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08-03-2008 09:56 AM
08-03-2008 09:56 AM
Hi,
today our VA7100 crashed.
armdiscover does not see the array, neither does armdsp work.
A serial console on the controller says that the EVA is in a warning state:
Redundancy Loss
Rebuild Failed
Non Redundant Disk Access
One LED on a disk is yellow, and the VA LED is also yellow.
armdsp -f says all disks are included. Only the Main Enclosure is in a Warning State.
The question is: Can we make things worse by removing the - probably defective - disk? (I need to look for a filler then, I suppose.)
If it is just a disk problem, then why is the communication with the host down?
best regards,
M. Kurz
today our VA7100 crashed.
armdiscover does not see the array, neither does armdsp work.
A serial console on the controller says that the EVA is in a warning state:
Redundancy Loss
Rebuild Failed
Non Redundant Disk Access
One LED on a disk is yellow, and the VA LED is also yellow.
armdsp -f says all disks are included. Only the Main Enclosure is in a Warning State.
The question is: Can we make things worse by removing the - probably defective - disk? (I need to look for a filler then, I suppose.)
If it is just a disk problem, then why is the communication with the host down?
best regards,
M. Kurz
Solved! Go to Solution.
2 REPLIES 2
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08-04-2008 05:07 AM
08-04-2008 05:07 AM
Solution
Could you attach the output of armdsp -a from the Serial console? Rebuild might fail if there is no free space available for the array to rebuild the data. If all the disk are showing online then we should look at the armlog as there might be a disk which might be going on/off on the loop.
Andy.
Andy.
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08-04-2008 05:52 AM
08-04-2008 05:52 AM
Re: Please help! VA7100 Failure
Hi Andy,
thanks for your reply. HP support gave me a hint, that might be useful for others, too:
Pulling the controller from the VA shelf for about 30 seconds interrupted the hang. As there are 2 controllers, the other one takes over.
There was no data loss (we have no write cache anyway), at least nothing that Oracle wasn't able to deal with.
The VA started a friendly looking light show, and even the bad disk suddenly was back to green (the disk had not been touched). The warning state had gone.
I had to run ioscn -fn on the attached hosts, otherwise the volume groups could not be mounted.
Of course, the disk will be changed, but that seems to be it. I wanted to pull the disk and put it back in, but I wanted reassurance in this case.
I couldn't provide any output, because it was just an old serial terminal at that moment.
Thanks for your help,
M. Kurz
thanks for your reply. HP support gave me a hint, that might be useful for others, too:
Pulling the controller from the VA shelf for about 30 seconds interrupted the hang. As there are 2 controllers, the other one takes over.
There was no data loss (we have no write cache anyway), at least nothing that Oracle wasn't able to deal with.
The VA started a friendly looking light show, and even the bad disk suddenly was back to green (the disk had not been touched). The warning state had gone.
I had to run ioscn -fn on the attached hosts, otherwise the volume groups could not be mounted.
Of course, the disk will be changed, but that seems to be it. I wanted to pull the disk and put it back in, but I wanted reassurance in this case.
I couldn't provide any output, because it was just an old serial terminal at that moment.
Thanks for your help,
M. Kurz
The opinions expressed above are the personal opinions of the authors, not of Hewlett Packard Enterprise. By using this site, you accept the Terms of Use and Rules of Participation.
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