Hi
I'm still trying to solve my drive numbering problems with my LSI cards. They are 9211-8is flashed with the P20 IT firmware to drop the raid functions away and make them dumb HBAs for the OS to manage.
Currently, the way the drives are presented in the booted OS (doesn't matter if Windows or Linux) is different to the boot order and physical slot e.g.
Physical Slot 1 = Port 0
Physical Slot 2 = Port 1
etc.
Physical Slot 8 = Port 7
The above is what I see when I see the boot screen before the OS has loaded. The physical slots match the port numbers that they are plugged into.
Now when I load the OS, the order can be completly different e.g.
Physical Slot 1 = LSI Port 0 = sdc
Physical Slot 2 = LSI Port 1 = sda
etc.
Its important to note that I am currently using SATA break out cables without the sideband cable.
If I was to replace my current chassis with a fully compliant SES2 backplane chassis and run SFF-8087 cables with sideband (e.g. 36 pins) would that report the drive slot number back to the card so that when linux loads I would get the true setup
Physical Slot 1 = LSI Port 0 = sda
Physical Slot 2 = LSI Port 1 = sdb
etc.?
If not, is there anyway to get the LSI to report to the OS the correct drive number?
Thanks for any help.
Chris
I'm still trying to solve my drive numbering problems with my LSI cards. They are 9211-8is flashed with the P20 IT firmware to drop the raid functions away and make them dumb HBAs for the OS to manage.
Currently, the way the drives are presented in the booted OS (doesn't matter if Windows or Linux) is different to the boot order and physical slot e.g.
Physical Slot 1 = Port 0
Physical Slot 2 = Port 1
etc.
Physical Slot 8 = Port 7
The above is what I see when I see the boot screen before the OS has loaded. The physical slots match the port numbers that they are plugged into.
Now when I load the OS, the order can be completly different e.g.
Physical Slot 1 = LSI Port 0 = sdc
Physical Slot 2 = LSI Port 1 = sda
etc.
Its important to note that I am currently using SATA break out cables without the sideband cable.
If I was to replace my current chassis with a fully compliant SES2 backplane chassis and run SFF-8087 cables with sideband (e.g. 36 pins) would that report the drive slot number back to the card so that when linux loads I would get the true setup
Physical Slot 1 = LSI Port 0 = sda
Physical Slot 2 = LSI Port 1 = sdb
etc.?
If not, is there anyway to get the LSI to report to the OS the correct drive number?
Thanks for any help.
Chris