Deleting arrays, Deleting arrays 4-7 – HP Workstation xw8000 User Manual

Page 73

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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

Creating a RAID 0

for

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

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