HP IO manual Creating a RAID configuration, Setting up Snmp for Windows operating systems

Page 29

3.After the device is initialized, you can add partitions or volumes. For more information, see the Disk Management documentation.

You can create dynamic volumes, which can be used in multi-disk RAID configurations (spanned, striped, or mirrored). For more information, see the Disk Management documentation.

Creating a RAID configuration

You can use your IO Accelerator as part of a RAID configuration. To do so, you must format the IO Accelerator as a dynamic volume. You can then use this dynamic volume to create multi-disk RAID configurations (spanned, striped, or mirrored).

For specific steps to perform a RAID configuration, see the Windows® Disk Management Utility documentation.

NOTE: If you are using RAID1 mirroring and one device fails, enter the fio-formatcommand on the replacement device (not the existing good device) before rebuilding the RAID.

HP recommends that you do not use a RAID5 configuration.

Using the IO Accelerator as swap with Windows operating system

To safely use the IO Accelerator as swap space, you must use the fio-configutility to pass a special pre-allocation parameter.

For example:

fio-config -p FIO_PREALLOCATE_MEMORY 1072,4997,6710,10345

where 1072,4997,6710,10345 are serial numbers obtained from fio-status.Be sure to use serial numbers for the IO Accelerator modules and not the adapter.

A 4K sector size format is required for swap. This reduces the driver memory footprint.

CAUTION: You must have 400MB of free RAM per 80GB of IO Accelerator capacity (formatted to 4KB block size) to enable the IO Accelerator with pre-allocation enabled for swap. Attaching an IO Accelerator with pre-allocation enabled and insufficient RAM might result in the loss of user processes and system instability.

Setting up SNMP for Windows operating systems

Use the following procedures to set up SNMP for Windows® operating systems.

SNMP details for Windows operating systems

You can set up a test mode with your IO Accelerator Windows® SNMP agent. Doing so enables you to set test values in a Windows® registry and force SNMP traps without having to create the actual conditions on the device.

For example, you can use the SNMP test mode to change the non-writeable indicator and generate a trap, or simulate a change to the physical or logical size of the device, and so forth.

Windows Server environments 29

Image 29
Contents HP IO Accelerator Version 3.2.3 Windows User Guide Page Contents Maintenance Resources About this guide Contents summaryProduct naming IntroductionOverview IO Accelerator capacity 320GB 640GB Models AJ878B BK836A Performance attributesSupported hardware Required operating environmentSupported firmware revisions Page Introduction Windows Server environments Installation overviewUninstalling a previously-installed driver Installing software on a Windows operating system Using the Setup Wizard Windows Server environments Windows Server environments Windows Server environments Windows Server environments Upgrading device firmware from VSL 1.x.x or 2.x.x to Fio-bugreport Upgrading procedureFio-update-iodrive iodriveversion.fff Manual installation on Windows ServerManually installing on Windows Server Manually installing on Windows Server 2008 Upgrading the device firmware using WindowsPerforming the upgrade Viewing the firmware versionFio-detach /dev/fct0 Upgrading driver software using WindowsWindows Server environments Outdated firmware check Silent install option Defragmentation IO Accelerator naming Enabling PCIe powerWindows Server environments Setting up Snmp for Windows operating systems Creating a RAID configurationFio-config -p Fiopreallocatememory 1072,4997,6710,10345 Snmp details for Windows operating systemsVia garbage collection Using test mode registry valuesSnmp test registry entry Description Snmp MIB fields supporting Windows ServerWindows Server environments Msiexec /i C\MyPackage\Example.msi /L*V C\log\example.log Using installation logsWindows Installer logging options Creating a patch install log Creating an installation logCreating an uninstall log Troubleshooting event log messages Automated logging with the Windows Installer Logging PolicyError ioDrivex Maintenance tools MaintenanceCommon maintenance tasks Uninstalling the IO Accelerator driver packageEnabling Autoattach Enabling PCIe power overrideUnmanaged shutdown issues Enabling the override parameter Fio-config /dev/fct2 -p PCIeGLOBALSLOTPOWERLIMIT Fio-config /dev/fctx -p PCIeGLOBALSLOTPOWERLIMITFio-attach UtilitiesUtilities reference Fio-bugreport Fio-beaconFio-attach device options Fio-beacon device optionsCompressing Fio-configFio-config device options Fioexternalpoweroverride Fio-config optionsFio-detach device options Fio-detachFio-format device options device Fio-formatFio-status Fio-pci-checkFio-pci-check options Options Fio-status device optionsFfield Geometry and capacity information not available. appears Fio-sure-erase options device Fio-sure-eraseFio-trim-config Fio-update-iodrive iodriveversion.fff options Fio-update-iodriveFio-trim-config options Options Format domainbusslot.func Nand flash and component failure Monitoring IO Accelerator healthHealth metrics Health monitoring techniquesSoftware RAID and health monitoring Flashback substitution eventsMonitoring IO Accelerator health Trim support Using TrimIntroduction to Trim Trim platformsControlling Trim aggressiveness Starting and stopping TrimEnabling Trim Trim configurations Configuring IO Accelerator paging support Using Windows page files with the IO AcceleratorIntroduction to Windows page files RAM consumptionFio-config -p Fiopreallocatememory Fio-config -p Fiopreallocatememory 1234,17834Fio-config -g Fiopreallocatememory Non-paged memory poolWindows page file management Setting up page filesGuaranteeing minimum committable memory System drive paging file configurationDir c /ah Virtual Memory performanceVerifying page file operation Introduction to performance and tuning Performance and tuningDisabling Dvfs Limiting Apci C-statesSetting the interrupt handler affinity Setting Numa affinityFio-config -p Fioaffinity 4,n1,0xf5,n07,g19,g2,0xff0 Numa configurationIntroduction to Numa architecture Fioaffinity parameterAdvanced configuration example Fio-config -p Fioaffinity 5,g0,0xf6,0xf Checking the log for errorsFor more information Subscription serviceResources Before you contact HP Support and other resourcesHP contact information Customer Self RepairRéparation par le client CSR Riparazione da parte del cliente Reparaciones del propio cliente Reparo feito pelo cliente Support and other resources Support and other resources Support and other resources Regulatory information Safety and regulatory complianceWarranty information Numa Acronyms and abbreviationsSMI-S Documentation feedback Index Using the IO Accelerator as a swap