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05-08-2015 06:18 AM
05-08-2015 06:18 AM
DL380-G5, H200 POST Error: 1720-S.M.A.R.T. Hard Drive Detects Imminent Failure
Good afternoon,
I have an old DL380g5 with an H200 RAID card. Two disks configured in a RAID1 (mirror).
The server is running ESXi 5.5
Both disks in the array have a flashing green light and the failing disk is also flashing orange (see video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZqGiINokAAA&feature=youtu.be )
One of the disks is now reporting as failing, so could someone advise on the correct way of replacing it without destroying my RAID set or loosing data. Googling for HP H200 produces no useful results.
Greatest of thanks
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05-10-2015 11:13 PM - edited 05-10-2015 11:14 PM
05-10-2015 11:13 PM - edited 05-10-2015 11:14 PM
Re: DL380-G5, H200 POST Error: 1720-S.M.A.R.T. Hard Drive Detects Imminent Failure
Hi,
I am not sure about H200, but in HP Raid Cards, if one of the drive fails in Raid 1, then you remove bad drive and insert a good drive into the same slot and it will rebuild.
I got this information from a pdf but not sure if its called a Virtual Disk, in HP we call it Logical Volume.
Replacing and Rebuilding a Degraded Virtual Disk
In the event of a physical disk failure in a RAID 1 or RAID 10 virtual disk, you will need to replace the disk and resynchronize the virtual disk.
Synchronization occurs automatically on replacing the physical disk using the following steps.
1 Replace the failed physical disk with a blank disk of the same type and of equal or greater capacity.
2 Check your management application or the BIOS Configuration Utility (<Ctrl><C>) to ensure synchronization started automatically.
I would recommend to take a valid backup before performing this task.
Thank You!
I am a HP employee
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[Any personal opinions expressed are mine, and not official statements on behalf of Hewlett Packard Enterprise]
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05-15-2015 03:02 AM
05-15-2015 03:02 AM
Re: DL380-G5, H200 POST Error: 1720-S.M.A.R.T. Hard Drive Detects Imminent Failure
For anyone finding this in the future.
Powered off server. Swapped out the failed disk with a new one. Powered the server back on.
During the RAID bootrom init, I was given a 60 second timeout; default option was to rebuild the array on the new disk (or I could have continued in the completely degraded state).
Quick and easy :)