Monitoring and Maintenance Activities
Manual No. 775029
4-29
How Do I Rebuild Redundancy Data Onto a
Logical Drive?
One of the most important features of RAID technology is fault tolerance
(data redundancy). It’s the redundancy built into your RAID 1 (10), RAID 3
(30), RAID 5 (50), and RAID 0+1 (0+1+0) logical drive data that allows for
a physical disk drive failure without the loss of that data.
In the event of a physical drive failure within a fault tolerant logical drive,
the disk array goes into critical mode, but I/O activity can continue (data can
be accessed and stored). However, it is unwise to leave the disk array in
critical mode for too long, because a second drive failure will lead to data
loss.
If you have a spare drive assigned, the controller can rebuild the failed
drive’s data using redundant information on the remaining drives in the disk
array. The rebuilt data is stored on the spare drive and the spare’s status
changes to online. While this process is taking place, the disk array is in
degraded performance mode, but I/O activity can continue. At a convenient
time, you would then replace the failed drive with a new one, rescan the
controller, and perhaps assign the new drive as a spare.
If you don’t have a spare drive assigned, or if automatic rebuild management
is not enabled, you’ll need to replace the failed drive as soon as possible and
use the Rebuild Redundancy Data option manually to rebuild the data onto
the new drive.
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