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01-19-2006 06:29 PM
01-19-2006 06:29 PM
Solved! Go to Solution.
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01-19-2006 06:38 PM
01-19-2006 06:38 PM
Re: hp jbods
pretty old stuffs but u may refer to this doc:
http://docs.hp.com/en/145/diskwp2.pdf
JBODs stands for "Just a Bunch Of Disks".
regards.
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01-19-2006 06:40 PM
01-19-2006 06:40 PM
Re: hp jbods
There are some enclosures from HP which will be doing the same job for you. You can go for DS2300, MSA1000 and other models within these depending upon the requirement and scalability.
In configuration part you will have to evenly distribute the load across multiple controllers if any. Use stripping at extent level to achive this so that the load is distributed across controllers.
HTH,
Devender
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01-19-2006 06:41 PM
01-19-2006 06:41 PM
Re: hp jbods
A model number might help.
Its actually fairly easy.
Connect to a compatible scsi card, power it up and run ioscan -fnC disk
But: If the two SCSI cards have the same scsi id one of the systems will panic when you hook of a second system.
SEP
Owner of ISN Corporation
http://isnamerica.com
http://hpuxconsulting.com
Sponsor: http://hpux.ws
Twitter: http://twitter.com/hpuxlinux
Founder http://newdatacloud.com
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01-19-2006 10:16 PM
01-19-2006 10:16 PM
Re: hp jbods
JBOD stands for Just Bunch of disks.
HP DS21xx is entry level jbods.
This you can use as DAS ( Direct Attached Storage) for your server for mounting extra hdds when your server don't have enough room.
Just go through the following thread ..
http://forums1.itrc.hp.com/service/forums/questionanswer.do?threadId=993116
Regards,
Shameer
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01-19-2006 11:29 PM
01-19-2006 11:29 PM
Re: hp jbods
the MSA1000 is not a simple disk drive enclosure - it is a complete (array controller + 14 disk bays) FC storage subsystem.
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01-20-2006 12:44 AM
01-20-2006 12:44 AM
SolutionThe DS2110 HP SCSI JBOD:
http://h18006.www1.hp.com/products/storageworks/ds2120/index.html
The DS24XX HP FIbre JBOD:
http://www.hp.com/products1/storage/products/disk_arrays/disksystems/ds2405/index.html
To get the redundancy (and sometimes performance) of HW RAID based storage - you will always need a host based volume manager that will do mirroring or other software RAID based protection for you (your choices are LVM and VxVM). Properly configured and laid out JBODS (OS/LVM?VxVM level) can sometimes result in storage units that comes close to the performance of their SAN or Hardare Raid based cousins.
As far as other configuration - you basically just hook them up to your HBA (FC, or SCSI). Theres basically very little configuration that you need to do on the enclosure apart from the ability to change SCSI ID addresses or splitting the the bus into two (for connection to two HBAs/systems) in the case of JBODs that allow for such.