Title. I scored a MD3600F storage array for free and know nothing about how to use it. The documentation says that the RAID controllers’ management ports use DHCP, but I can’t seem to get it to grab an IP. Also, the array’s enclosure LED flashes amber which I think is just the battery error? Not sure.

Any information would be helpful.

  • @[email protected]
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    101 day ago

    You probably need to reset the configuration on the controllers. I’m not familiar with that particular unit but older ones had serial ports that you could plug in a cable to and would either have a firmware prompt for commands or a menu system that you could interact with to do things like clear errors or reset the configuration.

  • @just_another_person
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    61 day ago

    Factory reset and start from scratch. No telling what state that controller or network settings are in. Docs online seem to still be available. The amber light could be network connectivity, as I’m sure that thing has a static IP already set.

  • @[email protected]
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    41 day ago

    What all they said about the reset, also Amber light on a Dell could be anything out of the ordinary. Only have one out of two power supplies plugged in? Messed up network config, bad fan, missing discs, bad disc. You name it, it’ll throw amber.

    If you really don’t want to reset it, throw it on a switch with another device and run Wireshark, You’ll see it’s a source IP while it’s looking for its long lost network. Course that’s still not likely to help you if you don’t have logins

  • @spookedintownsvilleOP
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    1 day ago

    After doing some more digging, I’ve found it’s apparently possible to use MD1200 controllers in place of the MD3600x FC controllers, which I have no intention of taking full advantage of the fiber part since I’m really only looking at doing a single host config.

    Now it’s more a matter of making sure it actually will work, and the getting the proper HBA/SAS controller (I don’t really know the difference)

    Edit: Links to what I believe I’m referring to

    • @[email protected]
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      1 day ago

      An HBA (host bus adapter) is a SAS controller (or rather, has a SAS controller chip on it). You mostly just want to make sure that your host (the server) has enough physical PCIe lanes to use the whole card, otherwise you’ll get bottlenecked there. You also want to check whether you’ve got 6G SAS or 12G SAS capability. If your drives only support 6 gig, for example, there’s zero point in buying a 12G SAS card, which is actually nice because 6G cards are a lot cheaper. You do want to make sure you actually need an HBA and not a RAID controller though - they’re easily confused. Not sure if I actually answered anything there but I write SAS firmware and use HBAs all the time, so feel free to ask me more and I’ll try to piece together a coherent answer.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 day ago

      Using the SAS cards instead of the FC controllers should be fine, but it will be a different beast. The MD3600 controllers are basically your RAID card and you use a SAS HBA to connect to it. The virtual disks are configured on the MD3600 and exposed as LUNs to the hosts over FC. If you put plain SAS controllers in the storage chassis instead, you are exposing all the bare drives to the host. That is how I would do it if I were in your shoes and then would just create ZFS arrays over those bare disks. If I were going to try and have multiple hosts using that storage then you would need to stick with the MD3600F.