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Unisphere Service Manager - Replacing A Failed Disk

The document provides instructions for replacing a faulty disk using Unisphere Service Manager. It describes starting USM, selecting Hardware Replacement, and following the instructions. It then discusses how the rebuild can be seen occurring on the Raid Group's internal LUNs. It also shows output that provides details on the Raid Group the failed disk was part of, the disks that make it up, and how the internal LUNs are configured. Finally, it mentions that Unisphere shows the hot spare is being used to equalize data and copy it to the replacement disk.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
369 views3 pages

Unisphere Service Manager - Replacing A Failed Disk

The document provides instructions for replacing a faulty disk using Unisphere Service Manager. It describes starting USM, selecting Hardware Replacement, and following the instructions. It then discusses how the rebuild can be seen occurring on the Raid Group's internal LUNs. It also shows output that provides details on the Raid Group the failed disk was part of, the disks that make it up, and how the internal LUNs are configured. Finally, it mentions that Unisphere shows the hot spare is being used to equalize data and copy it to the replacement disk.

Uploaded by

RobertPivac
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Unisphere Service Manager will be used to replace the drive.

1. Start USM
2. From the System screen, select Hardware > Hardware Replacement > Replace Faulted
Disk.
3. Follow the instructions that appear.

As this Disk is part of a Storage POOL we can see the rebuild occurring on the private Raid
Groups internal LUNs:

From the output in the image below you can get a clearer picture of the Raid Group RG241
(RAID 10) that the failed disk is part of, the disks that make up the RG and also how the
internal LUNs are carved up. Here we have 16 private LUNs 8108-8123 which make up the
base structure for a Private Raid Group (4+4 R10) which would be part of a larger Storage

Pool:

From Unisphere Storage Pool properties we can see that data is being equalized from a hot
spare and is being copied onto the replacement disk:

Running a naviseccli getdisk hs is another method of determining HS in use

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