|
Home
>> White
Papers >>
FlashDisk
RAID User-Friendly
Interfaces
FlashDisk
RAID User-Friendly
Interfaces
Introduction
FlashDisk provides
two means to setup,
monitor and control
the RAID array.
First is a unique
2x20 character
front-panel LCD
display with password-protected
push-button controls.
Second is an RS-232
port that is easily
connected to a
standard terminal
or PC with readily
available terminal
emulation software.
You can operate
the PC and thus
the RAID array
remotely with
a modem. In all
modes, you have
complete control
of the RAID array
operation, you
can monitor instantaneous
status and watch
for warnings,
error conditions,
rebuild operations,
hot-spare status
and more.
Host
and O/S Independent
By using these
two interfaces,
FlashDisk avoids
depending on graphical
user interfaces
(GUIs) which require
the host and host
bus, operating
system and GUI
software to be
working properly.
Since RAID monitors
are frequently
used when something
is wrong, FlashDisk
front panel and
RS-232 terminal
controls let you
talk directly
to the RAID array
without relying
on any other hardware
or software to
operate. Since
there are only
a few simple operations
to control, the
elegance of this
approach will
be appreciated
most if you ever
experience a hardware
failure. While
GUIs are, of course,
pretty and easy
to use, they unfortunately
require special
drivers for each
operating system
- and they quickly
become out-of-date.
Front
panel display
Network managers
love the 2x20
character LCD
front panel display.
It provides instantaneous
status information
including host
data transfer
rate, initialize
and rebuild progress
reports and a
full complement
of RAID array
status information.
With
just a few front
panel controls,
you can examine
the status of
SCSI
drives, review
RAID mode setups,
partition RAID
arrays into multiple
logical units,
add or delete
a spare drive,
replace a failed
drive and more.
Using front panel
controls including
up/down menu scroll,
ENT and ESC, you
can move through
the entire FlashDisk
menu tree from
the front panel.
 |
The
sequence to
the left shows
how to set
up a spare
drive on the
first logical
RAID array
(LG=0). The
status block
shows that
this is a
RAID 5 array
comprised
of five drives
with a total
of 16 GB (16384
MB) of usable
storage and
there is currently
no failed
drive (FL=0)
and no standby
(hot-spare)
drive (SB=0).
|
RS-232
Terminal
Naturally,
with a larger
display space,
the terminal mode
provides more
on-screen information
with less abbreviation
and thus is recommended
for ease in learning
and for non-routine
operations. The
larger display
format permits
you to display
and review complete
drive tables,
logical unit tables
and partition
tables without
scrolling. The
terminal mode
lets you control
the array at all
levels from creation,
deletion and partitioning
of RAID arrays
to enabling/disabling
write back cache,
enabling optional
battery backup,
entering and changing
passwords and
even resetting
the controller.
These capabilities
put you or your
designated service
provider in full
control of the
FlashDisk RAID
array at all times.

Normally,
you just set up
the RAID array
once and forget
it. However, when
it comes time
to upgrade, reconfigure,
replace a failed
drive or monitor
rebuild status,
you'll be happy
to have the FlashDisk
RAID array keep
you completely
informed about
these matters.
All this information
is merely a few
clicks away either
on the terminal
or LCD front-panel
display.
Inquiry
examples
You can set up
the front panel
to continuously
monitor the performance
of the RAID array.
Many people feel
a great deal of
comfort watching
this - knowing
that when they
see the gas
gauge horizontal
bar dancing across
the display, they
are reassured
that everything
is going alright.
In fact, any deviation
from normal behavior
in this visual
display may be
an early warning
to a problem and
give rise to further
inquiry.
Status
Inquiry
The first thing
to check in such
a case is the
Logical Drive
Table. Just select
V
for View and edit
logical drive
to produce this
display.
This display indicates
that there is
just one logical
drive setup as
a 16 GB RAID 5
array with five
drives, one standby
(hot-spare) drive
and that no drives
have failed.
A further inquiry
using P
for Partition
logical drives
produces the Logical
Drive Partition
Table which shows
that the RAID
5 array is partitioned
into three separate
logical partitions
which can be used
by by the host
operating system
as separate logical
volumes as if
they were all
physically different
disk drives. With
the dual hosting
capability, these
can even be used
under different
operating systems
by different hosts.
Two hosts can
even share the
data under operating
systems that support
clustering including
Digital UNIX &
OpenVMS, HP-UX,
IBM AIX and SUN
Solaris.
Rebuild
If a drive fails,
the hot spare
or new drive will
be rebuilt. The
RAID array will
continue running
transparently
to users while
reconstructing
lost data from
parity information.
The rebuild process
begins upon recognition
of a fresh drive,
whether just replaced
or already in
place as a standby.
The rebuild occurs
by recreating
parity information
or lost data in
the background,
sector by sector,
while normal operations
continue. The
front panel display
provides degree
of completion
information so
you know what
is happening and
can anticipate
when rebuild will
be complete.
Upgrading
the RAID array
Sooner or later
you will need
to upgrade the
RAID array, either
to add more storage,
change to larger
drives or just
to replace a failed
drive. Just select
A
to view
And edit scsi
drives from
the main menu
to review the
SCSI drive table.
The example below
shows five Seagate
4 GB drives in
the first five
SCSI slots numbered
0 to 4 on two
disk channels
numbered 0 and
1. All the drives
are in logical
drive 0. You can
select a new RAID
level and reassign
drives with the
RAID level commands
(be sure you have
backed up your
data - we recommend
backing up twice,
if possible) or
assign one of
the drives
or a new drive
as a standby (hot-spare)
drive.

Summary
RAID arrays offer
tremendous resiliency
to a failed disk
drive at reasonable
cost in terms
of number of extra
drives required.
To build and maintain
RAID arrays, setup
and monitoring
is required. FlashDisk
RAID provides
convenient and
accessible front
panel displays
and RS-232 ports
to make it simple
and easy.

contact us | site map | privacy copyright ©2008 by Winchester Systems
|