How to find out Hardware Raid levels using command on Linux machine, with out rebooting the server.
Issue: My Linux Machine Hard disks were configured with Hard ware RAID level, but i want to know which RAID was configured on this machine??
if the machine was configured with s/w RAID , we have a command to check. /proc/mdstat. It will give us the Software Raid level information. we know that hard ware RAID is configured at BIOS level, so we can not see that one, with out rebooting the server.
Solution:
# cat /proc/driver/cciss/cciss0
cciss0: HP Smart Array E200i Controller
Board ID: 0xxxxxxxxxx
Firmware Version: 1.84
IRQ: 82
Logical drives: 1
Current Q depth: 0
Current # commands on controller: 0
Max Q depth since init: 10
Max # commands on controller since init: 230
Max SG entries since init: 31
Sequential access devices: 0
cciss/c0d0: 299.96GB RAID 1(1+0)
cciss0: HP Smart Array E200i Controller
Board ID: 0xxxxxxxxxx
Firmware Version: 1.84
IRQ: 82
Logical drives: 1
Current Q depth: 0
Current # commands on controller: 0
Max Q depth since init: 10
Max # commands on controller since init: 230
Max SG entries since init: 31
Sequential access devices: 0
cciss/c0d0: 299.96GB RAID 1(1+0)
Here we can see that the machine is configured with RAID 1. On HP server Smart Araay controller option will be available. With this controller we can create Hard ware RAID levels ,RAID 0 , RAID 1 or RAID 5, depending on requirement.
Here we have two disks, with 300 GB each one, we crated raid 1, so we will get only ~300GB usable space.
ccisss/c0d0-- 1st Hard disk for HP servers.
Note: This command will work only for HP servers.
Hope it will helpful.
Thank you for such a wonderful Information !!
ReplyDeleteHere is a list of Top LINUX INTERVIEW QUESTIONS
Linux FTP vsftpd Interview Questions
SSH Interview Questions
Apache Interview Questions
Nagios Interview questions
IPTABLES Interview Questions
Ldap Server Interview Questions
LVM Interview questions
Sendmail Server Interview Questions
YUM Interview Questions
NFS Interview Questions
Read More at :- Linux Troubleshooting