Smart Array P400 Drive Failure

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Solution 1

I'd start here: HP Smart Array P400 controller - Questions & Answers

Honestly though almost every decent RAID controller acts the same in the case of a single drive failure in a two disk RAID 1 array. Since the Smart Array is a true hardware RAID controller either drive can fail and the OS will still work just about as fast as it did with two drives. If you had a software based RAID controller (Some of the cheaper Promise models for instance) then you sometimes need a boot diskette to force booting off the second drive.

The HP Smart Array's are very good RAID controllers, they are decently fast, very reliable and dead simple to use. They are definitely my favorite embedded RAID controller. One great feature they have is being able to pull a set of drives from one system and stick it into another for recovery etc. purposes. Lot's of other RAID controller get very confused when you present them an array pulled from a different controller, not so the Smart Array. They just work!

Solution 2

Couple of statements grabbed from the HP Smart Array Controller technology technology brief has a few insights:

RAID 1 load balancing

In general, RAID 0, RAID 5, and RAID 6 with ADG logical drives have the same read performance given the same stripe size and array size. RAID 1 logical drives contain two copies of the data. During reads to RAID 1 logical drives, the Smart Array controller issues read requests to either drive in the mirrored set. During a heavy read load, the Smart Array controller balances the number of requests between the two hard drives to achieve higher read bandwidth. This technique is called RAID 1 load balancing.

Automatic data recovery with rapid rebuild technology ... Generally, a rebuild operation requires approximately 15 to 30 seconds per gigabyte for RAID 5 or RAID 6 with ADG logical drives (where gigabytes are the measured capacity of the replacement disk drive). However, actual rebuild time depends on several factors, including the amount of I/O activity occurring during the rebuild operation, the number of disk drives in the logical drive, the rebuild priority setting, and the disk drive performance.

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So, while it's rebuilding, it'll try and do it in-between regular disk IO, but it will have some impact on performance.

Solution 3

Typically you may see some degraded read performance should a drive failure, but there will be no loss of service. Additional degradation may be seen when you replace the faulty drive and the array rebuilds.

Were you after some more specific information? :)

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Updated on September 17, 2022

Comments

  • ewwhite
    ewwhite almost 2 years

    I have a HP Proliant server with a Smart Array P400 RAID controller with 2 146 gb 10k SAS hard drives configured in a mirrored RAID configuration. Where could I find information regarding how a drive failure would affect this configuration? I am looking to see how this RAID configuration and hardware would react to a drive failure.

  • Admin
    Admin almost 15 years
    Thank you very much for your information, can I find this information in a manual? I basically want something I can show to the management supporting my statement regarding this.
  • Arie K
    Arie K almost 15 years
    +1 for "pull a set of drives from one system and stick it into another for recovery etc. purposes."
  • Sandy
    Sandy almost 15 years
    IBM use the P400? Really? I can't say I've heard that before, do you mean they use the same underlying OEM'ed RAID chip? I'm not sure exactly who makes the Smart Array's for HP or if they are truly an internal piece of hardware. Either way it's a great RAID board. I haven't really kept up with IBM hardware in the past three years since we got bought out by a company that uses 99% HP servers. I had always been very happy with my HP's so it didn't bother me much that I couldn't buy IBM's anymore ;-)
  • John Gardeniers
    John Gardeniers almost 15 years
    The IBM version is just a rebadged P400, made by the same company, using the same chips. Neither IBM nor HP make their own RAID controllers, at least not in the last decade or so.
  • Sandy
    Sandy almost 15 years
    Do you happen to now what the IBM part # or name is? The IBM's I've used in the past were all ServeRAID 4/6/8 based and I can't say I ever cared for those. Maybe the chip was the same underneath but the software left a lot to be desired...
  • John Gardeniers
    John Gardeniers almost 15 years
    Can't help with the part numbers but I can't say I have any complains about the few ServeRAID controllers I've used.