Deleting arrays, Deleting arrays 4-7 – HP Workstation xw8000 User Manual
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4-7
Using the Command Line Interface
Creating a RAID 5
When creating a RAID 5, you need to determine the stripe size that
is most suitable for your environment. See
more information about determining the appropriate stripe size for
your environment.
To recreate the data of a failed disk in a RAID 5, you use a form of
redundancy called parity. When you set up parity, you initialize
the parity stripes by using a scrubbing switch (
/scrub=TRUE).
Parity is set up in the background, and the disks are available
immediately.
The
/scrub switch is not available in UNIX/Linux. For UNIX/
Linux, the RAID 5 is always created by building.
To create a RAID 5, use the
container create raid5
command. In the following example, a RAID 5 is created on SCSI
devices (2,1,0), (2,2,0), and (2,3,0) using 100 M of available space
from each SCSI device. The /stripe_size switch specifies that each
stripe is 64 K in size.
AAC0> container create raid5 /stripe_size=64K ((2,1,0),
100M
) (2,2,0) (2,3,0)
Executing: container create raid5 /stripe_size=65,536
((CHANNEL=2,ID=1,LUN=0),104,857,600)
(CHANNEL=2,ID=2,LUN=0) (CHANNEL=2,ID=3,LUN=0)
Deleting Arrays
To delete an array, use the
container delete command. In the
following example, array 0 is deleted.
AAC0> container delete 0
Executing: container delete 0
After running the
container delete command, use the
container list command to verify that the array was deleted.
In the following example, no arrays are found on the controller.
AAC0> container list
Executing: container list
No containers found.
UG.book Page 7 Saturday, October 26, 2002 12:08 PM