RAID Configuration, Continued

By Bill Meade, published on August 1, 2006
Source: Tom's Guide US | Keywords: , , , , ,

8. RAID Configuration, Continued

Step 7: From the MegaRAID Management menu, hit the down arrow one time to the second option, "Initialize". Hit next hit the space bar to select "Logical Drive 0" (see (Figure 20). Next, hit to initialize the drive.

Figure 20: Initializing the array

A dialog will pop up that says "Initialize?" as shown in Figure 21. Move the cursor to "Yes" and hit .

Figure 21: Confirm array initialization

Initialization takes about 5 seconds on my system. During the process, it pops up an initialization meter that goes from 0 to 100 (see Figure 22).

Figure 22: RAID initialization progress

After the drive is initialized, go back out to the main menu and reboot your system (see Figure 23).

Figure 23: RAID array initialization completed

We've now taken the four hard drives and turned them into a RAID 5 array that operating systems will see as a single hard drive. The next step in building your DIY RAID 5 NAS is to install the operating system you will use.

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Anonymous 12/19/2007 10:01 AM
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An excellent article. I have been trying to setup something like this. I just went thru 2 weeks of trying to get software raid 5 to work in Ubuntu. I searched the net for how-to or step by step instructions and could only find bits and pieces. Nothing worked. Linux users need to remember that us wanna bees don't know even the slightest of commands! In every article I found, they assumed you knew "some" basic commands. I tried reading and learning, but I couldn't find a good learner for linux. Anyway, having decided to do a hardware raid 5 with Ubuntu desktop seemed like my only hope. Then I find this article here, and it is exactly the way EVERY article should be done, step by step, assuming the reader knows nothing. This article is VERY good and thorough! Congratulations Benjamin Webb, you did a great job! -Blueuniform

Anonymous 04/15/2008 11:01 AM
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interesting article, but the beauty of linux software RAID5 is that an array rebuild will happen automatically when you replace the faulty drive (well you have to tell it that you replaced the drive using mdadm). you can even simulate a failure and then watch it rebuild the array to get an idea of how your system will respond under different scenarios. here's a snippet of what needs to be done to replace the missing drive/partition:

Rebuilding:

To remove the failed partition and add the new parition:
mdadm /dev/mdX -r /dev/sdYZ -a /dev/sdYZ

where X is the array number (0,1,etc) and YZ is your disk/partition (sda3 for example)

e.g.:
mdadm /dev/md0 -r /dev/sde3 -a /dev/sdr3
(where sde3 is the 3rd partition on your faulty drive, and sdr3 is the 3rd partition on the new drive)


Watch the automatic reconstruction run with:
watch -n1 cat /proc/mdstat

Anonymous 07/02/2008 2:29 AM
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I understand that people fear the console commands. It can be a bit scary at first. But mdadm is pretty simple when you're used to console apps and a little bit of linux. It's mostly just mdadm and such. I currently run two software raids with 7 and 5 disks.

Anonymous 11/03/2008 1:06 AM
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i believe his concerns with software raid5 were not just the rebuilding points. i believe he liked the fact that if the os drive took a crap, he could take the card and array and move it to any operating computer and it would power up and work. if you lose the operating system that wrote the software raid array, you have lost the array.

Note You are going to post a comment as anonymous.



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