Dell MD1000 manual

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Table of contents for the manual

  • Page 1

    www .dell.com | support.dell.com Dell™ PowerV ault™ MD1000 Storage Enclosure Hardware Owner’ s Manual[...]

  • Page 2

    Notes, Notices, and Cautions NOTE: A NOTE indicates important info rmation that helps you make better use of your sy stem. NOTICE: A NOTICE indicates either potential damage to hardw are or loss of data and tells you how to avoid the problem. CAUTION: A CAUTION indicates a potential for pro perty damage, personal injury , or death. ________________[...]

  • Page 3

    Contents 3 Contents 1 About Y our Sy stem Other Information Y ou May Need . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Indicators on the Enclosure Bezel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Front-Panel Indicators and Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Drive Carrier LED Indicators . . . . . . . . . . . . .[...]

  • Page 4

    4 Contents Removing and Installing Drives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Removing Drives from the Enclosure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Installing SAS Drives in the Enclosure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Installing SA T A Drives in the Enclosure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Removing and Ins[...]

  • Page 5

    Contents 5 5 Getting Help T echnical Assistance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 Online Service s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 AutoT ech Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 Automated Order -Status Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [...]

  • Page 6

    6 Contents[...]

  • Page 7

    About Y our Sy stem 7 1 About Y our Sy stem The enclosure provides a 3-U rack-mounted e xtern al stor age chassis capa ble of accommodating up to 15 3.0-Gbps, Serial-Attached SC SI (SAS) drives or 3.0-Gbps Serial A T A (SA T A) drives. The enclosure can be daisy-chained with up to two additional enclosur es to provide up to 45 drives per host conne[...]

  • Page 8

    8 About Y our Sy stem Indicators on the Enclosure Bezel An optional locking bezel can be installed on the front of the enclosure to limit access. Fi g u r e 1 - 1 illustrates the indicators and componen ts on the bezel. T able 1-1 lists cond itions indicated by the lights on the bezel. F or inf ormation on installing and removing the bezel, se e &q[...]

  • Page 9

    About Y our Sy stem 9 Front-Panel Indicators and Features F igure 1-2 shows the LED indica tors and components on the enclosur e ’s front panel (optional lock ing bezel not shown). T able 1-2 lists the cond itio ns and functions indicated by each. Figure 1-2. Front-Panel Features 1 enclosure status LED 4 power LED 7 drives (15) 2 drive activity L[...]

  • Page 10

    10 About Y our Sy stem Drive Carrier LED Indicators Each drive carrier in your enclosure has two LEDs: an activity LED (green) and a bi-color (g reen/amber) status LED (s ee F igure 1-3). The act ivity LED flashes whenever the drive is acce ssed. T a ble 1-3 lists the flash patterns for the status LED. Figure 1-3. Drive Carrier LED Indicators P owe[...]

  • Page 11

    About Y our Sy stem 11 Back-Panel Indicators and Features F igure 1-4 s hows the back-panel featur es of a fully populated enclosur e containing both enclosure management modules (EMMs) and tw o power supply/cooling fan module s. The enclosure r equires at least one EMM to be installed; if only one E MM is inst alled, it must r eside in the primary[...]

  • Page 12

    12 About Y our Sy stem Figure 1-4. Back-Panel Features Enclosure Manage ment Module (EMM) Each EMM provides data path and enclosure management functions for your enclosure, including: • Monitoring and controlling enclosure environment elements (temperature, fans, power supplies, and enclosure LEDs) • Controlling access to the drives • Communi[...]

  • Page 13

    About Y our Sy stem 13 F or a description of each component on the front pane l of the EMM, see T able 1-4. F or an expl anation of how to connect the enclosure us ing the EMM ports, se e "Operating Y our Storage Enclosure." Figure 1-5. EMM External Panel T able 1-4. EMM Component Functions Item Component Icon Function 1 Debug P ort Dell [...]

  • Page 14

    14 About Y our Sy stem Unified Mode and Split Mode The enclosure can run in one of two modes: •U n i f i e d •S p l i t In unified mode, a SAS host can communicate with up to 15 drives in the enclosure via a single EMM, or up to 45 drives in thr ee enclosur es daisy chained toge ther . In split mode, the enclosur e is split into two virtual gro[...]

  • Page 15

    About Y our Sy stem 15 Figure 1-6. Drive Slot Distribution in Split Mode vs. Unified Mode EMM Control in Split Mode EMM Control in Unified Mode[...]

  • Page 16

    16 About Y our Sy stem Figure 1-7. Enclosure Mode Switch Settings NOTE: T o change the enclosure mode, you must change t he position of the enclosure mode switch before turnin g on power to the enclosure. Changing the position of the sw itch while the enclosure is on will not affect enclosure operation until the enclosure is rebooted. F or a comple[...]

  • Page 17

    About Y our Sy stem 17 EMM Thermal Shutdown If critical internal temperatures are rea ched, the en closure will be shut down automatically via either a thermal shutdown command issued by the EMM firmwa re or via a comm and from Serv er Administrator . Power Supply and Cooling Fan Features Y our storage enclosur e supports tw o integrated, hot-plugg[...]

  • Page 18

    18 About Y our Sy stem Enclosure Alarms An audible alarm is activated if any of the faul t condit ions listed in T able 1-6 occur . If a critical event occurs, the alarm sounds continuously . If a noncritical event occurs, the alarm sounds every 10 seconds. NOTE: The audible alarm is disabled by defaul t. T o enable the alarm, you must change the d[...]

  • Page 19

    Operating Y our Storage Enclosure 19 2 Operating Y our Storage Enclosure This section prov ides procedures for connecting your storag e enclosure to a host system for either unified or split mode. Before Y ou Begin Before connecting your storage enclosure , ensure that the following are available: • The components that came with your storage encl[...]

  • Page 20

    20 Operating Y our Storage Enclosure • A split-mode configuration is one i n which your storage enclosure is connected to either two host controllers, or two ports on a single host con troller . In this configuration, the drives are split into two groups with eight drives controlled by one host contro ller and seven drives controlled by the other[...]

  • Page 21

    Operating Y our Storage Enclosure 21 Figure 2-1. EMM Cabling Diagram in Unified and Split Mode 4 Using the enclosure mode switch, select your mode of operation, either unified or split mode (see F igure 1-7 for switch positions). 5 Connect power to the power supplies. NOTICE: T o safeguard your storage enclosure against power problems, connect the [...]

  • Page 22

    22 Operating Y our Storage Enclosure Minimum Requirements Y ou can obtain these components from support.dell.com . • MD1000 firmwar e version A03 (T he MD3000 enclosure does not support connection of an MD1000 expansion enclosure with A00 firmware.) • SAS 5/E firmwar e version A03 (00.10.49.00.06.12.02 .00). • MD3000 Resource CD version A01 ([...]

  • Page 23

    Operating Y our Storage Enclosure 23 5 P ower on the systems in the following order : a T urn on the MD1000 expansion enclosure(s). W ait for the enclos ure status LED to turn blue. b T urn on the MD3000 enclosure and wait for the st atus LED to indicate that the unit is ready : • If the status LE D is solid amber , the MD3000 is still comi ng on[...]

  • Page 24

    24 Operating Y our Storage Enclosure 6 T urn off the MD3000 enclosure. 7 Connect the MD1000 expansion enclosur e(s) to the MD3000 enclosure, as shown in the Dell P owerV ault Compatibili ty Matrix (available from support.dell.com ). 8 P ower on the systems in the following order : a T urn on the MD1000 expansion enclosure or enclosures. W ait for t[...]

  • Page 25

    Operating Y our Storage Enclosure 25 Managing Y our Storage Enclosure Disk storage within the enclosure can be configur ed using either the PERC 5/E Ctrl-R BIOS firmware or Server Administrator . F or optimal manageme nt and serviceability of your enclos ure, Dell r ecommen ds use of Server Administrator . NOTE: Online configuration, enclosure stat[...]

  • Page 26

    26 Operating Y our Storage Enclosure[...]

  • Page 27

    Installing Enclosure Components 29 3 Installing Enclosure Components This section explains how to install the fo llowing co mponents: • F ront bezel (optional) • Drives and drive carriers • EMMs • P ower supplies • Control panel • Enclosure midplane Recommended T ools The procedures in this section requir e the use of one or more of the[...]

  • Page 28

    30 Installing Enclosure Components Figure 3-1. Installing and Re moving the Front Bezel 4 T o replace the bezel, insert the interlocking notch into the U-shaped handle on the side of the front enclosure panel. 5 Snap the left side of the bezel into place in the U-shaped handle on the left side of the enclosur e . 6 T o lock the bezel, insert the ke[...]

  • Page 29

    Installing Enclosure Components 31 Removing Drives from the Enc losure NOTICE: T o avoid damage, never leave a drive carrier partia lly removed from the enclosure. Rotating a carrier handle next to an unseated drive carrier will result in serious damage to the unseated drive carrier . NOTICE: T o avoid data loss when removing a drive, Dell recomm e[...]

  • Page 30

    32 Installing Enclosure Components Installing SAS Drives in the Enclosure NOTICE: T o ensure proper airflow for enclosure cooling, each slot should contain either an active drive or a drive blank. NOTICE: Alway s wear a wrist grounding strap when ha ndling equipment with static-sensitive components. P erform the following steps to inst all the new [...]

  • Page 31

    Installing Enclosure Components 33 Figure 3-3. Installing the Drive in the Carrier 5 W ith the drive car rier handle open, carefully align th e channel on the drive carrier guide rail with the appropr iate drive slot k eying featu re on the cha ssi s face plate, an d insert the drive (see Figur e 3-2). 6 P ush the drive carrier into the slot until [...]

  • Page 32

    34 Installing Enclosure Components Installing SA T A Drives in the Enclosure NOTICE: T o ensure proper airflow for enclosure cooling, each slot should contain either an active drive or a drive blank. NOTICE: Alway s wear a wrist grounding strap when ha ndling equipment with static-sensitive components. P erform the following steps to install the ne[...]

  • Page 33

    Installing Enclosure Components 35 Figure 3-4. Installing the Drive in the Carrier 5 W ith the drive car rier handle open, carefully align th e channel on the drive carrier guide rail with the appropr iate drive slot k eying featu re on the cha ssi s face plate, an d insert the drive (see Figur e 3-2). 6 P ush the drive carrier into the slot until [...]

  • Page 34

    36 Installing Enclosure Components Removing and Installing an EMM An enclosure with redundant enclosur e man agement contains two EMMs and can be configured in either a unified mode or split mode. An enclosure with nonr edundant enclosure management consists of one EMM configured in unified mode. If only one EMM is installed in your enclosure, th e[...]

  • Page 35

    Installing Enclosure Components 37 Figure 3-5. Removing and Installing an EMM Installing an EMM 1 Carefully insert the EMM into the empty module slot. 2 P ush the module to the back of the slot until it is fir mly seated in th e backplane connector (see F igure 3-5). 3 P ush the release lever in (toward the enclosur e ) until the module is retracte[...]

  • Page 36

    38 Installing Enclosure Components Installing an EMM Module Cover in an Empty Bay If your enclosure configuration calls for a single EMM, the empty EMM bay must contain a module cover to ensure proper airflow . Installing and Removing an EMM Module Cover 1 Align the edges of the module cover with the edges of the EMM bay (see F igure 3-6). 2 P ush [...]

  • Page 37

    Installing Enclosure Components 39 Removing a Powe r Supply/Cooling Fan Mo dule NOTICE: Power supply/cooling fan modules are hot-pluggable . Provided one power suppl y/cooling fan mo dule is functioning normally , you can remove or replace t he other while the enclosure is powered on. NOTE: If you remove a fully functioning power supply/cooling fan[...]

  • Page 38

    40 Installing Enclosure Components Installing a Power Supp ly/Cooling Fan Module 1 Carefully slide the new power supp ly/cooling fan modu le approximately two-thirds of the way into the empty bay . 2 Gently push the module all the way to the back of the bay until it is firmly seated in the backplane connector . The power supply is seated when its f[...]

  • Page 39

    Installing Enclosure Components 41 Figure 3-8. Removing and Replacing the Control Panel 6 Using a T orx T10 driver , remove all 16 screws from the front faceplate of th e enclosure as shown in F igure 3-8. 7 Remove the front faceplate from the enclosur e and place it on a flat, secure surface. 8 Slide the control panel assembly straight out from i [...]

  • Page 40

    42 Installing Enclosure Components Removing and Installing the Midplane CAUTION: Only trained service technicians are authorized to remove the enclosure cover and access any of the components inside the enclosure. Before performing any procedure, see your Product Information Guide for complete information about safety precautions, wo rking inside t[...]

  • Page 41

    Installing Enclosure Components 43 5 Slide the EMM/pow er supply cage out of the enclosur e and place it aside. 6 Reaching into the enclosure chassis from the back, carefully disconnect the midplane from the control panel and lift it out of the enclosure. (See F igure 3-10.) 7 T o re-install the midplane, reverse the pr evious steps. Figure 3-10. R[...]

  • Page 42

    44 Installing Enclosure Components[...]

  • Page 43

    T roubleshooting Y our Enclosure 43 4 T roubleshooting Y our Enclosure Safety First—For Y ou and Y our Enclosure T o perform certain procedur es in this document, yo u must work inside the en closure. While working inside the enclosure, do not attempt to perform service ex cept as explained in this guide and elsewhere in your documentation. CAUTI[...]

  • Page 44

    44 T roubleshooting Y our Enclosure NOTE: In a split-mode configuration, these conditions apply to the se rver that is directly attached to the affec ted EMM. In a unified-mo de configuration, these conditions apply when communication is lost to any enclosure in the daisy chain. Problem • The PERC 5/E Adapter Ctrl-R utility reports: – Physical [...]

  • Page 45

    T roubleshooting Y our Enclosure 45 • F ailed Vi rtual Disks NOTE: This warning message appears if one or more virtual disk(s) are spanned across two or more enclosures or if an enclosure in sp lit mode is shared by one server . 1 During POST , press <Ctrl><R> to enter the Ctrl-R utility . 2 F ind the virtual disk(s) ma rked as F aile[...]

  • Page 46

    46 T roubleshooting Y our Enclosure 4 Remove the power supply/coo li ng fan modules from the enclosure . See "Removing and Installing the P ower Supply/Cooling F an Module." 5 Remove the enclosure midplane. See "Removing and Installing the Midplane." 6 Let the enclosure dry thoroughly for at leas t 24 hours. 7 Reinstall all the [...]

  • Page 47

    T roubleshooting Y our Enclosure 47 Action CAUTION: Only trained service technicians are authorized to remove the enclosure cover and access any of the components inside the enclosure. Before performing any procedure, see your Product Information Guide for complete information about safety precautions, wo rking inside the enclosure and protecting a[...]

  • Page 48

    48 T roubleshooting Y our Enclosure T roubleshooting a Fan Problem • Enclosur e-status indicator is amber . • Systems management software issues a fan-related error message. • F an status indicator indicates a problem with the fan. Action CAUTION: Only trained service technicians are authorized to remove the enclosure cover and access any of [...]

  • Page 49

    T roubleshooting Y our Enclosure 49 Problem • Drive status LED is flashing amber . Action 1 Review the Server Administrator alert logs for possible recovery actions. NOTE: If a drive rebuild is under way , allow the r ebuild to complete before viewing the alert logs. 2 Remove the drive from the enclosur e. See "Removing and Installing Drives[...]

  • Page 50

    50 T roubleshooting Y our Enclosure[...]

  • Page 51

    Getting Help 51 5 Getting Help T e chnical Assistance If you need assistance with a technica l problem, perform the following steps: 1 Complete the procedures in "T roubleshooting Y our Enclosure." 2 R un the enclosure diagnostics and recor d any information provided. 3 Use Dell's extensive suite of online services available at Dell [...]

  • Page 52

    52 Getting Help www .dell.com/la (Latin American countries) www .dell.ca (Canada on ly) • Anonymous file transfer protocol (FTP) ftp.dell.com/ Lo g in as user:anonymous , and use your e-mail address as your password. • Electronic Support Service support@us.dell.com apsupport@dell.com (Asian/P acific countries only) support.jp.dell.com (Japan on[...]

  • Page 53

    Getting Help 53 T o contact Dell's technical support service, see "Before Y ou Call" and then see the contact information for your region. Dell Enterprise T raining and Certification Dell Enterprise T raining and Certification is available; see www .dell.com/training for more information . This service may not be offer ed in al l loc[...]

  • Page 54

    54 Getting Help Before Y ou Call NOTE: Have your Express Service Code ready when you call. The code helps Dell's automated-support telephone sy stem direct your call more efficiently . If possible, turn on your enclosure before you call Dell for technical assistance an d call from a teleph one at or near the computer . Y ou may be asked to typ[...]

  • Page 55

    Glossary 55 Glossary This section defines or id entifies technical terms, abbreviations, and acronyms used in your system documents. A — Ampere(s). AC — Alternating current. ACP I — A dvanced Configura tion and P o wer Interf ace. A standard interface for enabling the operating system to direct configuration and power management. ambient temp[...]

  • Page 56

    56 Glossary cm — Centimeter(s). CMOS — Complementary metal-oxide semiconductor . component — As they r elate to DMI, components include operating systems, computer systems, expansion cards, and peripherals that are compatible with DMI. Each component is made up of groups and attributes that are defi ned as relevan t to that component. COM n ?[...]

  • Page 57

    Glossary 57 expansion card — An add-in card, such as a NIC or SCSI adapter , that plugs into an expansion-car d connector on the system board. An expansion car d add s some specialized function to the system by providing an interface between the e xpansion bus and a peripheral. expansion-card connector — A connector on the system board or riser[...]

  • Page 58

    58 Glossary jumper — Small blocks on a circuit boar d with two or more pins emer ging from them. Plastic plugs containing a wire fit down over the pins. The wir e connects the pins and creates a circuit, providing a simple and r eversible method of changing the circuitry in a boar d. K — Kilo-; 1000. Kb — Kilobit(s); 1024 bits. KB — Kilobyt[...]

  • Page 59

    Glossary 59 NMI — Nonmaskable interrupt. A device sends an NMI to signal the processor about hardware errors. ns — Nanosecond(s). NTFS — The NT F ile System option in the W indows 2000 operating system. NVRAM — Nonvolatile ra ndom-access memory . Memory that does not lose its contents when you turn off your system. NVR AM is used for mainta[...]

  • Page 60

    60 Glossary ROMB — RAID on motherboard. rpm — Revolutions per minute. RT C — Real-time clock. SA T A — Serial Advanced T echnology Attachment. A standard interface between the syste m board and storage devices. SCSI — Small computer system interface. An I/O bus interface with faster data transmission rates than standard ports. SDR AM — [...]

  • Page 61

    Glossary 61 UNIX — Universal Internet Ex change. UNIX, the precursor to Linux, is an operating system written in the C programming language. uplink port — A port on a network hub or switch used to connect to other hubs or switches without requiring a crossover cable. UPS — Uninterruptible power supply . A battery-powered unit that automatical[...]

  • Page 62

    62 Glossary[...]

  • Page 63

    Index 63 Index A alarms, 18 C Cabling, 19 cabling split mode, 2 0 unified mode, 2 0 contacting Dell, 54 cooling fan features, 1 7 troubleshooting, 4 8 D damaged systems troubleshooting, 4 6 Dell contacting, 5 4 E enclosure managing, 2 5 enclosure management module, 12 bay cover , 3 6 installing, 3 5 rem ov in g , 3 4 enclosure mode cabling, 1 9 cha[...]

  • Page 64

    64 Index T telephone numb ers, 54 thermal thresholds, 17 tools needed, 27 troubleshooting, 43 cooling fan, 4 8 damaged system, 4 6 external connections, 4 5 hard drive, 4 8 power supplies, 4 6 start-up routine, 4 3 system cooling, 4 7 wet system, 4 5 W warranty , 7[...]