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3 - adding/removing spare disks – HighPoint RocketRAID 2240 User Manual

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6.

Next, Use the

arrow key to highlight the Capacity (GB) option and press

ENTER. The total available capacity will be displayed. Press ENTER if you wish

to use all available space.

7.

If you wish to reserve disk space for additional arrays/single disks, use the

keyboard to input the amount of space (in GB) you wish to set aside for this

particular array, and press ENTER.

Note: Multiple arrays can be created using the same set of hard disk drives.

The Capacity option allows you to set aside disk space that be used to create

another array or set as a spare disk.

8.

To complete the creation procedure, use the

arrow key to highlight the Start

Creation item and press ENTER.

3 - Adding/Removing Spare Disks

This command is used to assign a hard disk to act as a Spare Disk.

Spare Disks are used to automatically rebuild Redundant RAID arrays (RAID 1, 5, 10)

in the case of disk failure. To set a hard disk to act as a Spare Disk, use the

↑ ↓ arrow

keys to select a disk, and press ENTER.

To remove the Spare Disk setting from a hard disk, highlight the spare disk, and press

ENTER.

Generally, single disks are designated to act as spares (disks that are not configured

into RAID arrays).

However, in some instances, disks that are members of RAID arrays may also be

designated to act as a spare. If the disks in question are part of a RAID array that did

not utilize the full available capacity at the time of creation, these disks may be used

as spares.

For example: a RAID 0 array was created between two 200GB hard disks, but only

200GB of space (out of a grand total of 400GB), was assigned to that array. In this

example, 200GB of disk space remains unallocated. This unallocated space would

allow these disks to be set as spares for a separate redundant array that falls into the

same capacity range (200GB).

RocketRAID 2240 BIOS Utility

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