November 17th, 2013, 23:09
November 18th, 2013, 1:38
November 18th, 2013, 1:39
November 18th, 2013, 7:49
mmoran69 wrote:Per HPs recommendation after doing a SmartArray firmware upgrade, I did a firmware upgrade to a RAID set containing 5 HP EG0900FBLSK drives (ST9900805SS) with firmware HPD3. HP says to upgrade them to HPD7, but the update tool said it did not apply to them, so I did from HPD3 to HPD4, that said it applies, but as luck will have it, two of those drives went dead after de upgrade. Now I need to recover data in the RAID volume that was not backed up.
The drives do not show in the SmartArray, but do show when connected to a LSI SATA/SAS HBA, still with firmware HPD3, but capacity 0. hydata free seagate SAS tool (ran it to get information, I know it will no fix them) says they are offline, and do not spin. S/N of the drive still shows, nothing else.
Q1: In your experience, are the drives recoverable?
Q2: What will be the best course of action?
Thanks for the advice.
November 18th, 2013, 9:51
November 18th, 2013, 20:35
mmoran69 wrote:Per HPs recommendation after doing a SmartArray firmware upgrade, I did a firmware upgrade to a RAID set containing 5 HP EG0900FBLSK drives (ST9900805SS) with firmware HPD3. HP says to upgrade them to HPD7, but the update tool said it did not apply to them, so I did from HPD3 to HPD4, that said it applies, but as luck will have it, two of those drives went dead after de upgrade. Now I need to recover data in the RAID volume that was not backed up.
The drives do not show in the SmartArray, but do show when connected to a LSI SATA/SAS HBA, still with firmware HPD3, but capacity 0. hydata free seagate SAS tool (ran it to get information, I know it will no fix them) says they are offline, and do not spin. S/N of the drive still shows, nothing else.
Q1: In your experience, are the drives recoverable?
Q2: What will be the best course of action?
Thanks for the advice.
November 18th, 2013, 22:29
BlackST wrote:mmoran69 wrote:Per HPs recommendation after doing a SmartArray firmware upgrade, I did a firmware upgrade to a RAID set containing 5 HP EG0900FBLSK drives (ST9900805SS) with firmware HPD3. HP says to upgrade them to HPD7, but the update tool said it did not apply to them, so I did from HPD3 to HPD4, that said it applies, but as luck will have it, two of those drives went dead after de upgrade. Now I need to recover data in the RAID volume that was not backed up.
The drives do not show in the SmartArray, but do show when connected to a LSI SATA/SAS HBA, still with firmware HPD3, but capacity 0. hydata free seagate SAS tool (ran it to get information, I know it will no fix them) says they are offline, and do not spin. S/N of the drive still shows, nothing else.
Q1: In your experience, are the drives recoverable?
Q2: What will be the best course of action?
Thanks for the advice.
A drive ALL ALONE does spin at power up hosted on a hba or not ? If not, the fun starts here...
November 18th, 2013, 22:34
November 18th, 2013, 23:00
mmoran69 wrote:Actually with any drive of the same type (HP SAS), they will start spinning when the SmartArray controller is initialized. Same when connected to the LSI controller.
November 19th, 2013, 1:58
November 19th, 2013, 3:41
mmoran69 wrote:Thanks all for the encouraging news...
Talked with a data recovery company and they want me to ship all drives to extract the data. I would prefer to send the bad drives for repair (including a drive in working condition if need for the firmware) assuming that they'll return with the data intact, and I'll be able to insert them bank in the array and that it will be online as if nothing happened.![]()
Is it possible? If so, can you recommend anyone in the U.S. (south-east) to do it ?
November 19th, 2013, 3:46
BlackST wrote:the request for the complete set is correct , they want to fix the bricked drives then rebuild the array SAFELY, I would do the same.
And as it is a RAID stripe it is a bad idea to try DIY solutions (your data, your choice anyway) especially on SS. Consider also that if the fw upgrade went wrong , there was something going wrong under. So said, you can estimate if the time to spend , server downtime and possibility of data loss are worth. Side note, as I see everyday various degrees of disastered data case with DIY intervention, consider that usually the same people who encourage DIY solutions copy/pasted from the internet do not run a data recovery REGULAR OFFICIAL business and when things go bad they simply go away whistling saying "Well I did my best, it's your problem" - success has many fathers, failure is orphan by default. Good luck whatever you decide
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