do sysctl -a | grep nonoptimal_volumes
this should find an oid somewhere under mpt branch, and it should
reflect the number of raid volumes in state other than "optimal".
in most cases this means that a disk has gone bad.
Cristiano Deana wrote:
Hi,
I'm using a 7-RELEASE on a Dell PowerEdge 19
Hi,
first of all thanks everybody.
this is the output about mpt0, can i help with some other info?
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:14:8:0: class=0x01 card=0x1f081028 chip=0x00541000
rev=0x01 hdr=0x00
vendor = 'LSI Logic (Was: Symbios Logic, NCR)'
device = 'SAS 3000 series, 8-port wit
On Wednesday 05 March 2008 06:13:06 am Bjoern A. Zeeb wrote:
> On Wed, 5 Mar 2008, Cristiano Deana wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I'm using a 7-RELEASE on a Dell PowerEdge 1955, using a mpt driver to
> > manage a hardware raid1.
> > Is there any way to check the status of the raid?
>
> Not really.
>
> > No
Hello Cristiano,
Cristiano Deana [Wed, Mar 05, 2008 at 11:07:31AM +0100]:
> I'm using a 7-RELEASE on a Dell PowerEdge 1955, using a mpt driver to
> manage a hardware raid1.
> Is there any way to check the status of the raid?
as far as I know there is currently no support to monitor mpt
on FreeBSD
On Wed, 5 Mar 2008, Cristiano Deana wrote:
Hi,
I'm using a 7-RELEASE on a Dell PowerEdge 1955, using a mpt driver to
manage a hardware raid1.
Is there any way to check the status of the raid?
Not really.
Now it's running on a single disk (the second one failed and has been
removed), and th
Hi,
I'm using a 7-RELEASE on a Dell PowerEdge 1955, using a mpt driver to
manage a hardware raid1.
Is there any way to check the status of the raid?
Now it's running on a single disk (the second one failed and has been
removed), and the only thing i can see are:
mpt0: mpt_cam_event: 0x16
mpt0: mp
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