DELL H200 사용자 설명서

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PERC H200 and 6Gbps SAS HBA BIOS
Hot Spare Failover 
If a RAID 1 or RAID 10 virtual disk enters a degraded state, a compatible hot 
spare automatically begins rebuilding the degraded virtual disk. The "missing" 
or "failed" member of the degraded virtual disk is displayed as a ‘missing’ 
global hot spare. The "missing" or "failed" drive must be replaced with a drive 
compatible with an existing virtual disk(s). 
 
NOTE: 
A compatible drive is one that is of the same drive type (SAS, SATA, or SSD) 
and of equal or greater size of the disk being replaced.
Replacing and Rebuilding a Degraded Virtual Disk
In the event of a physical disk failure in a RAID 1 or RAID 10 virtual disk, 
you will need to replace the disk and resynchronize the virtual disk. 
Synchronization occurs automatically on replacing the physical disk using the 
following steps.
1 Replace the failed physical disk with a blank disk of the same type and of 
equal or greater capacity.
2 Check your management application or the BIOS Configuration Utility 
(<Ctrl><C>) to ensure synchronization started automatically.
 
NOTE: 
During the rebuilding of a volume the synchronization will be restarted 
from the beginning if a hard drive is added or removed from the system. Wait until 
any synchronization processes have been completed before adding or 
removing hard drives. 
 
NOTE: 
Always remove any configuration information from hard drives if they are to 
be permanently removed from a system. This can be completed by deleting the 
RAID configuration through the BIOS Configuration Utility or an operating system 
unless you are migrating these hard drives to a different system level application. 
PERC H200 hotspare functionality requires that the slots in which hard drives are 
inserted be associated with the virtual disks they are a part of. Do not insert hard 
drives with foreign or old (out of date) configuration information stored on those 
hard drives into slots that are associated with existing virtual disks. 
 
NOTE: 
If the system is rebooted while the rebuild is in progress, the rebuild 
continues from where it left off as a result of rebuild checkpointing. The rebuild time 
for a volume varies depending on the size of the member disks and any additional 
system activity.
PERC H200.book  Page 58  Tuesday, July 13, 2010  4:15 PM