Gigabyte SiS 964, SiS 964 S-ATA User Manual

SiS 964 S-ATA User’s Manual
Quick User’s Guide
Version 0.1
Serial ATA RAID Quick User’s Guide
CONTENTS
Introduction.............................................................................................1
Step 0. What is RAID..............................................................................3
KNOW HOW......................................................................................3
PERFORMANCE HINTS AND RECOMMEND SETTING............3
Step 1. Hardware Setup..........................................................................5
HARD DRIVES SETUP......................................................................5
Step 2. Installing Software Drivers.........................................................8
WINDOWS 2000/XP...........................................................................8
NEW WINDOWS 2000/XP INSTALLATION.............................................. 8
EXISTING WINDOWS 2000/XP INSTALLATION ..................................... 9
CONFIRMING WINDOWS 2000/XP DRIVER INSTALLATION................ 9
Step 3. BIOS Utility Operation (for RAID only)..................................10
CREATING AN ARRAY FOR PERFORMANCE..........................11
CREATING A MIRROR ARRAY...................................................13
CREATING A JBOD ARRAY.........................................................16
CREATING A STRIPE-MIRROR ARRAY....................................18
Step 4. SIS 964 RAID Utility Operation...............................................22
VIEWING THE “CREATE RAID”.................................................24
CREATE A RAID SET.....................................................................26
VIEWING THE RAIDTYPE MEANING........................................33
DELETE A RAID SET.....................................................................35
RAID RECOVERY OPERATION...................................................38
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Introduction
The 964 S-ATA controller is a hybrid solution that combines two independent SATA ports and one Ultra ATA port for support of up to two Serial ATA (Serial ATA RAID) and two Ultra ATA (Ultra ATA RAID) drives. Specifications are as follows:
Serial ATA Interface
Serial ATA (SATA) is the latest generation of the ATA interface. SATA hard drives deliver blistering transfer speeds of up to 150MB/sec. Serial ATA uses long, thin cables, making it easier to connect your drive and improving the airflow inside your PC.
Supports 150 MB/s transfers with CRC error checking Large LBA support for drives over 137 GB Data handling optimizations including tagged command queuing, elevator seek
and packet chain command
Ultra ATA Interface
Standard ATA/IDE interface Supports Ultra ATA/133, Ultra ATA/100, and Ultra ATA/66 drives Supports CRC error checking for Ultra ATA drives Separate timing control for two devices attached to one ATA channel
Serial/Ultra ATA RAID Interfaces The Serial/Ultra ATA RAID is designed to provide a cost-effective, high
performance RAID solution that adds performance and/or reliability to PC desktops and/or servers using Serial ATA/150, Ultra ATA/133, Ultra ATA/100, Ultra ATA/66 hard disks.
Serial/Ultra ATA RAID function supports striping (RAID 0), mirroring (RAID
1), striping + mirroring (RAID 0+1) and span (JBOD). Please note that the
function supports hard disk drives only.
With striping, identical drives can read and write data in parallel to increase performance. Mirroring increases read performance through load balancing and elevator sorting while creating a complete backup of your files. Span would increase the logic hard disk space.
Serial/Ultra ATA RAID striped arrays can double the sustained data transfer rate of Serial ATA/150 and Ultra ATA/133 drives. Serial/Ultra ATA RAID fully supports Serial ATA/150 and Ultra ATA/133 specification of up to 150MB/sec per drive, depending on individual drive specifications.
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The technology also offers fault tolerant, data redundancy for entry-level network file servers or simply for desktop PC users wanting to continually protect valuable data on their PC. The Serial/Ultra ATA RAID offers RAID 1 mirroring (for two drives) to protect data. Should a drive that is part of a mirrored array fail, Serial/Ultra ATA RAID technology uses the mirrored drive (which contains identical data) to assume all data handling. When a new replacement drive is later installed, Serial/Ultra ATA RAID rebuilds data to the new drive from the mirrored drive to restore fault tolerance.
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Step 0. What is RAID
Know How
This section will give you an overview about the RAID system and introduce the basic background and glossary which you need to know before using “SiS 964 RAID Controller Application”.
1. RAID: (Redundant Array of Independent Disk Drives) use jointly several hard drives to increase data transfer rates and data security. It depends on the number of drives present and RAID function you select to fulfill the security or performance purposes or both.
2. RAID 0: Also known as “Stripping”. All of the data are distributed evenly to all of the existing drives. You gain benefits on performance because the data transfer rate is multiplied by the number of drives. However, RAID 0 has high risks of data security. All of the stored data will be lost if even any one drive in the RAID set crashes.
3. RAID 1: Also known as “Mirroring”. Two hard drives are required. The goal of RAID 0 is to ensure data security. Data is written to two or more drives synchronously. That is, 100% duplication of data from one drive to another.
4. RAID 0+1: Also known as “StripeMirror”. At least four hard drivers are required. RAID 0+1 is a combination of RAID 0 and RAID 1. Data is striped into two drives then mirrored. It provides high performance and high data protection. This is a costly solution as RAID 1 because the two mirrored drives represent an expensive insurance
5. JBOD: (Just a Bunch of Drives). Also known as “Spanning”. Two or more hard drives are required. Several hard disk types configured as a single hard disk. The hard drives are simply hooked up in series. This expands the capacity of your drive and results in a useable total capacity. However, JBOD will not increase any performance or data security.
Performance hints and recommend setting
For the best performance and reliability, please read the following suggestions.
1. In serial ATA port, use Native serial ATA drives. Parallel ATA to Serial ATA converter board is NOT suggested.
2. In parallel ATA port, use ATA 66/100/133 hard drives
3. Use the same model hard drives.
4. If you have only two serial ATA drives, the auto-configure function will assign each on a different channel as a master drive. Using only two
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parallel ATA drives to create a RAID array is NOT suggested. It might decrease performance.
5. Always use 80-conductor cables.
6. We strongly recommend you should use “DMA” transfer mode.
7. The recommended block size is 64K when creating RAID 0 and RAID 0+1.
8. The best selecting sequence of creating RAID 0+1 is Primary Master(1) -> Secondary Master(3) -> Primary Slave(2) -> Secondary Slave(4).
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Step 1. Hardware Setup
Hard Drives setup
The 964 controller supports up to two Serial ATA hard drives and two Parallel ATA hard drives.
Any combination to 2, 3 or 4 Hard disk would combine to a strip system.
HDD Population Rules for RAID 0 (Striping)
Ultra ATA (Master)
Ultra ATA (Slave) Serial ATA (Master 1) Serial ATA (Master 2)
1 V V X X 2 V X V X 3 V X X V 4 X V V X 5 X V X V 6 X X V V 7 V V V X 8 V V X V 9 V X V V
10
X V V V
11
V V V V
V = Install; X = Uninstall
NOTE: Storage Capacity: the number of hard drives times the capacity of
the smallest drive in the disk array
Working Speed: the speed of the lowest drive in the disk array
Any of 2 Hard Disk would make a mirror system.
HDD Population Rules for RAID 1 (Mirroring)
Ultra ATA (Master)
Ultra ATA (Slave) Serial ATA (Master 1) Serial ATA (Master 2)
1 V V X X
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2 V X V X 3 V X X V 4 X V V X 5 X V X V 6 X X V V
V = Install; X = Uninstall
NOTE: Storage Capacity: the capacity of the smallest drive in the disk array
Working Speed: the speed of the lowest drive in the disk array
4 Hard disk would set up a RAID 0 + 1
HDD Population Rules for RAID 0+1 (Striping + Mirroring)
Ultra ATA (Master)
Ultra ATA (Slave) Serial ATA (Master 1) Serial ATA (Master 2)
1 V V V V
V = Install; X = Uninstall
NOTE: Storage Capacity: the capacity of the smallest drive in the disk array
Working Speed: the speed of the lowest drive in the disk array
Any combination to 2, 3 or 4 Hard disk would combine to a JBOD system.
HDD Population Rules for JBOD (Spanning)
Ultra ATA (Master)
Ultra ATA (Slave) Serial ATA (Master 1) Serial ATA (Master 2)
1 V V X X 2 V X V X 3 V X X V 4 X V V X 5 X V X V 6 X X V V 7 V V V X 8 V V X V 9 V X V V
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10
X V V V
11
V V V V
V = Install; X = Uninstall
NOTE: Storage Capacity: the number of hard drives times the capacity of
the smallest drive in the disk array
Working Speed: the speed of the lowest drive in the disk array
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Step 2. Installing Software Drivers
SiS provides Mini IDE driver for SiS964 SATA function and RAID driver for SiS964 SATA with RAID function.
SiS Mini IDE driver for Windows 2000/XP SiS RAID driver for Windows 2000/XP
1. For SATA function, both of Mini IDE driver and RAID driver support SATA.
2. For RAID function, SiS964 support RAID0, RAID, RAID0+1 and JBOD by software RAID driver only.
For special occasions, users can refer to the following section with details on the SiS964 driver installation when used with various operating systems.
Windows 2000/XP
New Windows 2000/XP Installation
The following details the installation of the drivers while installing Windows 2000/XP.
1. Start the installation:
Boot from the CD-ROM. Press F6 when the message “Press F6
key if you need to install third party SCSI or RAID driver” appears.
2. When the Windows 2000/XP Setup window is generated, press S
key to specify an Additional Device(s).
3. Insert the driver diskette into drive A: and press Enter.
4. Choose one of the following items:
WinXP SiS Raid/IDE Controller “ (for RAID), WinXP SiS Mini IDE Controller” (for SATA), Win2000 SiS Raid/IDE Controller” (for RAID), Win2000 SiS Mini IDE Controller” (for SATA) that appears on
screen, and then press the Enter key.
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5. Press Enter to continue with installation or if you need to specify
any additional devices to be installed, do so at this time. Once all devices are specified, Press Enter to continue with installation.
6. From the Windows 2000/XP Setup screen, press the Enter key.
Setup will now load all device files and then continue the Windows 2000/XP installation.
7. Please install the driver package again (ex. SiS RAID driver v1.00)
while the operation system has been setup.
Remark:
If you would like to install windows to any RAID set, you should create RAID from BIOS utility first and then follow the steps above.
Existing Windows 2000/XP Installation
1. Install the driver by execute SiS driver setup utility.
2. The drivers and WinXP RAID utility will be automatically installed.
Confirming Windows 2000/XP Driver Installation
1. From Windows 2000/XP, open the Control Panel from “My
Computer” followed by the System icon.
2. Choose the “Hardware” tab, then click the “Device Manager” tab.
3. Click the “+” in front of “SCSI and RAID Controllers” hardware type.
The driver “WinXP SiS964 Raid Controller” (for RAID) or Win2000/XP SiS964 IDE Controller” (for SATA) should appear.
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Step 3. BIOS Utility Operation (for RAID only)
Note: For the best performance and reliability, please read “Performance
Hints and Recommend Setting” section in Step 0
1. Boot your system. If this is the first time you have booted with the SIS 964 and the drives installed, the onboard BIOS will display the following screen.
2. Press <Ctrl-S> keys to display the SIS964 Utility Main Menu.
3. Press “R” to display the RAID setup menu below. This is the fastest and easiest method to creating your first array.
Silicon Integrated Systems Corp. RAID Card BIOS Setting Utility
1.00.0.XX (c) 2003-2006 Silicon Integrated Systems Corp. All Rights Reserved.
Press <Ctrl><S> to run BIOS Setting Utility
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Creating an Array for Performance
NOTE: SIS 964 enables users to create striped arrays with 1, 2, 3, or 4
drives.
To create an array for best performance, follow these steps:
1. Press “A” to create array .
2. Press <2> and <Enter> to select Stripe .
3. Press <1><7> keys and <Enter> to select Block Size. ( Default : 32K )
4. Press <1><2> keys and <Enter> to select Transfer Mode. ( Default : DMA )
5. Use<↑> <↓> to select disk , and press <Enter> to select disk, <Q> to exit.
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