Sun System Handbook - ISO 3.4 June 2011 Internal/Partner Edition | |||
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Solution Type Technical Instruction Sure Solution 1008650.1 : Changing RM6 Controller States
PreviouslyPublishedAs 211860 Steps to Follow In the event that a controller needs to be replaced in an A3X00 storage product, you should understand how the controllers interact with the system and how to safely replace them. First off, Raid Manager is a GUI driven product, which means most "fixing" or damaged part "replacement" should be done through the GUI - not CLI (Command Line Interface). In the event a procedure fails through the GUI, you can try using the command line alternative. Possible controller states are active, passive, offline and no controller: Active means the controller owns luns and handles I/O requests for those luns. Passive means the controller is acting as a spare. In an event the active controller becomes disabled, the passive controller kicks in and takes over the I/O requests to the damaged controller (if the module has RDAC failover support). Offline means the controller is no longer receiving I/O. A controller is usually placed offline by the RDAC driver in response to a data path error. The user can manually place a controller offline, if and only if, there are two controllers in the raid module. No controller means the selected raid module has only one controller. If a controller pair somehow becomes active/passive you can follow these steps to put it back into an active/active state via GUI: Go to the Maintenance & Tuning applications Select the RAID module you want to change Select the controller mode icon Then select the button to switch the controller state back to active/active Then (if applicable) balance the luns And CLI: # rdacutil -m 2 <raid_module_name> Then (if applicable) balance the luns with # rdacutil -l <luns_to_be_moved> <controller> If you would like to swap the active/passive setup for passive/active via CLI: # rdacutil -m 1 <raid_module_name> And to put it back to the original active/passive setup, issue the command again: # rdacutil -m 1 <raid_module_name> Product Storage Software Sun StorageTek A1000 Array Sun StorageTek A3500 FC Array Sun StorageTek A3500 Array Internal Comments None. Previously Published As 24532 Change History Date: 2006-01-19 User Name: 31620 Action: Update Canceled Comment: *** Restored Published Content *** SSH AUDIT Version: 0 Date: 2006-01-19 User Name: 31620 Action: Update Started Comment: SSH AUDIT Version: 0 Date: 2003-05-20 User Name: Administrator Action: Migration from KMSCreator Comment: updated by : George Bolduc comment : Looks OK date : Aug 2, 2001 updated by : Joel Garrett comment : would like to see CLI examples. Past that, don't find anything wrong. date : Aug 1, 2001 updated by : Sean Hassall comment : No comment date : Jul 24, 2001 updated by : Frank Klinkovsky comment : No comment date : Jun 6, 2001 updated by : George Bolduc comment : No comment date : Dec 13, 2000 updated by : Lucinda Westover comment : Tested date : Dec 12, 2000 updated by : Sean Hassall comment : No comment date : Nov 14, 2000 updated by : Sean Hassall comment : Article created. date : Nov 13, 2000 Version: 0 Product_uuid 1b964e2c-21a3-11d6-91f2-ea21581f16eb|Storage Software 2a792916-0a18-11d6-8d0a-c3d03933af3c|Sun StorageTek A1000 Array b648cdf0-efb8-4d4f-93d4-b17c1baf1935|Sun StorageTek A3500 FC Array 2a8022d4-0a18-11d6-8043-ee5a180fdb7f|Sun StorageTek A3500 Array Attachments This solution has no attachment |
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