNMP alert 15 source virtual disk 67 79 83 87 status 79 storage array adding 17 18 adding with automatic discovery 17 managing 13 naming 18 removing 18 storage partition 61 storage partitioning 53 Summary tab 12 58 Support tab 13 support dell com 14 T target virtual disk 83 90 Tools tab 13 U unconfigured capacity 53 utilities hot_add 58 V virtual disk 53 54 access 15 deleting in Linux 55 name 78 79 recopy 90 registering 57 source 67 79 virtual disk copy 12 87 90 examples 84 restrictions 86 stop 90 WwW warranty 14 Index 113 114 Index
53. elp to guarantee a stable copy of the drive for the Snapshot Before creating a snapshot virtual disk the host server has to be in the proper state To ensure that the host server is properly prepared to create a snapshot virtual disk you can either use an application to carry out this task or you can perform the following steps 1 2 70 Stop all I O activity to the source Using your Windows system flush the cache to the source At the host prompt type SMrepassist f lt filename identifier gt and press lt Enter gt See SMrepassist Utility on page 102 for more information Snapshot Virtual Disks 3 Remove the drive letter s of the source in Windows or unmount the virtual drive s in Linux to help guarantee a stable copy of the drive for the Snapshot If this is not done the snapshot operation will report that it has completed successfully but the snapshot data will not be updated properly K NOTE Verify that the virtual disk has a status of Optimal or Disabled by clicking the Summary tab and then clicking Disk Groups amp Virtual Disks 4 Follow any additional instructions for your operating system Failure to follow these additional instructions can create unusable snapshot virtual disks K NOTE If your operating system requires additional instructions you can find those instructions in your operating system documentation After your host server has been prepared see Creating the Snapshot Using the
54. erface Creating a Snapshot Virtual Disk Using the Simple Path You can choose the simple path to create a snapshot virtual disk if the disk group of the source virtual disk has the required amount of free space A snapshot repository virtual disk requires a minimum 8 MB of free capacity The destination of a snapshot repository virtual disk is determined based on the free capacity available in the disk group If 8 MB of free capacity is not available in the disk group of the source virtual disk the Create Snapshot Virtual Disks feature defaults to the advanced path see Creating a Snapshot Virtual Disk Using the Advanced Path on page 73 In the advanced path option you can choose to place the snapshot repository virtual disk in another disk group or you can use unconfigured capacity on the storage array to create a new disk group About the Simple Path Using the simple path you can specify the following parameters for your snapshot virtual disk Snapshot Virtual Disk Name A user specified name that helps you associate the snapshot virtual disk to its corresponding snapshot repository virtual disk and source virtual disk 68 Snapshot Virtual Disks Snapshot Repository Virtual Disk Name A user specified name that helps you associate the snapshot repository virtual disk to its corresponding snapshot virtual disk and source virtual disk Using the simple path the following defaults are used for the other parameters of
55. f 32 to 126 decimal See Table 3 1 for a list of valid ASCII characters Table 3 1 Valid ASCII Characters for CHAP Secrets Space 4 amp i 0 l 2 3 4 5 6 ds 8 9 lt gt A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S I U V Ww X Y Z a _ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Ww x y Zz Using iSCSI 33 Changing the iSCSI Target Identification You cannot change the iSCSI target name but you can associate an alias with the target for simpler identification Aliases are useful because the iSCSI target names are not intuitive You should provide an iSCSI target alias that is meaningful and easy to remember 1 Click the iSCSI tab and then click Change Target Identification 2 Type the alias in the iSCSI target alias field and click OK K NOTE Aliases can contain a maximum of 30 characters Aliases can include letters numbers and the special characters underscore _ minus and pound sign No other special characters are permitted K NOTE Open iSCSI which is used by Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 with SP 1 does not support using target alias Changing the iSCSI Target Discovery 1 Click the iSCSI tab and then click Change Target Discovery 2 Select the Use iSNS server check box to activate iSCSI target discovery You can use one of these methods a Use the DHCP option IPv4 only to automatically activate target discovery You
56. figure each storage array with a password to protect it from unauthorized access MD Storage Manager asks for this password when an attempt is made to change the storage array configuration such as when a virtual disk is created or deleted View operations do not require a password To set change or remove a password for a storage array 1 Click the Tools tab then click Set or Change Password Text boxes for the current password the new password and new password confirmation are displayed 2 To enter a new password e Leave the Current password text box blank Enter the new password in the New password and Confirm new password text boxes To change a password e Enter the current password in the Current password text box e Enter the new password in the New password and Confirm new password text boxes Storage Array 21 To remove a password Enter the current password in the Current password text box Leave the New password and Confirm new password text boxes blank If you forget your password contact Dell for technical assistance Password Guidelines Consider these guidelines when you create a password e Use secure passwords for your storage array A password should be easy for you to remember but difficult for others to determine Consider using numbers or special characters in the place of letters such as a 1 in the place of the letter J or the at sign in the place of the letter a e For i
57. fining host topology For example a host might have two host connections For this host you would select two host connections If a component such as a RAID controller module or a cable fails or an error occurs on the data path to the preferred RAID controller module virtual disk ownership is moved to the alternate nonpreferred RAID controller module for processing This failure or error is called failover Multi path drivers such as MPIO and MPP are installed on host systems that access the storage array and provide I O path failover The multi path driver MPIO in Windows and MPP in Linux is used for failover Automatic Virtual Disk Transfer AVT is used specifically for single port cluster failover The AVT feature mode is automatically selected by host type K NOTE You should have the multi path driver installed on the hosts at all times even in a configuration where there is only one path to the storage system such as a single port cluster configuration During a failover the virtual disk transfer is logged as a critical event and an alert notification is sent automatically if you have configured alert destinations for the storage array Failover with Red Hat Enterprise Linux For users running Red Hat Enterprise Linux Version 3 0 x86 the mpp_vhba failover driver component does not load unless a storage array is connected and a LUN is mapped to the host server Follow these steps to ensure proper MPP driver loading and LUN
58. hat period You can select this option only if the Information to send option is set to Event Profile or Event Support Click Save Configuring SNMP Alerts To add a management console to the list of addresses configured to receive SNMP alerts K NOTE The Management Information Base MIB for the MD Storage Array is copied to the client directory as part of a Full or Management Station installation selection DellMDStorageArray mib can be compiled on an SNMP Management Console using the interface provided by the console Click the Tools tab then click Set up SNMP Alerts Enter the Community name K NOTE The community name is an ASCII string that identifies a known set of management consoles and is set by the network administrator in the management console The default community name is public Enter the Trap destination K NOTE The trap destination is the IP address or the host name of a management console that runs an SNMP service Click Add to add the management console to the Configured SNMP addresses list Repeat steps 2 through 4 until you have added all management consoles that should receive SNMP alerts Click OK NOTE You must install an SNMP service on every system included in the list of addresses configured to receive SNMP alerts NOTE You do not have to install MD Storage Manager on a system in order to display SNMP alerts You need only install an appropriate SNMP service and application such
59. he Dell PowerEdge Cluster SE600W Systems Installation and Troubleshooting Guide on support dell com The destination of a snapshot repository virtual disk is determined based on the free capacity available in the disk group A snapshot repository virtual disk requires a minimum 8 MB of free capacity You can choose your preferred creation path simple or advanced if the disk group of the source virtual disk has the required amount of free space If 8 MB of free capacity is not available in the disk group of the source virtual disk the Create Snapshot Virtual Disks feature defaults to the advanced path see Creating a Snapshot Virtual Disk Using the Advanced Path on page 73 In the advanced path option you can choose to place the snapshot repository virtual disk in another disk group or you can use unconfigured capacity on the storage array to create a new disk group K NOTE You can create concurrent snapshots of a source virtual disk on both the 74 source disk group and on another disk group Snapshot Virtual Disks Before creating a Snapshot Virtual Disk note the following EA The following types of virtual disks are not valid source virtual disks snapshot repository virtual disks snapshot virtual disks target virtual disks that are participating in a virtual disk copy K NOTE Virtual Disk Copy is an Advanced Premium feature You cannot create a snapshot of a virtual disk that contains unreadable sectors
60. he IP address routable IP addresses and router IP address After you manually enter an IP address you also can click Advanced to set the advanced parameters for the iSCSI target discovery Advanced iSCSI Host Ports Settings K NOTE Configuring the advanced iSCSI host ports settings is optional Use the advanced settings for the individual iSCSI host ports to specify the TOP frame size the virtual LAN and the network priority Table 3 2 Advanced iSCSI Host Port Settings Setting Description Virtual LAN VLAN A method of creating independent logical networks within a physical network Several VLANs can exist within a network VLAN 1 is the default VLAN NOTE For more information on creating and configuring a VLAN with MD Support Manager click the Support tab then click View Online Help Using iSCSI 35 Table 3 2 Advanced iSCSI Host Port Settings continued Setting Description Ethernet Priority The network priority can be set from lowest to highest Although network managers must determine these mappings the IEEE has made broad recommendations e 0 lowest priority default e 1 4 ranges from loss eligible traffic to controlled load applications such as streaming multimedia and business critical traffic e 5 6 delay sensitive applications such as interactive video and voice e 7 highest priority reserved for network critical traffic do not use with the MD3000i TCP Liste
61. he group Other hosts in the group do not inherit the mappings of the added host Removing a Host From a Host Group 1 3 4 5 Click the Modify tab then click Edit Host Topology A list of hosts and host groups appears In the host topology list click the plus sign to the left of the host group name The host group expands to show the hosts in the group Click the name of the host you want to remove from the group Click Remove located to the right of the list Click Yes to remove the host The host is moved out of the host group The host retains the virtual disk mappings assigned to it and loses the virtual disk mappings assigned to the group Moving a Host to a Different Host Group 1 48 Click the Modify tab then click Edit Host Topology A list of hosts and host groups appears In the host topology list click the plus sign to the left of the host group name The host group expands to show the hosts in the group Click the name of the host you want to move to another group and click Move Select the host group to which you want to move the host Click OK The host is moved to the indicated host group About Your Host The host retains the virtual disk mappings assigned to it and inherits the virtual disk mappings assigned to the group to which it is moved The host loses the virtual disk mappings assigned to the group from which it was moved Removing a Host Group This section cover
62. his section The restrictions apply to the source virtual disk the target virtual disk and the storage array 86 While a virtual disk copy has a status of In Progress Pending or Failed the source virtual disk is available for read I O activity only After the virtual disk copy is complete read and write I O activity to the source virtual disk are permitted A virtual disk can be selected as a target virtual disk for only one virtual disk copy at a time A virtual disk copy for any virtual disk cannot be mounted on the same host as the source virtual disk Windows does not allow a drive letter to be assigned to a virtual disk copy A virtual disk with a Failed status cannot be used as a source virtual disk or target virtual disk A virtual disk with a Degraded status cannot be used as a target virtual disk A virtual disk participating in a modification operation cannot be selected as a source virtual disk or target virtual disk Modification operations include the following Capacity expansion RAID level migration Segment sizing Virtual disk expansion Defragmenting a virtual disk NOTE The following host preparation sections also apply when using the virtual disk copy feature through the CLI interface Virtual Disk Copy Creating a Virtual Disk Copy Use the Create Virtual Disk Copies feature on the Configure tab to create a full copy of a source virtual disk This operation overwrites an
63. hoose whether to place the snapshot repository virtual disk on free capacity or unconfigured capacity and to change the snapshot repository virtual disk parameters You can select the advanced path regardless of whether you use free capacity or unconfigured capacity for the snapshot virtual disk Using the advanced path you can specify the following parameters for your snapshot virtual disk Snapshot Virtual Disk Name A user specified name that helps you associate the snapshot virtual disk to its corresponding snapshot repository virtual disk and source virtual disk Snapshot Repository Virtual Disk Name A user specified name that helps you associate the snapshot repository virtual disk to its corresponding snapshot virtual disk and source virtual disk Capacity Allocation This parameter allows you to choose where to create the snapshot repository virtual disk You can allocate capacity by using one of the following methods Use free capacity on the same disk group where the source virtual disk resides Use free capacity on another disk group Use unconfigured capacity and create a new disk group for the snapshot repository virtual disk Dell recommends placing the snapshot repository virtual disk within the disk group of the source virtual disk This ensures that if drives associated with the disk group are moved to another storage array all the virtual disks associated with the snapshot virtual disk remain in
64. iSCSI Event Monitor An event monitor is provided with MD Storage Manager When enabled the event monitor runs continuously in the background and monitors activity on the managed storage arrays If the event monitor detects any critical problems it can notify a host or remote system using e mail Simple Network Management Protocol SNMP trap messages or both For the most timely and continuous notification of events enable the event monitor on a management station that runs 24 hours a day Enabling the event monitor on multiple systems or having a combination of an event monitor and MD Storage Manager active can result in duplicate events but this does not indicate multiple failures on the array Enabling the Event Monitor You can enable the event monitor at any time K NOTE It is a good idea to configure the event monitor to start by default on a management station that runs 24 hours a day Microsoft Windows 1 Select Start Settings Control Panel gt Administrative Tools gt Services or Select Start Administrative Tools gt Services 2 From the list of services select Modular Disk Storage Manager Event Monitor Select Action Properties In the Service Status area click Start Linux At the command prompt type SMmonitor start and press lt Enter gt When the program startup begins the system displays the following message SMmonitor started Event Monitor 41 Disabling the Event
65. identified Devices 104 Recovering from an Unidentified Storage Array 104 A Enclosure Hardware Replacement Maintenance and Configuration Considerations 107 Removing and Inserting Enclosure Management Modules on Attached Expansion Enclosures 107 Removing an EMM from the Expansion ENClOSUTG ws Suse doze eS Boe tive ok es 107 Inserting an EMM into an Expansion ENClOSU 25509 cia eae dayne Wan ee Aap eek 107 Removing and Inserting Physical Disks 108 MD3000 Maintenance Considerations 108 MD3000 Cluster Configuration Guidelines for Standalone Host Servers 109 Contents 10 Contents About This Guide Dell PowerVault Modular Disk MD Storage Manager software is used to create and manage multiple storage arrays The software can be used on any host attached to the storage array as well as on storage management stations connected to the same sub network MD Storage Manager is a graphical user interface GUI with wizard guided tools and a task based structure designed to reduce the complexity of installation configuration management and diagnostic tasks MD Storage Manager software also contains an optional event monitoring service that is used to send alerts when a critical problem with the storage array occurs and a command line interface CLI to access functions performed by MD Storage Manager This guide is intended for user
66. ils and end iSCSI sessions View iSCSI Statistics View and save iSCSI statistics Using iSCSI 31 Changing the iSCSI Target Authentication If an initiator requires mutual bi directional authentication see Entering Mutual Authentication Permissions on page 32 1 Click the iSCSI tab and then click Change Target Authentication 2 Select None if no authentication is required for any initiator to access the target K NOTE If you select None any initiator can access this target Use this option only if you do not require secure data However if you select both None and CHAP atthe same time the storage array will allow an iSCSI initiator to log on with or without CHAP authentication 3 Select CHAP if you want any initiator that tries to access the target to provide the target permissions If CHAP is selected but no CHAP secret is defined an error message appears Click CHAP Secret to see the Enter CHAP Secret dialog see Creating CHAP Secrets on page 32 You can define the permissions in this dialog Entering Mutual Authentication Permissions Mutual authentication or two way authentication is a way for a client or a user to verify themselves to a host server and for the host server to validate itself to the user This validation is accomplished in such a way that both parties are sure of the other s identity 1 Click the iSCSI tab and then click Enter Mutual Authentication Permissions Select an initiator from
67. ing systems When HyperTerminal prompts for a name type MD and click OK Select the COMI port and click OK Set the following communication settings click Apply then click OK Bits per second 115200 Data bits 8 Parity none Stop bits 1 Flow control none LINUX Operating System The following instructions use the Linux application MINICOM to connect via the serial port 1 2 3 Open a terminal command window At the prompt type minicom all lowercase and press lt Enter gt Once MINICOM is open press lt Ctrl gt lt A gt then lt Z gt then the letter lt O gt to open the configuration screen Select Serial Port Setup and press lt Enter gt Press lt F gt to change Hardware Flow Control setting to no Press lt E gt to set the Comm Parameters Storage Array 23 9 10 Press lt I gt to set the speed to 115200 Press lt Q gt to set the data parity and stopbits to 8 N 1 then press lt Enter gt Press lt Enter gt to exit the Comm Parameters screen Select Exit and press lt Enter gt again to exit the setup screen Reset Password NOTICE Failure to stop data 1 0 to a non fault tolerant array before performing the 24 1 2 10 11 following steps may result in loss of data Stop all I O to the array From the HyperTerminal Windows or MINICOM Linux window press lt Ctr gt lt B gt At the SPECIAL OPERATIONS MENU press lt 1 gt lt 0 gt and lt Enter gt
68. initiator to access the target b Enter Mutual Authentication Permissions If initiators require mutual authentication you can enter permissions for the target to access the initiator c Change Target Identification Define an alias for the target for easy identification d Change Target Discovery Configure parameters for how the target will be discovered on the network View and Enable Premium Features Optional You may have purchased premium features including snapshot virtual disks and virtual disk copies See which premium features are currently available to you and enable these features if they are currently turned off Configure Ethernet Management Ports Optional Configure network parameters for the Ethernet management ports managing a storage array for out of band Ethernet connections Storage Array Storage Array Support Data Aggregated support data can be generated for a storage array to aid in remote troubleshooting and issue analysis To generate the support data report 1 Click the Support tab then click Gather Support Information 2 Click Browse to display the Collect All Support Data dialog box 3 In the Save in drop down box navigate to the location where you want the report saved 4 Type a meaningful name in the File name text box and click Save Click Start A compressed zip file containing support data is saved to the location of your choice Setting a Password You can con
69. is found If a problem exists make the appropriate modifications to the host If you have an out of band storage array use the following procedure Click Refresh after each step to make sure of the results Make sure that the network can access the controllers by using the ping command Use the following syntax ping lt controller IP address gt If the network can access the controllers continue to step b If the network cannot access the controllers skip to step c Remove the storage array with the unresponsive status from the MD Storage Manager and add that storage array again If the storage array returns to optimal status you have completed this procedure Examine the ethernet cables to make sure that you cannot see any damage and that they are tightly connected Troubleshooting 105 106 d Make sure that the applicable network configuration tasks have been done for example the IP addresses have been assigned to each controller Make sure that the controller firmware is compatible with the MD Storage Manager on your management station If the controller firmware was upgraded the MD Storage Manager might not have access to the storage array A new version of MD Storage Manager might be needed to manage the storage array with the new version of the controller firmware If this problem exists see the Dell support website at support dell com Look to see if there is too much network traffic to one or more co
70. isk and its associated snapshot virtual disk If you are using a Linux based system run the hot_add utility to register the snapshot virtual disk with the host operating system K NOTE The hot_add utility is not needed for Windows Specifying Snapshot Virtual Disk Names Choose a name that helps you associate the snapshot virtual disk and snapshot repository virtual disk with its corresponding source virtual disk The following information is useful when naming virtual disks 78 By default the snapshot name is shown in the Snapshot virtual disk name field as lt source virtual disk name gt lt sequence number gt where sequence number is the chronological number of the snapshot relative to the source virtual disk The default name for the associated snapshot repository virtual disk that is shown in the Snapshot repository virtual disk field is lt source virtual disk name gt R lt sequence number gt For example if you are creating the first snapshot virtual disk for a source virtual disk called Accounting the default snapshot virtual disk is Accounting 1 and the associated snapshot repository virtual disk default name is Accounting R1 The default name of the next snapshot virtual disk you create based on Accounting is Accounting 2 with the corresponding snapshot repository virtual disk named as Accounting R2 by default Snapshot Virtual Disks Whether you use the software supplied sequence number tha
71. isters virtual disks K NOTE Virtual disks mapped to Windows Server 2008 hosts are marked offline by default To bring the virtual disks online use the Disk Management MMC if you are using a GUI version of Windows Server 2008 or use the DiskPart utility if you are using a Core version of Windows Server 2008 Hot Spare Drive Protection Hot spare drives in a storage array provide an additional level of protection in case a physical disk fails Hot spare drives only take over for failed drives in a RAID level 1 5 or 10 disk group Using a hot spare drive can be an advantage because it automatically replaces a failed physical disk that is part of a disk group You can see whether hot spare protection is currently set by viewing the Hot Spare Physical Disks line in the Hardware Components area of the Summary tab You can also see the number of standby and in use hot spares A standby hot spare drive is a physical disk that has been assigned as a hot spare drive and is available to take over for any failed physical disk An in use hot spare drive is a physical disk that has been assigned as a hot spare drive and is currently taking over for a failed physical disk Automatically Configuring Hot Spares You can choose to allow MD Storage Manager to automatically configure hot spare drives With automatic configuration the controller automatically configures the number and type of hot spare drives that will provide optimal 58 Disk Groups
72. ity for the snapshot repository virtual disk is approaching its threshold you can increase the capacity of a snapshot repository virtual disk by using one of the following methods Use the free capacity available on the disk group of the snapshot repository virtual disk Add unconfigured capacity to the disk group of the snapshot repository virtual disk Use this option when no free capacity exists on the disk group You cannot increase the storage capacity of a snapshot repository virtual disk if the snapshot repository virtual disk has any one of the following conditions The virtual disk has one or more hot spare drives in use The virtual disk has a status other than Optimal Snapshot Virtual Disks 79 e Any virtual disk in the disk group is in any state of modification The controller that has ownership of this virtual disk is currently adding capacity to another virtual disk Each controller can add capacity to only one virtual disk at a time e No free capacity exists in the disk group e No unconfigured capacity is available to add to the disk group To expand the snapshot repository virtual disk from MD Storage Manager 1 Click the Modify tab then click Modify snapshot virtual disks 2 Click Expand Snapshot Repository 3 Click the snapshot repository virtual disk you want to expand 4 If necessary you can add free capacity to the volume group by adding an unassigned drive To add an unassigned drive a Click Add D
73. l Disks 2 The Additional Instructions dialog appears click Close in this dialog to continue 3 Click the plus sign to the left of the disk group to expand it then click the virtual disk from which you want to create a snapshot 4 Click Next A No Capacity Exists warning appears if there is not enough space in the disk group of the source virtual disk to create the snapshot 5 On the Create Snapshot Virtual Disks Select Path screen select the Advanced path K NOTE A snapshot repository virtual disk requires 8 MB of free space If the required free space is not available in the disk group of the source virtual disk the Create Snapshot Virtual Disks feature defaults to the advanced path 76 Snapshot Virtual Disks 10 11 12 13 14 Click Next Type a name for the snapshot in the Snapshot virtual disk name text box Type a name for the snapshot repository virtual disk in the Snapshot repository virtual disk name text box Click Next Choose whether to create the snapshot virtual disk from unconfigured capacity or free capacity To create the snapshot virtual disk from unconfigured capacity a Select Unconfigured capacity then click Next b On the Create Snapshot Virtual Disks Specify Capacity screen choose a RAID level then click Next To create the snapshot virtual disk from free capacity a Select Free capacity b Select a free capacity node then click Next On the Create Snapshot
74. l disk RAID level e Virtual disk configuration Number of drives in the virtual disk groups e Virtual disk type Snapshot virtual disks might take more time to copy than standard virtual disks During a virtual disk copy resources for the storage array are diverted from processing I O activity to completing a virtual disk copy This affects the overall performance of the storage array When you create a new virtual disk copy you define the copy priority to determine how much controller processing time is diverted from I O activity to a virtual disk copy operation Setting Copy Priority The Copy Priority setting defines how much of the storage array s resources are used to complete a virtual disk copy rather than to fulfill I O requests Changing the copy priorities sets the rate at which a virtual disk copy is completed Five copy priority rates are available lowest low medium high and highest If the copy priority is set at the lowest rate I O activity is prioritized and the virtual disk copy takes longer At the highest priority rate the virtual disk copy is prioritized and I O activity for the storage array is slower Virtual Disk Copy 89 You can change the copy priority for a virtual disk copy in the following circumstances e Before the virtual disk copy begins See Creating a Virtual Disk Copy on page 87 e While the virtual disk copy is in progress Click the Modify tab then click Manage Virtual Disk Co
75. l disk types are expandable only from the CLI 62 Disk Groups and Virtual Disks If you receive a warning that the snapshot repository virtual disk is becoming full you may expand the snapshot repository virtual disk from MD Storage Manager See Snapshot Repository Capacity on page 79 for step by step instructions Storage Array Media Scan The media scan is a long running operation that examines virtual disks to verify that data is accessible The process finds media errors before normal read and write activity is disrupted and reports errors to the event log Errors discovered by the media scan include Unrecovered media error Data could not be read on the first attempt or on any subsequent attempts For virtual disks with redundancy protection data is reconstructed rewritten to the physical disk and verified and the error is reported to the event log For virtual disks without redundancy protection RAID 0 virtual disks and degraded RAID 1 and RAID 5 virtual disks the error is not corrected but is reported to the event log Recovered media error Data could not be read by the physical disk on the first attempt but was successfully read on a subsequent attempt Data is rewritten to the physical disk and verified and the error is reported to the event log Redundancy mismatches error The first 10 redundancy mismatches that are found on the virtual disk are reported to the event log Untfixable error Data could n
76. l the memory resident data for the file system indicated by lt filesystem identifier gt and lt filesystem identifier gt specifies a unique file system in the following syntax drive letter lt mount point path gt The file system identifier might consist of only a drive letter as in the following example SMrepassist f E K NOTE In Windows the mount point path is a drive letter An error message appears in the command line when the utility cannot distinguish between the following e Source virtual disk and snapshot virtual disk for example if the snapshot virtual disk has been removed e Standard virtual disk and virtual disk copy for example if the virtual disk copy has been removed Support Information Package MD Storage Manager provides a feature that enables you to save all storage array data such as profile and event log information to a file that you can send if you seek technical assistance for problem resolution To generate this support information bundle 1 Click the Support tab then click Gather Support Information 2 Click Browse The Collect All Support Data dialog box appears 3 In the Save in drop down menu select the location at which you want to save the support data bundle In the File name text box type a name for the bundle 4 Click Save to close the Collect All Support Data dialog box Click Start The support information bundle is saved to the location of your choice Troublesh
77. leted successfully but the snapshot data will not be updated properly K NOTE Verify that the virtual disk has a status of Optimal or Disabled by clicking the Summary tab and then clicking Disk Groups amp Virtual Disks Snapshot Virtual Disks 75 4 Follow any additional instructions for your operating system Failure to follow these additional instructions can create unusable snapshot virtual disks K NOTE If your operating system requires additional instructions you can find those instructions in your operating system documentation After your host server has been prepared see Creating the Snapshot Using the Advanced Path on page 76 to create the snapshot using the advanced path If you want to use a snapshot regularly such as for backups use the Disable Snapshot and Re create Snapshot options to reuse the snapshot Disabling and re creating snapshots preserves the existing virtual disk to host mappings to the snapshot virtual disk Creating the Snapshot Using the Advanced Path K NOTE Removing the drive letter of the associated virtual disk in Windows or unmounting the virtual drive in Linux will help to guarantee a stable copy of the drive for the Snapshot After first preparing the host server s as specified in the preceding procedure complete the following steps to create a virtual disk snapshot using the advanced path 1 In MD Storage Manager click the Configure tab and then click Create Snapshot Virtua
78. logy as a text file Viewing iSCSI Statistics and Setting Baseline Statistics If the configured storage array has iSCSI technology the View iSCSI Statistics option is available only on the iSCSI tab 1 Click the iSCSI tab and then click View iSCSI Statistics 2 Select the iSCSI statistic type you want to view Select one of these types Ethernet MAC statistics Ethernet TCP IP statistics e Target protocol statistics 3 Choose either Raw statistics or the Baseline statistics Raw statistics are all the statistics that have been gathered since the controllers were started Baseline statistics are point in time statistics that have been gathered since you set the baseline time After you select the statistics type and either raw or baseline statistics the details of the statistics appear in the statistics tables 4 To set the baseline for the statistics complete the following steps a Select Baseline Statistics b Click Set Baseline UsingiSCSI 37 c Confirm that you want to set the baseline statistics in the dialog that appears The baseline time shows the latest time you set the baseline The sampling interval is the difference in time from when you set the baseline until you launch the dialog or click Refresh K NOTE You must first set a baseline before you can compare baseline statistics Edit Remove or Rename Host Topology If you give access to the wrong host or the wrong host group you can remove or e
79. lush the cache to both the source and the target virtual disk if mounted At the host prompt type SMrepassist f lt filename identifier gt and press lt Enter gt See SMrepassist Utility on page 102 for more information 3 Click the Summary tab then click Disk Groups amp Virtual Disks to ensure that the virtual disk is in Optimal or Disabled status Virtual Disk Copy 87 4 Remove the drive letter s of the source and if mounted virtual disk in Windows or unmount the virtual drive s in Linux to help guarantee a stable copy of the drive for the virtual disk If this is not done the copy operation will report that it has completed successfully but the copied data will not be updated properly Follow any additional instructions for your operating system Failure to follow these additional instructions can create unusable virtual disk copies K NOTE If your operating system requires additional instructions you can find those instructions in your operating system documentation Copying the Virtual Disk After first preparing the host server s as specified in the preceding procedure complete the following steps to make a virtual disk copy 1 2 Click the Configure tab then click Create Virtual Disk Copies On the Select Source Virtual Disk page select the virtual disk to copy source virtual disk and click Next The Select Target Virtual Disk page appears K NOTE If the virtual disk you select is no
80. mapping 1 Ensure that the storage array is connected to the host server and that out of band Ethernet connections to each RAID controller module exist Create a virtual disk and map it to LUN 0 Reboot the host About Your Host 51 After the host is rebooted the LUN is properly mapped and the MPP driver is loaded All other sequential LUNs can be created and registered to the operating system by running hot_add 52 About Your Host Disk Groups and Virtual Disks Following is a list of terms used throughout this chapter Disk Group A set of physical disks that are logically grouped and assigned a RAID level Every disk group provides the overall capacity required to create one or more virtual disks Virtual Disk A logical component created to enable hosts to access storage on the storage array A virtual disk is created from the capacity available on a disk group and appears as one logical component even though it is created from more than one physical disk Storage Partitioning Logical division of a storage array into entities consisting of one or more virtual disks that can be accessed by a single host or shared among hosts that are part of a host group Unconfigured Capacity Physical disks that are not already assigned to a disk group Free Capacity Space in a disk group that has not been assigned to a virtual disk Standby Hot Spare Drive Physical disk that has been assigned as a hot spare d
81. milar to the following messages is displayed Storage Manager Agent Version 09 1x 00 00 Built Wed Aug 15 16 54 46 CDT 2006 Copyright C 2006 All rights reserved checking device dev rdsk c0t0d0s2 skipping checking device dev rdsk c2t3d18s2 skipping checking device dev rdsk c2t3el6s2 skipping checking device dev rdsk c2t3d14w2 skipping Storage Array 29 30 Storage Array Using iSCSI This chapter provides information on using iSCSI in MD Storage Manager For iSCSI prerequisite requirements and detailed step by step instructions on setting up and configuring iSCSI see the Installation Guide Using the iSCSI Tab The iSCSI tab is shown in the MD Storage Manager only when the controllers contain iSCSI host ports You can define or change settings for the iSCSI target or enter the CHAP permissions in the iSCSI tab Here are some of the iSCSI settings Change Target Authentication Select the authentication method to be supported by the target Enter Mutual Authentication Permissions Define the permissions for initiators that require mutual authentication Change Target Identification Associate an alias with the target for simpler identification Change Target Discovery Modify the way to discover iSCSI targets using the Internet Storage Name Service iSNS server settings Configure iSCSI Host Ports Set the parameters for iSCSI host ports View End iSCSI Sessions View iSCSI session deta
82. ncreased protection use a long password with at least 15 alphanumeric characters The maximum password length is 30 characters e Passwords are case sensitive e For security reasons you can attempt to enter a password only ten times before the storage array enters a lockout state Before you can try to enter a password again you must wait ten minutes for the storage array to reset Resetting a Password Perform this procedure when you have lost or forgotten your password and you need to reset it Connecting the Serial Cable 1 Remove the serial cable from the password reset cable package 2 Connect the DB9 oval end of the cable to the serial port on the computer to be used to communicate with the RAID Controller module 3 Connect the PS2 type round end of the cable to the serial port on either of the MD RAID Controller Modules The flat side of the connector faces down when inserting 22 Storage Array System Setup for Password Reset Microsoft Windows Operating Systems 1 Click Start gt Programs gt Accessories gt Communication gt HyperTerminal to run HyperTerminal If HyperTerminal is not installed click Control Panel gt Add Remove Programs Add Remove Windows Components find HyperTerminal and click the check box then click Apply and OK NOTE The original Windows installation disk may be needed to install HyperTerminal NOTE HyperTerminal is not a component on Windows Server 2008 operat
83. ning Port The default Transmission Control Protocol TCP listening port is 3260 Jumbo Frames The maximum transmission units MTUs It can be set between 1500 and 9000 bytes per frame If the Jumbo Frames are disabled the default MTU is 1500 bytes per frame K NOTE Changing any of these settings resets the iSCSI port 1 0 is interrupted to any host accessing that port You can access the I 0 automatically after the port restarts and the host logs in again Viewing or Ending an iSCSI Session 1 Click the iSCSI tab and then click View End iSCSI Sessions 2 Select the session you want to view in the Current sessions box The details are shown below in the Details box 3 If you want to end the session perform the following steps a Select the session that you want to end and then click End Session to show the End Session confirmation window 36 Using iSCSI b In the confirmation window type yes to confirm that you want to end the iSCSI session and then click OK K NOTE If you end a session any corresponding connections terminate the link between the host and the storage array and the data on the storage array is no longer available K NOTE When a session is manually terminated using the MD Storage Manager the iSCSI initiator software will automatically attempt to re establish the terminated connection to the storage array This may cause an error message 4 Click Save As to save the entire iSCSI sessions topo
84. ns on page 25 for more information a Configure Sender E mail Settings Provide the SMTP e mail address and contact information MD Storage Manager uses to send e mail alerts b Add or Edit E mail Addresses Provide information about accounts that should receive e mail based alerts c Set up SNMP Alerts Provide information about hosts that should receive SNMP based alerts 5 Configure iSCSI Host Ports Configure network parameters for the iSCSI host ports on the RAID controller module s Storage Array 19 20 10 Configure Host Access Set up one or more hosts to access the storage array See Configuring Host Access on page 43 for more information Configure storage array 2 options a Automatic Simple configuration e Step 1 Automatic Configuration See Creating Disk Groups and Virtual Disks on page 54 for more information e Step 2 Create Host to Virtual Disk Mappings See Creating Host to Virtual Disk Mappings on page 60 for more information b Manual Advanced configuration e Step 1 Create Virtual Disks See Manual Configuration on page 55 for more information e Step 2 Configure Hot Spare Physical Disks See Manually Configuring Hot Spares on page 59 for more information Manage iSCSI Settings This option will be present only if your controllers contain iSCSI host ports a Change Target Authentication Choose the authentication methods and permissions if required for an
85. ntation is also included on the Resource CD under Product Documentation e Documentation for any components you purchased separately provides information to configure and install these options e Release notes or readme files are included to provide last minute updates to the enclosure or documentation or advanced technical reference material intended for experienced users or technicians K NOTE Always check for updates on support dell com and read the updates first because they often supersede information in other documents 14 About This Guide About Your Storage Array This chapter covers basic information about how to manage storage arrays from MD Storage Manager including adding and removing arrays from the software performing initial setup tasks setting passwords on an array and configuring alert notifications For information on planning your storage array see the Installation Guide Following is a list of terms that are used throughout this chapter e Physical Disk Non volatile randomly addressable device for storing data e Host System that accesses a storage array and is mapped to virtual disks e Host Group Hosts that are logically associated and share access to the same virtual disks Host Agent Software Software installed on the host that provides in band management and topology discovery e Logical Unit Number LUN Address that identifies individual virtual disks within a storage
86. ntroller and NVSRAM firmware K NOTE Due to a limitation with Linux firmware updates to the RAID controller module must be performed using out of band management only Failure to do so may result in the host server becoming unresponsive and it may require a reboot Firmware Downloads 95 Downloading Both RAID Controller and NVSRAM Firmware K NOTE 1 0 to the array can continue while you are upgrading RAID controller and NVSRAM firmware K NOTE The RAID enclosure must contain at least two disk drives in order to update the firmware on the controller Use the following procedure to download RAID controller and NVSRAM firmware in a single operation 1 Click the Support tab then click Download firmware 2 From the Download firmware display click Download RAID Controller Module Firmware A dialog box lists the current controller firmware and NVSRAM versions in use 3 Click Select File to browse to the file that you want to download By default only firmware images that are compatible with the current storage array configuration appear 4 Click the file in the File Selection area and then click OK If the file you selected is not valid or is incompatible with the current storage array configuration an error message appears Click OK to close the error message and select a compatible file K NOTE If you wish to only download firmware for the RAID controller skip to step 10 in this procedure 6 Click the check box next
87. ntrollers This problem corrects itself because the MD Storage Manager tries to re establish communication with the controllers in the storage array at regular times If the storage array was unresponsive and a subsequent try to connect to the storage array succeeds the storage array becomes responsive For an out of band storage array look to see if management operations are taking place on the storage array from other storage management stations The type of management operations being done and the number of management sessions taking place together establish the number of TCP IP connections made to a controller When the maximum number of TCP IP connections have been made the controller stops responding This problem corrects itself because after some TCP IP connections complete the controller then becomes responsive to other connection tries If the storage array is still unresponsive problems might exist with the controllers If these problems exist see the Dell support website at support dell com Troubleshooting Enclosure Hardware Replacement Maintenance and Configuration Considerations Removing and Inserting Enclosure Management Modules on Attached Expansion Enclosures The following procedures describe how to safely remove and insert an enclosure management module EMM from an expansion enclosure attached to the MD3000 MD3000i NOTICE Failure to follow these guidelines may result in a physical disk failing
88. onfigured hosts 3 Select the hosts you want to give access to the storage array in the Available hosts window 4 To see the ports and the host type for the selected hosts click View Details at the right of the list 5 Click Add to move specific hosts to the Selected hosts window 6 Click OK to configure access for the hosts you selected Manual Configuration using SAS HBA K NOTE Host access that is manually configured requires special attention to ensure that the correct SAS host port World Wide IDs are selected for each host If any incorrect IDs are configured an inaccurate topology will result You can use the SAS 5 E HBA BIOS Setup program to identify the World Wide IDs for the SAS host ports Configure the host to make it available to the storage array for volume mapping by following these steps 1 Click the Configure tab and then click Configure Host Access Manual 2 Type a name of your choice in the Enter host name text box This can be an informal name not necessarily a name used to identify the host to the network 3 Select the operating system of your host in the Select host type box and then click Next 44 About Your Host 4 Specify the HBA host ports by choosing known host ports or by manually defining host ports To select a host port that is already recognized by MD Storage Manager click a host port in the Known HBA host ports list then click Add To manually define a host port click New
89. ooting 103 Unidentified Devices An unidentified node or device occurs when the MD Storage Manager cannot access a new storage array Causes for this error include network connection problems the storage array is turned off or the storage array does not exist K NOTE Before beginning any recovery procedure make sure that the host agent software is installed and running If you started the host before the host was connected to the storage array the host agent software will not be able to find the storage array If so make sure that the connections are tight and restart the host agent software If a storage array is managed by using both out of band management and in band management using the same host a management network connection problem might prevent direct communication with the storage array However you might still be able to manage the storage array over the in band connections The opposite situation can also occur If a storage array is managed through more than one host it is possible that the storage array might become unresponsive to communication over the connections given by one host However you might still be able to manage the storage array over the connections provided by another host Recovering from an Unidentified Storage Array Use the following procedure to recover from an unidentified storage array 104 1 Make sure that the network connection to the storage management station is operating M
90. ot be read and parity or redundancy information could not be used to regenerate the data For example redundancy information cannot be used to reconstruct the data on a degraded virtual disk The error is reported to the event log Changing Media Scan Settings 1 Click the Tools tab then click Change Media Scan Settings 2 Select the number of days allowed for the media scan to complete in the Scan duration days box K NOTE Performing the media scan frequently may negatively impact the performance of other operations Adjust scan duration based on the performance needs of your storage array Disk Groups and Virtual Disks 63 3 In the Select virtual disks to scan box click the virtual disk you want to include in the media scan K NOTE Press lt Ctrl gt and click to add more than one virtual disk to the media scan Click Select All to include all virtual disks in the media scan 4 Check the Scan selected virtual disks checkbox to enable scanning then choose either With consistency check or Without consistency check Consistency check enables parity data to be checked during the media scan 5 Click OK to accept the updated media scan settings Suspending the Media Scan You cannot perform a media scan while performing another long running operation on the disk drive such as reconstruction copy back reconfiguration volume initialization or immediate availability formatting If you want to perform another long r
91. ot virtual disk stops until the snapshot virtual disk is re created Preparing Host Servers to Re create a Snapshot Virtual Disk NOTICE Before you create a new point in time image of a source virtual disk stop any data access 1 0 activity or suspend data transfer to the source virtual disk and snapshot virtual disk to ensure that you capture an accurate point in time image of the source virtual disk Close all applications including Windows Internet Explorer to make sure all I O activity has stopped K NOTE Removing the drive letter of the associated virtual disk in Windows or unmounting the virtual drive in Linux will help to guarantee a stable copy of the drive for the Snapshot Before re creating a snapshot virtual disk both the host server and the associated virtual disk you are re creating have to be in the proper state Perform the following steps to prepare your host server and virtual disk 1 Stop all I O activity to the source and snapshot virtual disk if mounted 2 Using your Windows system flush the cache to both the source and the snapshot virtual disk if mounted At the host prompt type SMrepassist f lt filename identifier gt and press lt Enter gt See SMrepassist Utility on page 102 for more information 3 Click the Summary tab then click Disk Groups amp Virtual Disks to ensure that the snapshot virtual disk is in Optimal or Disabled status Snapshot Virtual Disks 81 4 Remove the drive le
92. ource for system testing or to copy data to another device such as a tape drive or other media NOTE Recovering from a backup copy You can use the Edit Host to Virtual Disk Mappings feature to recover data from the backup virtual disk you created in the previous procedure The Mappings option enables you to unmap the source virtual disk from its host and then to map the backup virtual disk to the same host Creating a Virtual Disk Copy for an MSCS Shared Disk To create a virtual disk copy for a Microsoft Cluster Server MSCS shared disk create a snapshot of the virtual disk and then use the snapshot virtual disk as the source for the virtual disk copy K K 84 NOTE An attempt to directly create a virtual disk copy for an MSCS shared disk rather than using a snapshot virtual disk will fail with the following error The operation cannot complete because the selected virtual disk is not a source virtual disk candidate NOTE When creating a snapshot virtual disk map the snapshot virtual disk to only one node in the cluster Mapping the snapshot virtual disk to the host group or both nodes in the cluster may cause data corruption by allowing both nodes to concurrently access data Virtual Disk Copy Virtual Disk Read Write Permissions After the virtual disk copy is complete the target virtual disk automatically becomes read only to the hosts The target virtual disk rejects read and write requests while the
93. p is achieved by adding unconfigured capacity on the array to the disk group Data is accessible on disk groups virtual disks and physical disks throughout the entire modification operation The additional free capacity can then be used to perform a virtual disk expansion on a standard or snapshot repository virtual disk Disk Group Expansion To add free capacity to a disk group use the following procedure 1 Click the Modify tab then click Add Free Capacity Physical Disks 2 On the Add Free Capacity page click the disk group you want to expand 3 Click Next beneath the list of disk groups The Storage Manager displays information on the disk group you selected 4 Inthe Add capacity to volume group drop down menu choose the amount of unconfigured capacity to add to the disk group 5 Click Finish to start the process of adding capacity to the disk group You can also use the Command Line Interface CLI on both Windows and Linux hosts to add free capacity to a disk group See the CLI Guide for more information Once the capacity expansion is completed additional free capacity is available in the disk group for creation of new virtual disks or expansion of existing virtual disks Virtual Disk Expansion Virtual disk expansion is a dynamic modification operation that increases the capacity of standard virtual disks K NOTE Snapshot repository virtual disks can be expanded from the CLI or from MD Storage Manager All other virtua
94. pies Select an active copy operation then click Priority to the right of the list of virtual disk copies e When re creating a virtual disk copy Click the Modify tab then click Manage Virtual Disk Copies Select a completed copy operation then click Re copy to the right of the list of virtual disk copies Stopping a Virtual Disk Copy You can stop a virtual disk copy operation that has an In Progress status a Pending status or a Failed status Stopping a virtual disk copy that has a Failed status clears the Needs Attention status displayed for the storage array When you stop a virtual disk copy all mapped hosts have write access to the source virtual disk If data is written to the source virtual disk the data on the target virtual disk no longer matches the data on the source virtual disk To stop a virtual disk copy complete the following steps 1 Click the Modify tab and then click Manage virtual disk copies 2 Select the copy operation you wish to stop by clicking it and click Stop You can only select one copy operation at a time to be stopped 3 Click Yes to stop the virtual disk copy Recopying a Virtual Disk You can recopy a virtual disk when you have stopped a virtual disk copy and you want to start it again or when a virtual disk copy has failed The Recopy option overwrites existing data on the target virtual disk and makes the target virtual disk read only to hosts This option fails all snapshot virtual disks
95. r need the data or back up the data on the target virtual disk K NOTE If you ordered this feature you received a Premium Feature Activation card that shipped in the same box as your Dell PowerVault MD storage array Follow the directions on the card to obtain a key file and to enable the feature K NOTE The preferred method for creating a virtual disk copy is to copy from a snapshot virtual disk This allows the original virtual disk used in the snapshot operation to remain fully available for read write activity while the snapshot is used as the source for the virtual disk copy operation When you create a virtual disk copy you create a copy pair that has a source virtual disk and a target virtual disk on the same storage array The source virtual disk is the virtual disk that contains the data you want to copy The source virtual disk accepts the host I O read activity and stores the data until it is copied to the target virtual disk The source virtual disk can be a standard virtual disk a snapshot virtual disk or the source virtual disk of a snapshot virtual disk When you start a virtual disk copy all data is copied to the target virtual disk and the source virtual disk permissions are set to read only until the virtual disk copy is complete The target virtual disk is a virtual disk to which you copy data from the source virtual disk The target virtual disk can be a standard virtual disk or the source virtual disk of a faile
96. r removing a host to virtual disk mapping applies to both hosts and host groups NOTICE Before you modify or remove a host to virtual disk mapping you must stop any data access 1 0 to the virtual disks to prevent data loss 1 Stop any data access I O to the virtual disks 2 Click the Modify tab and then click Edit Host to Virtual Disk Mappings MD Storage Manager displays a list of virtual disks and the hosts to which they are mapped 3 Select the virtual disk you wish to modify by clicking its name 60 Disk Groups and Virtual Disks 4 To map the disk to a different host or host group click Change located to the right of the list 5 To remove the disk mapping to a host or host group click Remove located to the right of the list Changing Controller Ownership of the Virtual Disk If the host has a single data path to the MD storage array the virtual disk must be owned by the controller to which the host is connected You must configure this storage array before you start I O operations and after the virtual disk is created To assign ownership of the virtual disk to the connected controller 1 Click the Modify tab and then select Change Virtual Disk Ownership Preferred Path 2 Select the appropriate virtual disk and click Change Storage Partitioning A storage partition is a logical entity consisting of one or more virtual disks that can be accessed by a single host or shared among hosts that are part of a ho
97. rive and is available to take over for any failed physical disk In use Hot Spare Drive Physical disk that has been assigned as a hot spare drive and is currently taking over for a failed physical disk Snapshot Virtual Disk Point in time image of a virtual disk in a storage array Snapshot Repository Virtual Disk Virtual disk containing metadata and copy on write data for a particular snapshot virtual disk automatically created when the snapshot virtual disk is created Consistency Check Background operation that checks the parity of virtual disks Disk Groups and Virtual Disks 53 Creating Disk Groups and Virtual Disks Disk groups are created in the unconfigured capacity of a storage array and virtual disks are created in the free capacity of a disk group The maximum number of physical disks supported in a disk group is 30 The hosts attached to the storage array read and write data to the virtual disks K NOTE Before you can create virtual disks you must first organize the physical disks into disk groups and configure host access Then you can create virtual disks within a disk group K NOTE The disk group must contain physical disks of the same type Mixing SAS and SATA II disks in a disk group is not supported To create a virtual disk use one of the following methods e Create a new disk group from unconfigured capacity You first define the RAID level and free capacity available storage space for the
98. rives b Select the capacity to add from the drop down menu c Click Add 5 Enter the amount by which you want to expand the snapshot repository virtual disk in the Increase capacity by field 6 Click Finish to expand the capacity of the snapshot repository virtual disk Re creating Snapshot Virtual Disks Before re creating a snapshot virtual disk refer to the following guidelines Disabling a Snapshot Virtual Disk Disable a snapshot virtual disk if one of the following conditions exists e You do not need the snapshot now e You intend to re create the snapshot at a later time and want to retain the associated snapshot repository virtual disk so that you do not need to create it again You want to maximize storage array performance by stopping copy on write activity to the snapshot repository virtual disk The SMdevices utility displays the snapshot virtual disk in its output even after the snapshot virtual disk is disabled 80 Snapshot Virtual Disks To disable a snapshot virtual disk 1 Click the Modify tab then click Modify snapshot virtual disks 2 Click Disable Snapshot Virtual Disks 3 Highlight the snapshot virtual disk to be disabled and click Disable beneath the list 4 Inthe Confirm Disable Snapshot Virtual Disk dialog box type yes and then click OK The snapshot virtual disk is disabled The associated snapshot repository virtual disk does not change status but copy on write activity to the disabled snapsh
99. s subnet mask and default gateway is correct before adding a new storage array using the Automatic option K NOTE For Linux set the default gateway so that broadcast packets are sent to 255 255 255 255 For Red Hat Linux if no gateway exists on the network set the default gateway to the IP address of the NIC K NOTE MD Storage Manager uses TCP UDP port 2463 for communication to the MD Storage Array Automatic Discovery of Storage Arrays The Automatic Discovery process sends out a broadcast message across the local subnetwork subnet and adds any storage array that responds to the message The Automatic Discovery process finds both in band and out of band storage arrays Manual Addition of a Storage Array Use Manual Addition if the storage array resides outside of the local subnet This process requires specific identification information to manually add a storage array e To add a storage array that uses in band management specify the host name or IP address of the host When adding a storage array using in band management with iSCSI a session must first be established between the initiator on the host server and the storage array For more information see Configuring iSCSI in the Modular Disk 3000i Systems Installation Guide The host agent must be restarted before in band management communication can be established See Starting or Restarting the Host Agent Software in Windows on page 28 or Starting or
100. s been corrected and the managed device is currently moving into Optimal status e Unresponsive status The storage management station cannot communicate with the device or with one or both controllers in the storage array e Contacting Device status MD Storage Manager is currently establishing contact with the device e Needs Upgrade status The storage array is running a level of firmware that is no longer supported by MD Storage Manager K NOTE For every non Optimal status condition listed use the Recovery Guru to detect and troubleshoot the problem K NOTE Wait at least five minutes for the storage array to return to an Optimal status following a recovery procedure SMrepassist Utility SMrepassist replication assistance is a host based utility for Windows platforms This utility is installed with the MD Storage Manager software Use this utility before and after you create a virtual disk copy on a Windows operating system to ensure that all the memory resident data for file systems on the target virtual disk is flushed and that the driver recognizes signatures and file system partitions You can also use this utility to resolve duplicate signature problems for snapshot virtual disks From a MS DOS window on a host running Windows navigate to C Program Files Dell MD Storage Manager util and run the following command SMrepassist f lt filesystem identifier gt 102 Troubleshooting where f flushes al
101. s removing an entire host group To remove a single host from a host group see Removing a Host From a Host Group on page 48 1 Click the Modify tab then click Edit Host Topology 2 In the host topology list click the name of the host group you want to remove 3 Click Remove 4 Click Yes The host group and its assigned virtual disk mappings are removed K NOTE If the host group contains hosts those hosts are removed as well including their access to the storage array Host Topology Host topology is the organization of hosts host groups and host interfaces configured for a storage array The Edit Host Topology screen accessed from the Modify tab shows the hierarchy of the host groups the hosts that are part of each host group and the host connections of each host You can use these tasks to change the host topology e Move a host or a host connection e Rename a host group a host or a host connection e Adda host connection e Replace a host connection e Change a host type MD Storage Manager automatically detects these changes for any host running the host agent software About Your Host 49 Host Context Agent The host context agent discovers the host topology The host context agent starts when the host is started and stops when the host is turned off The topology discovered by the host context agent can be viewed by clicking Configure Host Access Automatic in the Configure tab in the MD Storage Manager
102. s who are already familiar with the basic functions of their storage array Any differences in certain functions between supported operating systems are explained where applicable MD Storage Manager online help contains detailed answers to software related questions You can access online help by clicking Help located at the top right corner of the MD Storage Manager interface Refer to your storage array s Installation Guide for information on installing the MD Storage Manager User Interface The Storage Manager screen is divided into three parts e The Title Bar at the top of the screen displays the name of the application and the Dell logo e Beneath the Title Bar is the Array Selector listing the MD Storage Array that is currently selected The icon next to the array s name indicates its condition You can choose another array by clicking the down arrow next to the array s name and highlighting a different array in the drop down list Links to the right of the array name let you add or remove arrays from the list of managed arrays Links to the far right provide access to online help or close the Storage Manager About This Guide 11 Beneath the Array Selector is the Content Area Several tabs appear in this area to group the tasks you can perform on the selected array When you click on a tab the Content Area displays links for the tasks you can perform The following sections list some of the tasks you can perform under e
103. st group The first time you map a virtual disk to a specific host or host group a storage partition is created Subsequent virtual disk mappings to that host or host group do not create another storage partition One storage partition is sufficient if e Only one attached host accesses all of the virtual disks in the storage array e All attached hosts share access to all of the virtual disks in the storage array When you choose this type of configuration all of the hosts must have the same operating system and special software such as clustering software to manage virtual disk sharing and accessibility More than one storage partition is required if e Specific hosts must access specific virtual disks in the storage array e Hosts with different operating systems are attached to the same storage array In this case a storage partition will be created for each host type NOTE If Microsoft Windows is the host server you must partition and format the virtual disk using the Microsoft Management Console MMC Go to Settings Control Panel gt Administrative Tools or Control Panel gt Disk Groups and Virtual Disks 61 Administrative Tools and select the Disk Management MMC option to format and partition the disk If the host server is running Windows Server 2008 Core version partition and format the virtual disk using the Microsoft DiskPart utility Disk Group and Virtual Disk Expansion Adding free capacity to a disk grou
104. t by default populates the Snapshot virtual disk name or the Snapshot repository virtual disk name field the next default name for a snapshot or snapshot repository virtual disk still uses the sequence number determined by the software For example if you give the first snapshot of source virtual disk Accounting the name Accounting 8 and do not use the software supplied sequence number of 1 the default name for the next snapshot of Accounting is still Accounting 2 The next available sequence number is based on the number of existing snapshots of a source virtual disk If you delete a snapshot virtual disk its sequence number becomes available again You must choose a unique name for the snapshot virtual disk and the snapshot repository virtual disks or an error message is displayed Names are limited to 30 characters After you reach this limit in either the Snapshot virtual disk name or the Snapshot repository virtual disk name fields you can no longer type in the field If the source virtual disk is 30 characters the default names for the snapshot and its associated snapshot repository virtual disk use the source virtual disk name truncated enough to add the sequence string For example for Host Software Engineering Group GR 1 the default snapshot name is Host Software Engineering GR 1 and the default repository name would be Host Software Engineering GR R1 Snapshot Repository Capacity If you receive a warning that the capac
105. t valid an information dialog box appears explaining the types of virtual disks you can use as the source for a virtual disk copy Click OK to close this dialog box and select a different source virtual disk Choose the target virtual disk a To use an existing virtual disk as the target select Use an existing virtual disk and highlight the virtual disk of your choice in the list K NOTE If you select a target virtual disk with a capacity similar to the source virtual disk you reduce the risk of having unusable space on the target virtual disk after the virtual disk copy is completed b To create a new virtual disk for the target select Create a new virtual disk Type a name for this new target virtual disk in the text box Click Next at the bottom of the page The Create virtual disk copies Set Copy Priority dialog box appears Virtual Disk Copy 5 Set the copy priority for the virtual disk copy and click Next The source virtual disk the target virtual disk and the copy priority setting that you selected appear on the Create virtual disk copies Confirm Copy Settings dialog The higher priorities allocate more resources to the virtual disk copy at the expense of the storage array s performance For more information see Setting Copy Priority on page 89 Storage Array Performance During Virtual Disk Copy The following factors contribute to the overall performance of the storage array T O activity e Virtua
106. the disk group Click the free capacity for the disk group you want to modify and then click Next at the bottom of the page Specify the size of the virtual disk to be created in the New virtual disk capacity box Enter a name for the virtual disk in the Name text box Specify the type of files that will be stored on the virtual disk MD Storage Manager will optimize the virtual disk based on your selection Your choices include File system typical Database Multimedia When you are satisfied with the parameters of the virtual disk click Next To map the new virtual disk to a host now select Map now and assign a logical unit number LUN to the virtual disk in the drop down box To map the new virtual disk to a host later select Map later After you create virtual disks and map them to hosts you must register the virtual disks with each host Registration ensures the host recognizes the virtual disks Disk Groups and Virtual Disks 57 If you plan to create multiple virtual disks wait until you have created all the virtual disks to register them Waiting prevents you from having to register virtual disks more than once Linux K NOTE You need super user Linux privileges to run the hot__add utility The hot_add utility is installed with the host agent package and is run from the Linux command line You cannot run the hot_add utility using the MD Storage Manager Windows Windows automatically reg
107. the list The initiator details are shown Select CHAP Secret to enter the initiator CHAP permissions in the dialog that appears K NOTE To add modify or delete an initiator click the Modify tab and then click Edit Host Topology Creating CHAP Secrets When you set up an authentication method you can choose to create a Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol CHAP secret The CHAP secret is a password that is recognized by the initiator and the target If you are using mutual authentication to configure the MD3000i storage array you 32 Using iSCSI must enter the same CHAP secret that is defined in the iSCSI initiator and you must define a CHAP secret on the target the storage array that must be configured in every iSCSI initiator that will connect to the target For more information on CHAP see Understanding CHAP Authentication in the Installation Guide Initiator CHAP Secret The initiator CHAP secret is set on the host using the iSCSI initiator If you are using the mutual authentication method you must define the initiator CHAP secret when you set up the host This must be the same CHAP secret that is defined for the target when defining mutual authentication settings Target CHAP Secret If you are using CHAP secrets you must define the CHAP secret for the target Valid Characters for CHAP Secrets The CHAP secret must be between 12 and 57 characters The CHAP secret supports characters with ASCII values o
108. the secondary node refer to the Dell PowerEdge Cluster SE600W Systems Installation and Troubleshooting Guide on support dell com NOTE You can create concurrent snapshots of a source virtual disk on both the source disk group and on another disk group Snapshot Virtual Disks 69 Before creating a Snapshot Virtual Disk note the following The following types of virtual disks are not valid source virtual disks snapshot repository virtual disks snapshot virtual disks target virtual disks that are participating in a virtual disk copy K NOTE Virtual Disk Copy is an Advanced Premium feature You cannot create a snapshot of a virtual disk that contains unreadable sectors You must satisfy the requirements of your host operating system for creating snapshot virtual disks Failure to meet the requirements of your host operating system results in an inaccurate point in time image of the source virtual disk or the target virtual disk in a virtual disk copy NOTICE Before you create a new point in time image of a source virtual disk stop any data access I O activity or suspend data transfer to the source virtual disk to ensure that you capture an accurate point in time image of the source virtual disk Close all applications including Windows Internet Explorer to make sure all 1 0 activity has stopped NOTE Removing the drive letter of the associated virtual disk s in Windows or unmounting the virtual drive in Linux will h
109. to Transfer NVSRAM file with RAID controller module firmware 7 Click Select File to browse to the file that you want to download By default only firmware images that are compatible with the current storage array configuration appear 8 Click the file in the File Selection area and then click OK 9 If the file you selected is not valid or is incompatible with the current storage array configuration an error message appears Click OK to close it and select a compatible file 10 Click Transfer 96 Firmware Downloads 11 A Confirm Download dialog box appears listing the current versions and the versions you selected of the RAID controller and NVSRAM firmware To complete the download click Yes Downloading Only NVSRAM Firmware Use the following procedure to download NVSRAM firmware 1 2 Click the Support tab then click Download firmware From the Download firmware display click Download RAID Controller Module NVSRAM A dialog box lists the current controller firmware and NVSRAM versions in use Click Select File to browse to the file that you want to download By default only firmware images that are compatible with the current storage array configuration appear Click the file in the File Selection area and then click OK If the file you selected is not valid or is incompatible with the current storage array configuration an error message appears Click OK to close it and select a compatible file Click Tr
110. tter s of the source and if mounted snapshot virtual disk in Windows or unmount the virtual drive s in Linux to help guarantee a stable copy of the drive for the Snapshot If this is not done the snapshot operation will report that it has completed successfully but the snapshot data will not be updated properly 5 Follow any additional instructions for your operating system Failure to follow these additional instructions can create unusable snapshot virtual disks K NOTE If your operating system requires additional instructions you can find those instructions in your operating system documentation Re creating a Snapshot Virtual Disk After first preparing the host server s as specified in the preceding procedure re create a snapshot virtual disk using the following steps NOTICE This action invalidates the current snapshot 1 Click the Modify tab then click Modify snapshot virtual disks 2 Click Re create Snapshot Virtual Disks 3 Highlight the snapshot virtual disk to re create and click Re Create beneath the list 4 Inthe Confirm Snapshot Virtual Disk Re Creation dialog box type yes and then click OK Re creating a snapshot repository virtual disk uses the previously configured snapshot name and parameters 82 Snapshot Virtual Disks Premium Feature Virtual Disk Copy NOTICE A virtual disk copy overwrites data on the target virtual disk Before starting a virtual disk copy ensure that you no longe
111. ture Virtual Disk COPY 228 vet So hated ee tate Creating a Virtual Disk Copy for an MSCS Shared Disk 0000 Virtual Disk Read Write Permissions Virtual Disk Copy Restrictions Contents Creating a Virtual Disk Copy 87 Preparing Host Servers to Create a Virtual Disk Copy nrz ag Beas dea Aad Soa ee S 87 Copying the Virtual Disk 88 Storage Array Performance During Virtual Disk Copy 0 2000002 89 Setting Copy Priority 89 Stopping a Virtual Disk Copy 90 Recopying a Virtual Disk 90 Preparing Host Servers to Recopy a Virtual Disk aoaaa a 91 Recopying the Virtual Disk 92 Removing Copy Pairs 93 9 Firmware Downloads 95 Downloading RAID Controller and NVSRAM Packages o uu sc 6 srate ne So 84 Se OS ee 95 Downloading Both RAID Controller and NVSRAM Firmware 96 Downloading Only NVSRAM Firmware 97 Downloading Non redundant MSCS NVSRAM Firmware 97 Downloading Physical Disk Firmware 98 Downloading EMM Firmware 99 10 Troubleshooting Problems 101 RecoveryGuru 004 101 Storage Array Profile 101 Contents Device Health Conditions 101 SMrepassist Utility 102 Support Information Package 103 Un
112. unning operation you should suspend the media scan K NOTE A background media scan is the lowest priority of the long running operations 1 Click the Tools tab then click Change Media Scan Settings 2 Check the Suspend media scan checkbox 3 Click OK to suspend media scanning Microsoft Services Virtual Disk Service The Microsoft Virtual Disk Service VDS is supported on your RAID storage array Microsoft VDS is a set of application programming interfaces APIs that provides a single interface for managing disks and other storage hardware including creating volumes on those disks 64 Disk Groups and Virtual Disks Volume Shadow Copy Service The Microsoft Volume Shadow copy Service VSS is a storage management interface for Microsoft Windows operating systems VSS enables your storage array to interact with third party applications that use the VSS Application Programming Interface Virtual disks that will be used as source virtual disks for VSS snapshots should have names no longer than 16 characters The VSS hardware provider uses the source virtual disk name as a prefix for the snapshot and repository virtual disk names The resulting snapshot and repository names will be too long if the source virtual disk name exceeds 16 characters For more information on VDS and VSS see www microsoft com Disk Groups and Virtual Disks 65 66 Disk Groups and Virtual Disks Premium Feature Snapshot Virtual Disks K
113. y existing data on the target virtual disk Once the virtual disk copy has started all I O activity to the source virtual disk is read only Any attempts to write to the source virtual disk fail until the operation is complete K NOTE It is recommended that you create a virtual disk copy from a snapshot virtual disk rather than from the original virtual disk This allows the original virtual disk to remain in full use while the snapshot of this virtual disk is used as the source for the virtual disk copy operation Preparing Host Servers to Create a Virtual Disk Copy NOTICE Before you create a new copy of a source virtual disk stop any data access I O activity or suspend data transfer to the source virtual disk and if applicable the target disk to ensure that you capture an accurate point in time image of the source virtual disk Close all applications including Windows Internet Explorer to make sure all I O activity has stopped K NOTE Removing the drive letter of the associated virtual disk s in Windows or unmounting the virtual drive in Linux will help to guarantee a stable copy of the drive for the virtual disk copy Before creating a virtual disk copy both the host server and the associated virtual disk you are copying have to be in the proper state Perform the following steps to prepare your host server and virtual disk 1 Stop all I O activity to the source and target virtual disk 2 Using your Windows system f

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