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Hot-pluggable and hot-swappable components – Sun Microsystems Sun Fire V490 User Manual

Page 47

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Chapter 2

System Overview

19

About Reliability, Availability, and
Serviceability Features

Reliability, availability, and serviceability (RAS) are aspects of a system’s design that
affect its ability to operate continuously and to minimize the time necessary to
service the system. Reliability refers to a system’s ability to operate continuously
without failures and to maintain data integrity. System availability refers to the
percentage of time that a system remains accessible and usable. Serviceability relates
to the time it takes to restore a system to service following a system failure. Together,
reliability, availability, and serviceability features provide for near continuous
system operation.

To deliver high levels of reliability, availability and serviceability, the Sun Fire V490
system offers the following features:

Hot-pluggable disk drives

Redundant, hot-swappable power supplies

Environmental monitoring and fault detection

Automatic system recovery (ASR) capabilities

Multiplexed I/O (MPxIO)

Remote “lights out” management capability

Hardware watchdog mechanism and externally initiated reset (XIR)

Dual-loop enabled FC-AL subsystem

Support for disk and network multipathing with automatic failover capability

Error correction and parity checking for improved data integrity

Hot-Pluggable and Hot-Swappable Components

Sun Fire V490 hardware is designed to support hot-plugging of internal disk drives
and hot-swapping of power supplies. With the proper software support, you can
install or remove these components while the system is running. Hot-plug and
hot-swap technology significantly increases the system’s serviceability and
availability, by providing the ability to:

Increase storage capacity dynamically to handle larger work loads and improve
system performance

Replace disk drives and power supplies without service disruption

For additional information about the system’s hot-pluggable and hot-swappable
components—including a discussion of the differences between the two
practices—see “About Hot-Pluggable and Hot-Swappable Components” on page 26.