mfiutil
—
Utility for managing LSI MegaRAID SAS controllers
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
show adapter |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
show battery |
mfiutil |
[-d ] [-e ]
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
show config |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
show drives |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
show events [-c
class] [-l
locale] [-n
count] [-v ]
[start [stop]] |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
show firmware |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
show foreign [volume] |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
show logstate |
mfiutil |
[-d ] [-e ]
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
show patrol |
mfiutil |
[-d ] [-e ]
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
show progress |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
show volumes |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
fail drive |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
good drive |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
rebuild drive |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
syspd drive |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
drive progress drive |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
drive clear drive {start |
stop} |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
start rebuild drive |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
abort rebuild drive |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
locate drive {on | off} |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
cache volume
[setting [value] [...]] |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
name volume
name |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
volume progress volume |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
clear |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
create type
[-v ] [-s
stripe_size]
drive[,drive[,...]]
[drive[,drive[,...]]] |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
delete volume |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
add drive
[volume] |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
remove drive |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
start patrol |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
stop patrol |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
patrol command
[interval [start]] |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
foreign scan |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
foreign clear [config] |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
foreign diag [config] |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
foreign preview
[config] |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
foreign import [config] |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
flash file |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
start learn |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
bbu setting
value |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
ctrlprop rebuild [rate] |
mfiutil |
[-t drv_type]
[-u unit]
ctrlprop alarm [on|off] |
The mfiutil
utility can be used to display or modify
various parameters on LSI MegaRAID SAS RAID controllers. Each invocation of
mfiutil
consists of zero or more global options
followed by a command. Commands may support additional optional or required
arguments after the command.
Currently two global options are supported:
-t
drv_type
- (FreeBSD only) drv_type specifies the type of driver
to work with; it takes either
mfi
or
mrsas
. The default type is
mrsas
if this tool was invoked as
mrsasutil
, otherwise mfi
.
(Solaris only) drv_type specifies the
type of driver to work with. The default type is
mr_sas
.
-u
unit
- unit specifies the unit of the controller to work
with. If no unit is specified, then unit 0 is used.
Various commands accept either or both of the two options:
-d
- Print numeric device IDs as drive identifier. This is the default. Useful
in combination with
-e
to print both, numeric
device IDs and enclosure:slot information.
-e
- Print drive identifiers in enclosure:slot form. See next paragraph on
format details in context of input rather than output.
Drives may be specified in two forms. First, a drive may be
identified by its device ID. The device ID for configured drives can be
found in show config
. Second, a drive may be
identified by its location as
[Exx:]S
yy
where xx is the enclosure and yy
is the slot for each drive as displayed in show
drives
.
A volume may be identified by its target ID. Alternatively, when
working with mfi(4) driver, the volume may also be
specified by the corresponding mfidX device name, such as
mfid0.
The mfiutil
utility supports several
different groups of commands. The first group of commands provide
information about the controller, the volumes it manages, and the drives it
controls. The second group of commands are used to manage the physical
drives attached to the controller. The third group of commands are used to
manage the logical volumes managed by the controller. The fourth group of
commands are used to manage the drive configuration for the controller. The
fifth group of commands are used to manage controller-wide operations.
The informational commands include:
version
- Displays the version of
mfiutil
.
show
adapter
- Displays information about the RAID controller such as the model
number.
show
battery
- Displays information about the battery from the battery backup unit.
show
config
- Displays the volume and drive configuration for the controller. Each array
is listed along with the physical drives the array is built from. Each
volume is listed along with the arrays that the volume spans. If any hot
spare drives are configured, then they are listed as well.
show
drives
- Lists all of the physical drives attached to the controller.
show
events
[-c
class]
[-l
locale]
[-n
count]
[-v
] [start
[stop]]
- Display entries from the controller's event log. The controller maintains
a circular buffer of events. Each event is tagged with a class and locale.
The class parameter limits the output to
entries at the specified class or higher. The default class is
“warn”. The available classes from lowest priority to
highest are:
debug
- Debug messages.
progress
- Periodic progress updates for long-running operations such as
background initializations, array rebuilds, or patrol reads.
info
- Informational messages such as drive insertions and volume
creations.
warn
- Indicates that some component may be close to failing.
crit
- A component has failed, but no data is lost. For example, a volume
becoming degraded due to a drive failure.
fatal
- A component has failed resulting in data loss.
dead
- The controller itself has died.
The locale parameter limits the output
to entries for the specified part of the controller. The default locale
is “all”. The available locales are
“volume”, “drive”,
“enclosure”, “battery”, “sas”,
“controller”, “config”,
“cluster”, and “all”.
The count parameter is a debugging aid
that specifies the number of events to fetch from the controller for
each low-level request. The default is 15 events.
By default, matching event log entries from the previous
shutdown up to the present are displayed. This range can be adjusted via
the start and stop
parameters. Each of these parameters can either be specified as a log
entry number or as one of the following aliases:
newest
- The newest entry in the event log.
oldest
- The oldest entry in the event log.
clear
- The first entry since the event log was cleared.
shutdown
- The entry in the event log corresponding to the last time the
controller was cleanly shut down.
boot
- The entry in the event log corresponding to the most recent boot.
show
firmware
- Lists all of the firmware images present on the controller.
show
foreign
- Displays detected foreign configurations on disks for importation or
removal.
show
logstate
- Display the various sequence numbers associated with the event log.
show
patrol
- Display the status of the controller's patrol read operation.
show
progress
- Report the current progress and estimated completion time for active
operations on all volumes and drives.
show
volumes
- Lists all of the logical volumes managed by the controller.
The physical drive management commands include:
fail
drive
- Mark drive as failed. Drive
must be an online drive that is part of an array.
good
drive
- Mark drive as an unconfigured good drive.
Drive must not be part of an existing array.
rebuild
drive
- Mark a failed drive that is still part of an array
as a good drive suitable for a rebuild. The firmware should kick off an
array rebuild on its own if a failed drive is marked as a rebuild
drive.
syspd
drive
- Present the drive to the host operating system as a disk SYSPD block
device in the format /dev/mfisyspdX. Clear this flag with
good
drive
drive
progress
drive
- Report the current progress and estimated completion time of drive
operations such as rebuilds or patrol reads.
drive
clear
drive {start | stop}
- Start or stop the writing of all 0x00 characters to a drive.
start
rebuild
drive
- Manually start a rebuild on drive.
abort
rebuild
drive
- Abort an in-progress rebuild operation on drive. It
can be resumed with the
start rebuild
command.
locate
drive {on | off}
- Change the state of the external LED associated with
drive.
The logical volume management commands include:
cache
volume [setting
[value] [...]]
- If no setting arguments are supplied, then the
current cache policy for volume is displayed;
otherwise, the cache policy for volume is modified.
One or more setting arguments may be given. Some
settings take an additional value argument as noted
below. The valid settings are:
enable
- Enable caching for both read and write I/O operations.
disable
- Disable caching for both read and write I/O operations.
reads
- Enable caching only for read I/O operations.
writes
- Enable caching only for write I/O operations.
write-back
- Use write-back policy for cached writes.
write-through
- Use write-through policy for cached writes.
read-ahead
value
- Set the read ahead policy for cached reads. The
value argument can be set to either
“none”, “adaptive”, or
“always”.
bad-bbu-write-cache
value
- Control the behavior of I/O write caching if the battery is dead or
missing. The value argument can be set to either
“disable” or “enable”. In general this
setting should be left disabled to avoid data loss when the system
loses power.
write-cache
value
- Control the write caches on the physical drives backing
volume. The value argument
can be set to either “disable”, “enable”,
or “default”.
In general this setting should be left disabled to avoid
data loss when the physical drives lose power. The battery backup of
the RAID controller does not save data in the write caches of the
physical drives.
name
volume name
- Sets the name of volume to
name.
volume
progress
volume
- Report the current progress and estimated completion time of volume
operations such as consistency checks and initializations.
The configuration commands include:
clear
- Delete the entire configuration including all volumes, arrays, and
spares.
create
type [-v
]
[-s
stripe_size]
drive[,drive[,...]]
[drive[,drive[,...]]]
- Create a new volume. The type specifies the type of
volume to create. Currently supported types include:
jbod
- Creates a RAID0 volume for each drive specified. Each drive must be
specified as a separate argument.
raid0
- Creates one RAID0 volume spanning the drives listed in the single
drive list.
raid1
- Creates one RAID1 volume spanning the drives listed in the single
drive list.
raid5
- Creates one RAID5 volume spanning the drives listed in the single
drive list.
raid6
- Creates one RAID6 volume spanning the drives listed in the single
drive list.
raid10
- Creates one RAID10 volume spanning multiple RAID1 arrays. The drives
for each RAID1 array are specified as a single drive list.
raid50
- Creates one RAID50 volume spanning multiple RAID5 arrays. The drives
for each RAID5 array are specified as a single drive list.
raid60
- Creates one RAID60 volume spanning multiple RAID6 arrays. The drives
for each RAID6 array are specified as a single drive list.
concat
- Creates a single volume by concatenating all of the drives in the
single drive list.
Note: Not all volume types are supported by
all controllers.
If the -v
flag is specified after
type, then more verbose output will be enabled.
Currently this just provides notification as drives are added to arrays
and arrays to volumes when building the configuration.
The -s
stripe_size parameter allows the stripe size of
the array to be set. By default a stripe size of 64K is used. Valid
values are 512 through 1M, though the MFI firmware may reject some
values.
delete
volume
- Delete the volume volume.
add
drive [volume]
- Mark drive as a hot spare.
Drive must be in the unconfigured good state. If
volume is specified, then the hot spare will be
dedicated to arrays backing that volume. Otherwise,
drive will be used as a global hot spare backing all
arrays for this controller. Note that drive must be
as large as the smallest drive in all of the arrays it is going to
back.
remove
drive
- Remove the hot spare drive from service. It will be
placed in the unconfigured good state.
The controller management commands include:
patrol
command [interval
[start]]
- Set the patrol read operation mode. The command
argument can be one of the following values:
disable
- Disable patrol reads.
auto
- Enable periodic patrol reads initiated by the firmware. The optional
interval argument specifies the interval in
seconds between patrol reads. If patrol reads should be run
continuously, then interval should consist of
the word “continuously”. The optional
start argument specifies a non-negative,
relative start time for the next patrol read. If an interval or start
time is not specified, then the existing setting will be used.
manual
- Enable manual patrol reads that are only initiated by the user.
start
patrol
- Start a patrol read operation.
stop
patrol
- Stop a currently running patrol read operation.
foreign
scan
- Scan for foreign configurations and display the number found. The
config argument for the commands below takes the
form of a number from 0 to the total configurations found.
foreign
clear
[config]
- Clear the specified foreign config or all if no
config argument is provided.
foreign
diag
[config]
- Display a diagnostic display of the specified foreign
config or all if no config
argument is provided.
foreign
preview
[config]
- Preview the specified foreign config after import or
all if no config argument is provided.
foreign
import
[config]
- Import the specified foreign config or all if no
config argument is provided.
flash
file
- Updates the flash on the controller with the firmware stored in
file. A reboot is required for the new firmware to
take effect.
start
learn
- Start a battery relearn. Note that this seems to always result in the
battery being completely drained, regardless of the BBU mode. In
particular, the controller write cache will be disabled during the relearn
even if transparent learning mode is enabled.
bbu
setting value
- Update battery backup unit (BBU) properties related to battery relearning.
The following settings are configurable:
learn-delay
- Add a delay to the next scheduled battery relearn event. This setting
is given in hours and must lie in the range of 0 to 255.
autolearn-mode
- Enable or disable automatic periodic battery relearning. The setting
may be set to “enable” or “disable” to
respectively enable or disable the relearn cycle. Alternatively, a
mode of 0, 1 or 2 may be given. Mode 0 enables periodic relearning,
mode 1 disables it, and mode 2 disables it and logs a warning to the
event log when it detects that a battery relearn should be
performed.
bbu-mode
- Set the BBU's mode of operation. This setting is not supported by all
BBUs. Where it is supported, the possible values are the integers
between 1 and 5 inclusive. Modes 1, 2 and 3 enable a transparent learn
cycle, whereas modes 4 and 5 do not. The BBU's data retention time is
greater when transparent learning is not used.
ctrlprop
rebuild
[rate]
- With no arguments display the rate of rebuild (percentage)a for volumes.
With an integer argument (0-100), set that value as the new rebuild rate
for volumes.
ctrlprop
alarm
[on|off]
- With no arguments display the current alarm enable/disable status. With an
on
or an off
argument,
enable or disable alarm.
Configure the cache for volume mfid0 to cache only writes:
mfiutil
cache mfid0 writes
mfiutil
cache mfid0 write-back
Create a RAID5 array spanning the first four disks in the second
enclosure:
mfiutil
create raid5 e1:s0,e1:s1,e1:s2,e1:s4
Configure the first three disks on a controller as JBOD:
mfiutil
create jbod 0 1 2
Create a RAID10 volume that spans two arrays each of which
contains two disks from two different enclosures:
mfiutil
create raid10 e1:s0,e1:s1 e2:s0,e2:s1
Add drive with the device ID of 4 as a global hot spare:
mfiutil
add 4
Add the drive in slot 2 in the main chassis as a hot spare for
volume mfid0:
mfiutil
add s2 mfid0
Reconfigure a disk as a SYSPD block device with no RAID
mfiutil
syspd 0
Configure the adapter to run periodic patrol reads once a week
with the first patrol read starting in 5 minutes:
mfiutil
patrol auto 604800 300
Display the second detected foreign configuration:
mfiutil
show foreign 1
Set the current rebuild rate for volumes to 40%:
mfiutil
ctrlprop rebuild 40
The mfiutil
utility first appeared in
FreeBSD 8.0.