
H-4 Recovering from Drive Failure
The capacity of replacement drives must be at least as large as the capacity of the other drives in the array. Drives of insufficient capacity will be failed immediately by the controller without starting the Automatic Data Recovery.
CAUTION: If the Smart Array 3200 Controller has a failed drive, replace this drive with a new or
Automatic Data Recovery
If a drive in a
Replacement drives are not considered to be “online” until Automatic Data Recovery is completed, at which time the online LED stops blinking and is on “solid.” Any drives that are not yet “online” are treated as if they are “failed” when trying to determine whether fault tolerance will be compromised. For example, in a RAID 5 logical drive with no spare and one drive rebuilding, another drive failure at this time would result in a “failure” condition for the entire logical drive.
In general, the time required for a rebuild is approximately 15 minutes per gigabyte. The actual rebuild time, however, depends upon the rebuild priority set for the amount of I/O activity occurring during the rebuild operation, the disk drive speed, and the number of drives in the array (RAID 4 and RAID 5). In RAID 4 and RAID 5 configurations, the rebuild time varies from 10 minutes/GB for three drives to 20 minutes/GB for 14 drives (using