Michael Hennebry wrote:
On Wed, 18 Nov 2015, Birta Levente wrote:
I have a supermicro server, motherboard is with C612 chipset and beside
that with LSI3108 raid controller integrated.Two Intel SSD DC S3710 200GB. OS: Centos 7.1 up to date.
My problem is that the Intel SSD Data Center Tool (ISDCT) does not
recognize the SSD drives when they connected to the standard S-ATA ports on the motherboard, but through the LSI raid controller is working.
Does somebody know what could be the problem?
<snip>
Perhaps the tool looks for the string RHEL. My recollection is that when IBM PC's were fairly new, IBM used that trick with some of its software. To work around that, some open source developers used the string "not IBM".I think this was pre-internet, so google might not work.
If it's worth the effort, you might make another "CentOS" distribution,
but call it "not RHEL".
I'll add to that: it was only maybe three years ago that to get one of Dell's support tools (Dset, maybe) to run on one of our CentOS boxes was to edit /etc/redhat-release so that it had the RH info, instead of saying CentosOS release ... You might try that.
-- Michael hennebry@web.cs.ndsu.NoDak.edu "Sorry but your password must contain an uppercase letter, a number, a
haiku, a gang sign, a heiroglyph, and the blood of a virgin."
That's never going to work - where the hell do you find a virgin?
mark
On Wed, November 18, 2015 12:05 pm, m.roth@5-cent.us wrote:
Michael Hennebry wrote:
On Wed, 18 Nov 2015, Birta Levente wrote:
I have a supermicro server, motherboard is with C612 chipset and beside
that with LSI3108 raid controller integrated.Two Intel SSD DC S3710 200GB. OS: Centos 7.1 up to date.
My problem is that the Intel SSD Data Center Tool (ISDCT) does not
recognize the SSD drives when they connected to the standard S-ATA ports on the motherboard, but through the LSI raid controller is working.
Does somebody know what could be the problem?
<snip> > Perhaps the tool looks for the string RHEL. > My recollection is that when IBM PC's were fairly new, > IBM used that trick with some of its software. > To work around that, some open source developers used the string "not > IBM".I think this was pre-internet, so google might not work. > > If it's worth the effort, you might make another "CentOS" distribution, but call it "not RHEL". > I'll add to that: it was only maybe three years ago that to get one of Dell's support tools (Dset, maybe) to run on one of our CentOS boxes was to edit /etc/redhat-release so that it had the RH info, instead of saying CentosOS release ... You might try that.
-- Michael hennebry@web.cs.ndsu.NoDak.edu "Sorry but your password must contain an uppercase letter, a number, a
haiku, a gang sign, a heiroglyph, and the blood of a virgin."
That's never going to work - where the hell do you find a virgin?
Will extra virgin olive oil be fair replacement?
mark
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