Replacing a Faulty Drive
Replacing a Faulty Drive
To avoid the loss of critical
data, it is important that you replace and rebuild a defunct
(DDD) drive promptly.
The results of hard disk drive failures depend on the
configuration of the disk arrays and the number of drives
that fail. Before you remove or replace a DDD drive,
review the following examples.
- Example 1. One hard disk drive becomes defunct,
but a hot-spare (HSP) drive of the same size exists.
- If the failing drive is part of a redundant (RAID
level 1 or RAID level 5) logical drive, the
hot-spare drive takes over immediately.
- RAID level 1 and RAID level 5 logical drives
within the array change to the critical (CRT) state
and remain in the CRT state until the rebuild
process completes.
- The RAID level 0 logical drives within the array
change to the offline (OFL) state.
- All data in the RAID level 0 logical drives within
the array is lost.
- Example 2. One hard disk drive becomes defunct,
and an appropriate hot-spare (HSP) drive is not
available.
- The RAID level 1 and RAID level 5 logical drives
change to the CRT state and remain in the CRT
state until the rebuild process completes. Data
is not lost from logical drives in the CRT state,
but you must replace the DDD hard disk drive
promptly to avoid the loss of data. (If two drives
within the same array become DDD, all data
within the array is lost.)
- The RAID level 0 logical drives change to the
OFL state.
- All data in the RAID level 0 logical drives within
the array is lost.
- Example 3. Multiple drives within an array become
defunct.
- All logical drives in the array change to the
offline (OFL) state.
- All data from the array is lost, regardless of the
RAID levels assigned to the logical drives.
To replace a faulty drive:
- Before you remove or replace a drive that you
suspect to be defective, verify that the drive is
defective. To do this:
- Check the drive for damage.
- Verify that the drive is positioned correctly. If the
drive is not installed correctly, reposition the
drive.
- Check the lights on the drive tray. (See the
following information for a description of the
lights.) Verify that you can remove the drive
safely.
The lights on the hot-swap drive tray provide
drive status information, as follows:
- Hard Disk Activity Light: When this green
light is flashing, it indicates that the server
is accessing the drive.
- Hard Disk Status Light: When this amber
light is lit continuously, it indicates that the
drive has failed. When the light flashes
slowly (one flash per second), it indicates
that the hard disk drive is part of a disk
array and is being rebuilt. When the light
flashes rapidly (three flashes per second), it
indicates that the controller is identifying the
drive. The drive should not be replaced if
this light is blinking, the drive has just been
replaced and the disk array is being rebuilt.
- Physically replace the defective drive or use an
existing RDY drive that has a capacity equal to or
greater than the drive that you are replacing as a
hot-spare replacement drive.
Removing the wrong hard disk drive might cause
loss of all data in the array.
- To physically replace the defective hard disk
drive, follow the instructions in 'Internal Drive Installation'
and 'Installing a Drive in a Hot-Swap Bay', then, follow
the instructions in 'Understanding the Drive Rebuild Process'.
- To rebuild the defunct drive to an existing RDY
drive, follow the instructions in 'Understanding the Drive Rebuild Process'.
Note:
You can use the Administration and
Monitoring utility program to identify a
defunct drive and designate a replacement
drive without restarting the server. Review
the information in 'Understanding the Drive Rebuild Process', then, see
'Using the Administration and Monitoring Utility Program'
for more information.
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