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Manual de usuario Fujitsu, modelo SPARC T5220

Fabricar: Fujitsu
Tamaño del archivo: 11.78 mb
Nombre del archivo: t5120t5220-service-en-04.pdf
Idioma del manual:en
Enlace gratuito para este manual disponible en la parte inferior de la página



Resumen del manual


1 1 ni 1 e Caution — The latch is not an ejector. Do not bend the latch too far to the right. Doing so can damage the latch 5. Grasp the latch and pull the drive out of the drive slot. Related Information ■ “Install a Hard Drive” on page 73 ■ “Four-Drive Capable Backplane Configuration Reference” on page 77 ■ “Eight-Drive Capable Backplane Configuration Reference” on page 78 ■ “Sixteen-Drive Capable Backplane Configuration Reference” on page 79 ▼ Install a Hard Drive Installing a hard drive into the SPARC Enterprise T5120 and T5220 servers is a two-step process. You must first install a hard drive into the desired drive slot. Then you must configure that drive to the server. 1. If necessary, remove the blank panel from the chassis. Servicing Hard Drives 73 Note — SPARC Enterprise T5120 servers might have up to seven blank panels covering unoccupied drive slots. SPARC Enterprise T5220 servers might have as many as fifteen blank panels covering unoccupied hard drive slots. 2. Align the replacement drive to the drive slot. Hard drives are physically addressed according to the slot in which they are installed. If you install a hard drive as a replacement for a drive that was removed, the new drive must go into the same slot as the drive it is replacing. FIGURE: Installing a Hard Drive (Illustrating Installation in a SPARC Enterprise T5220 Server) 3. With the latch open, slide the hard drive into its bay until it is fully seated. Then close the latch to secure the drive. 74 SPARC Enterprise T5120 and T5220 Servers Service Manual • July 2009 4. At the Solaris prompt, type the cfgadm -al command. This will list all drives in the device tree, including drives that are not configured. # cfgadm -al This command should identify the Ap_id for the hard drive you plan to remove, as shown below. Ap_id Type Receptacle Occupant Condition c0 scsi-bus connected configured unknown c0::dsk/c1t0d0 disk connected configured unknown c0::sd1 disk connected unconfigured unknown usb0/1 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb0/2 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb0/3 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb1/1 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb1/2 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb1/3 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb2/1 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb2/2 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb2/3 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb2/4 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb2/5 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb2/6 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb2/7 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb2/8 unknown empty unconfigured ok 5. Type cfgadm -c configure command to configure the disk. For example, the following shows drive c0:dsk/c1t1d1 being configured: # cfgadm -c configure c0::sd1 where c0::sd1 is the disk that you want to configure. 6. Wait until the blue Ready-to-Remove LED is no longer lit on the drive that you installed. Servicing Hard Drives 75 7. At the Solaris prompt, type the cfgadm -al command to list all drives in the device tree, including any drives that are not configured. | # cfgadm -al | This command should identify the Ap_id for the hard drive that you installed. The output should indicate that the drive you installed is configured. For example, the output should look like this: Ap_id Type Receptacle Occupant Condition c0 scsi-bus connected configured unknown c0::dsk/c1t0d0 disk connected configured unknown c0::dsk/c1t1d0 disk connected configured unknown usb0/1 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb0/2 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb0/3 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb1/1 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb1/2 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb1/3 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb2/1 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb2/2 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb2/3 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb2/4 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb2/5 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb2/6 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb2/7 unknown empty unconfigured ok usb2/8 unknown empty unconfigured ok Related Information ■ “Install a Hard Drive” on page 73 ■ “Four-Drive Capable Backplane Configuration Reference” on page 77 ■ “Eight-Drive Capable Backplane Configuration Reference” on page 78 ■ “Sixteen-Drive Capable Backplane Configuration Reference” on page 79 76 SPARC Enterprise T5120 and T5220 Servers Service Manual • July 2009 Four-Drive Capable Backplane Configuration Reference The following table shows the physical hard drive locations in a four-drive capable backplane. TABLE: Physical Drive Locations in a Four-Drive Capable Backplane DVD HDD0 HDD1 HDD2 HDD3 The following table matches the FRU names and the default OpenBoot PROM/Solaris drive pathnames with the physical drive locations in a four-drive capable backplane. TABLE: Physical Drive Locations, FRU Names, and Default Drive Pathnames for a Four-Drive Capable Backplane Physical Location FRU Name OpenBoot PROM/Solaris Default Drive Pathname HDD0 /SYS/HDD0 c0::dsk/c1t0d0 HDD1 /SYS/HDD1 c0::dsk/c1t1d0 HDD2 /SYS/HDD2 c0::dsk/c1t2d0 HDD3 /SYS/HD...

Otros modelos de este manual:
Computadoras - SPARC T5220 (11.78 mb)

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