Go to the HP.com website and download the SmartStart CD for your system. This has everything you need to configure the raid. The raid on these machines is a 'hardware' raid running through a proprietary raid card. It is 'extremely' robust. However, you must use the HP SmartStart disk (or perhaps there is something else from hp/compaq?) to configure your raid. The raid card in that machine most likely has a battery on it to allow protected write caching. Very speedy. The battery is used in case of power outage... the data still gets written.
As for the OS selection, don't worry about it, just create the raid and CentOS will find it and install.
John Hinton
On 2/17/2010 5:50 PM, Rainer Duffner wrote:
Am 17.02.2010 um 23:26 schrieb Niki Kovacs:
Fernando Gleiser a écrit :
And yes, first build the array from within the smatarray utility, then you can install centos. I've installed centos, rhel and fedora on 100s of MLs and DLs without any problems
I'm sorry but I can't seem to find that "Smart Array" utility. The machine I have was shipped "as is", with some loose disks, no apparent system on it, and it came without any CD or handbook. And the HP site isn't exactly helpful for that. Officially this hardware supports RHEL3 and RHEL4, and that's it. Looks like there's no way to install CentOS5 on it (correct me if I'm wrong).
Plus, I admit I'm lost in the sheer myriad of options in the various boot configuration tools (bios, scsi configurator). So far I haven't managed to have any disk recognized, and what puzzles me is that there isn't the slightest mention of a disk in the bios.
Niki
That's because it's probably handled by the controller.
Can you make a video of it booting and upload it to youtube? Then, we can look at it and tell you the timecode where you have to press what key.
cheers, Rainer _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos