It's in the email that was linked. Read it.
On Thu, Jan 12, 2006 at 11:35:25AM +1100, Ioan Nemes wrote:
C. Bensend [EMAIL PROTECTED] 12/01/2006 10:00:13 am
Wrong.
When you set the machine up (or using bioctl) you label a drive as a
hot spare. When a failure happens, it automatically
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What motherboards are folks using that support these (64 bit) PCI
slots? Most consumer grade x86 motherboards only have 32-bit PCI
slots. I've seen very few motherboards (at least at newegg) that
have 64-bit PCI, and they're very expensive.
I have the oppurtunity to order some RAID controllers for my older OpenBSD
boxes. Our newer machines use the Dell PERC controllers. Could you please
recommend some RAID cards for OpenBSD? I know which ones are supported, just
looking for some preferred cards. I have not used any of the SATA,
On 1/11/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have the oppurtunity to order some RAID controllers for my older OpenBSD
boxes. Our newer machines use the Dell PERC controllers. Could you please
recommend some RAID cards for OpenBSD? I know which ones are supported, just
looking
On Wednesday 11 January 2006 13:10, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have the oppurtunity to order some RAID controllers for my older OpenBSD
boxes. Our newer machines use the Dell PERC controllers. Could you please
recommend some RAID cards for OpenBSD? I know which ones are supported,
just
LSI Logic Megaraid cards (SATA/SCSI). work like a champ. If I'm not
mistaken LSI is currently the only cooperative RAID controller vendor.
Read mailing list archives.
-Tico
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have the oppurtunity to order some RAID controllers for my older OpenBSD
boxes. Our newer
* [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] [060111 15:20]:
I have the oppurtunity to order some RAID controllers for my older OpenBSD
boxes. Our newer machines use the Dell PERC controllers. Could you please
recommend some RAID cards for OpenBSD? I know which ones are supported, just
looking for
I will stick to the LSI cards. This is exactly the info I needed.
Shane
- Original Message -
From: Thomas Hannan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: misc@openbsd.org
Sent: Wednesday, January 11, 2006 5:26 PM
Subject: Re: RAID card recommendations
LSI Logic Megaraid cards (SATA/SCSI). work like
On 1/11/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have not used any of the SATA, but would consider that an option.
I've got a couple of the LSI 300-8X SATA cards. They certainly perform
wonderfully and at a good pricepoint.
I had run into a problem on SMP AMD64 with ccb timeouts locking
I've got a couple of the LSI 300-8X SATA cards. They certainly perform
wonderfully and at a good pricepoint.
I had run into a problem on SMP AMD64 with ccb timeouts locking up the
box, which is doing some heavy NFS and DB. Upgrading the firmware
seems to have cleared that up (knock on wood).
I've got a couple of the LSI 300-8X SATA cards. They certainly perform
wonderfully and at a good pricepoint.
I had run into a problem on SMP AMD64 with ccb timeouts locking up the
box, which is doing some heavy NFS and DB. Upgrading the firmware
seems to have cleared that up (knock on
On Wed, Jan 11, 2006 at 04:19:12PM -0500, Jim Razmus wrote:
I have already replaced two Adaptec controllers with LSI Logic
MEGARAID SATA 150-6 cards. I then added a call to bioctl in
These LSI Megaraid cards are 64-bit PCI, right? Do they have a
PCI Express version?
What motherboards are
Wrong.
When you set the machine up (or using bioctl) you label a drive as a
hot spare. When a failure happens, it automatically takes that drive
over and does a rebuild.
Shut down? You don't get it. We wrote all this code because we were
tired of shutting down and doing the repairs in
No, I understand that just fine. I should have been more specific -
if I have a failure, it does its thing, great. But, I'd want to
replace the failed drive so I'd have a hot spare again.
That's the part I was asking about - you'd have to shutdown to
replace that failed drive when it's
On 1/11/06, C. Bensend [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Wrong.
When you set the machine up (or using bioctl) you label a drive as a
hot spare. When a failure happens, it automatically takes that drive
over and does a rebuild.
Shut down? You don't get it. We wrote all this code because we
C. Bensend [EMAIL PROTECTED] 12/01/2006 10:00:13 am
Wrong.
When you set the machine up (or using bioctl) you label a drive as a
hot spare. When a failure happens, it automatically takes that
drive
over and does a rebuild.
Shut down? You don't get it. We wrote all this code because we
LSI Logic Megaraid cards (SATA/SCSI). work like a champ. If I'm not
mistaken LSI is currently the only cooperative RAID controller vendor.
Read mailing list archives.
One thing for sure. Anytime we have to buy hardware, what ever that
might be, when ever possible we should stick with vendor
C. Bensend wrote:
I've heard nothing but good about these cards, but I have heard
hardly anything about recovery and rebuild. I'm assuming you need
to shut down, plug in the new drive, and go... How quick is the
rebuild (subject to drive size of course)?
This was announce, explain and
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