Hp Smart Array B110i Linux Driver

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Enabling and configuring the controller 5 Enabling and configuring the controller Enabling the controller and setting the boot order The HP Smart Array B110i SATA RAID Controller is not enabled by default and must be enabled in RBSU. Installing Apache2 Php5 Mysql 5 And Phpmyadmin On Windows.

Hello, I'm trying to install CentOS 6.0 64bit on a HP ProLiant ML110 G7 with a HP Smart Array B110i SATA RAID Controller. One logical drive (RAID 1+0) on the RAID Controller is already build.

CentOS Installation can't find the logical Drive, but it shows me the zwo physical drives (sda+sdb). After searching the web, I found following hints: OK. Downloaded the file 'hpahcisr-1.2.6-7.rhel5.x86_64.dd.gz' and do the dd from another Linux workstation. # dd if=hpahcisr-1.2.6-7.rhel5.x86_64.dd.gz of=/dev/sdb (4Gig USB Stick) starting the CentOS 6.0 64 bit installation from the DVD boot: linux dd After loading the kernel, the installer is asking whether I have driverdisk and asked to indicate which drive (sdc) /dev/sdc is my 4Gig USB Stick. My problem is now, the step 'Driver Disk' is failed: Failed to mount driver disk. Hp Color Laserjet 5/5m Driver. Any hints are very, very welcome. Thanks in advance Richard.

On 10/24/11 3:04 AM, Richard Gliebe wrote: I'm trying to install CentOS 6.0 64bit on a HP ProLiant ML110 G7 with a HP Smart Array B110i SATA RAID Controller. One logical drive (RAID 1+0) on the RAID Controller is already build.

CentOS Installation can't find the logical Drive, but it shows me the zwo physical drives (sda+sdb). After searching the web, I found following hints:wild guess says, that isn't really a raid controller, that its a fake-raid, such as an Intel Matrix, where the 'raid' is done purely in the BIOS and the Windows Driver. You're better off reconfiguring that for JBOD in the BIOS, and letting Linux see the physical disks (which it does, anywayas), and implementing mdraid mirroring in Linux natively.

Hp Smart Array B110i Linux Driver

On 10/24/11 12:14 PM John R Pierce wrote: wild guess says, that isn't really a raid controller, that its a fake-raid, such as an Intel Matrix, where the 'raid' is done purely in the BIOS and the Windows Driver. Wild austrian guys says: there is always a way to heaven;-) you're better off reconfiguring that for JBOD in the BIOS, and letting Linux see the physical disks (which it does, anywayas), and implementing mdraid mirroring in Linux natively.I'm not really a friend about software mirroring. Download Game Touchscreen Di Hp Samsung Champ here. On 10/24/11 3:42 AM, Richard Gliebe wrote: you're better off reconfiguring that for JBOD in the BIOS, and letting Linux see the physical disks (which it does, anywayas), and implementing mdraid mirroring in Linux natively.I'm not really a friend about software mirroring.well, your controller doesn't support anything else if its what I think it is.