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At the Oracle ILOM prompt, disable autoboot so that the server will not boot the OS when the
server powers on.
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>set/HOST/bootmodescript="setenvautoboot?false"
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okshowdevs
...
/pci@400/pci@2/pci@0/pci@e/scsi@0
...
You can also use the devalias command to locate device paths specific to your server.
okdevalias
...
scsi0/pci@400/pci@2/pci@0/pci@e/scsi@0
scsi/pci@400/pci@2/pci@0/pci@e/scsi@0
...
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okselectscsi
Instead of using the alias name scsi, you could type the full device path name (such
as /pci@400/pci@2/pci@0/pci@e/scsi@0).
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List all connected logical RAID volumes to determine which volumes are in an inactive state.
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okshowvolumes
For example, the following output shows an inactive volume:
okshowvolumes
Volume0Target389TypeRAID1(Mirroring)
WWID03b2999bca4dc677
OptimalEnabledInactive
2Members583983104Blocks,298GB
Disk1
PrimaryOptimal
Target9HITACHIH103030SCSUN300GA2A8
Disk0
SecondaryOptimal
TargetcHITACHIH103030SCSUN300GA2A8
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okshowchildren
...
Target9
Unit0DiskHITACHIH109030SESUN300GA31A585937500Blocks,300GB
SASDeviceName5000cca01622ac64SASAddress5000cca01622ac65PhyNum0
Targeta
Unit0DiskHITACHIH109030SESUN300GA31A585937500Blocks,300GB
SASDeviceName5000cca01622b1f4SASAddress5000cca01622b1f5PhyNum1
ok
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Select one of these commands to create a logical drive from several physical disks:
o
createraid0volume
createraid1volume
createraid1evolume
createraid10volume
For example, to create a RAID 0 volume with targets 9 and a, type the targets first then type the command
name:
ok9acreateraid0volume
To create a RAID 1e volume with three targets (a, b, and c), type:
okabccreateraid1evolume
To create a RAID 10 volume with four targets (9, a, b, and c), type:
ok9abccreateraid10volume
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okshowvolumes
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okunselectdev
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At the Oracle ILOM prompt, disable autoboot so that the server will not boot the OS when the
server powers on.
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>set/HOST/bootmodescript="setenvautoboot?false"
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okshowdevs
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...
/pci@400/pci@2/pci@0/pci@e/scsi@0
...
You can also use the devalias command to locate device paths specific to your server.
okdevalias
...
scsi0/pci@400/pci@2/pci@0/pci@e/scsi@0
scsi/pci@400/pci@2/pci@0/pci@e/scsi@0
...
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okselectscsi
Instead of using the alias name scsi, you could type the full device path name (such
as /pci@400/pci@2/pci@0/pci@e/scsi@0).
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List all connected logical RAID volumes to determine which volumes are in an inactive state.
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okshowvolumes
For example, the following output shows an inactive volume:
okshowvolumes
Volume0Target389TypeRAID1(Mirroring)
WWID03b2999bca4dc677
OptimalEnabledInactive
2Members583983104Blocks,298GB
Disk1
PrimaryOptimal
Target9HITACHIH103030SCSUN300GA2A8
Disk0
SecondaryOptimal
TargetcHITACHIH103030SCSUN300GA2A8
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For each RAID volume listed as inactive, type the following command to activate that volume.
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okinactive_volumeactivatevolume
where inactive_volume is the name of the RAID volume that you are activating. For example:
ok0activatevolume
Volume0isnowactivated
Note - For more information on configuring hardware RAID on the server, refer to Servers Administration.
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okunselectdev
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okprobescsiall
/pci@400/pci@2/pci@0/pci@e/scsi@0
FCodeVersion1.00.54,MPTVersion2.00,FirmwareVersion5.00.17.00
Targeta
Unit0RemovableReadOnlydeviceTEACDVW28SSR1.0C
SATAdevicePhyNum3
Targetb
GBUnit0DiskSEAGATEST914603SSUN146G0868286739329Blocks,
146
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SASDeviceName5000c50016f75e4fSASAddress5000c50016f75e4dPhyNum1
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Target389Volume0
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Unit0DiskLSILogicalVolume3000583983104Blocks,
298GB
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VolumeDeviceName33b2999bca4dc677VolumeWWID03b2999bca4dc677
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/pci@400/pci@1/pci@0/pci@b/pci@0/usb@0,2/hub@2/hub@3/storage@2
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Unit0RemovableReadOnlydeviceAMIVirtualCDROM1.00
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Set the autoboot? OpenBoot PROM variable to true so the server boots the OS when powered
on.
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oksetenvautoboot?true
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