HP (Hewlett-Packard) E200 Benutzerhandbuch

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Replacing, moving, or adding hard drives  24 
Effects of a hard drive failure 
When a hard drive fails, all logical drives that are in the same array are affected. Each logical drive in 
an array can use a different fault-tolerance method, so each logical drive can be affected differently. 
 
RAID 0 configurations cannot tolerate drive failure. If any physical drive in the array fails, all non-
fault-tolerant (RAID 0) logical drives in the same array will also fail. 
 
RAID 1+0 configurations can tolerate multiple drive failures as long as no failed drives are mirrored 
to one another. 
 
RAID 5 configurations can tolerate one drive failure. 
 
Compromised fault tolerance 
If more hard drives fail than the fault-tolerance method allows, fault tolerance is compromised, and the 
logical drive fails. In this case, all requests from the operating system are rejected with unrecoverable 
errors. You are likely to lose data, although it can sometimes be recovered (refer to "
One example of a situation in which compromised fault tolerance may occur is when a drive in an array 
fails while another drive in the array is being rebuilt. If the array has no online spare, any logical drives 
in this array that are configured with RAID 5 fault tolerance will fail. 
Compromised fault tolerance can also be caused by non-drive problems, such as a faulty cable or 
temporary power loss to a storage system. In such cases, you do not need to replace the physical drives. 
However, you may still have lost data, especially if the system was busy at the time that the problem 
occurred. 
 
Recovering from compromised fault tolerance 
If fault tolerance is compromised, inserting replacement drives does not improve the condition of the 
logical volume. Instead, if the screen displays unrecoverable error messages, perform the following 
procedure to recover data: 
1.
 
Power down the entire system, and then power it back up. In some cases, a marginal drive will work 
again for long enough to enable you to make copies of important files. 
If a 1779 POST message is displayed, press the F2 key to re-enable the logical volumes. Remember 
that data loss has probably occurred and any data on the logical volume is suspect. 
2.
 
Make copies of important data, if possible. 
3.
 
Replace any failed drives. 
4.
 
After you have replaced the failed drives, fault tolerance may again be compromised. If so, cycle the 
power again. If the 1779 POST message is displayed:  
a.
 
Press the F2 key to re-enable the logical drives.  
b.
 
Recreate the partitions.  
c.
 
Restore all data from backup. 
To minimize the risk of data loss that is caused by compromised fault tolerance, make frequent backups of 
all logical volumes. 
 
Replacing hard drives 
The most common reason for replacing a hard drive is that it has failed. However, another reason is to 
gradually increase the storage capacity of the entire system.