HPSA(4) manual page
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hpsa - HP Smart Array SCSI driver
modprobe hpsa [ hpsa_allow_any=1 ]
hpsa is a SCSI driver for HP Smart Array RAID controllers.
hpsa_allow_any=1:
This option allows the driver to attempt to operate on any HP Smart Array
hardware RAID controller, even if it is not explicitly known to the driver.
This allows newer hardware to work with older drivers. Typically this is
used to allow installation of operating systems from media that predates
the RAID controller, though it may also be used to enable hpsa to drive
older controllers that would normally be handled by the cciss(4)
driver.
These older boards have not been tested and are not supported with hpsa,
and cciss(4)
should still be used for these.
The hpsa
driver supports the following Smart Array boards:
Smart Array P700M
Smart Array P212
Smart Array P410
Smart Array P410i
Smart Array P411
Smart Array P812
Smart Array P712m
Smart Array P711m
StorageWorks P1210m
To configure HP Smart Array controllers, use the HP
Array Configuration Utility (either hpacuxe(8)
or hpacucli(8)
) or the Offline
ROM-based Configuration Utility (ORCA) run from the Smart Array’s option
ROM at boot time.
Logical drives are accessed via the SCSI
disk driver (sd(4)
), tape drives via the SCSI tape driver (st(4)
), and
the RAID controller via the SCSI generic driver (sg(4)
), with device nodes
named /dev/sd*, /dev/st*, and /dev/sg*, respectively.
- /sys/class/scsi_host/host*/rescan
- This is a write-only
attribute. Writing to this attribute will cause the driver to scan for new,
changed, or removed devices (e.g,. hot-plugged tape drives, or newly configured
or deleted logical drives, etc.) and notify the SCSI midlayer of any changes
detected. Normally a rescan is triggered automatically by HP’s Array Configuration
Utility (either the GUI or the command-line variety); thus, for logical
drive changes, the user should not normally have to use this attribute.
This attribute may be useful when hot plugging devices like tape drives,
or entire storage boxes containing preconfigured logical drives.
- /sys/class/scsi_host/host*/firmware_revision
- This attribute contains the firmware version of the Smart Array.
For example:
# cd /sys/class/scsi_host/host4
# cat firmware_revision
7.14
- /sys/class/scsi_disk/c:b:t:l/device/unique_id
- This attribute contains a 32 hex-digit unique ID for each logical drive.
For example:
# cd /sys/class/scsi_disk/4:0:0:0/device
# cat unique_id
600508B1001044395355323037570F77
- /sys/class/scsi_disk/c:b:t:l/device/raid_level
- This attribute contains
the RAID level of each logical drive.
For example:
# cd /sys/class/scsi_disk/4:0:0:0/device
# cat raid_level
RAID 0
- /sys/class/scsi_disk/c:b:t:l/device/lunid
- This attribute contains the 16
hex-digit (8 byte) LUN ID by which a logical drive or physical device can
be addressed. c:b:t:l are the controller, bus, target, and lun of the device.
For example:
# cd /sys/class/scsi_disk/4:0:0:0/device
# cat lunid
0x0000004000000000
For compatibility with applications written
for the cciss(4)
driver, many, but not all of the ioctls supported by the
cciss(4)
driver are also supported by the hpsa driver. The data structures
used by these ioctls are described in the Linux kernel source file include/linux/cciss_ioctl.h.
- CCISS_DEREGDISK, CCISS_REGNEWDISK, CCISS_REGNEWD
- These three ioctls all
do exactly the same thing, which is to cause the driver to rescan for new
devices. This does exactly the same thing as writing to the hpsa-specific
host "rescan" attribute.
- CCISS_GETPCIINFO
- Returns PCI domain, bus, device
and function and "board ID" (PCI subsystem ID).
- CCISS_GETDRIVVER
- Returns
driver version in three bytes encoded as:
(major_version << 16) | (minor_version
<< 8) |
(subminor_version)
- CCISS_PASSTHRU, CCISS_BIG_PASSTHRU
- Allows "BMIC" and "CISS" commands to
be passed through to the Smart Array. These are used extensively by the
HP Array Configuration Utility, SNMP storage agents, and so on. See cciss_vol_status
at for some examples.
cciss(4)
, sd(4)
, st(4)
, cciss_vol_status(8)
,
hpacucli(8)
, hpacuxe(8)
,
and Documentation/scsi/hpsa.txt and Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-pci-devices-cciss
in the Linux kernel source tree
This page is part of release
3.78 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information
about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found
at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
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