How do I expand my HP P2000 Vdisk?
How do I expand my HP P2000 Vdisk?
Re: HP P2000 G3 MSA -Expand volume
- In the Configuration View panel, right-click a standard volume and select Tools > Expand Volume.
- In the main panel, specify the amount of free space to add to the volume.
- Click Expand Volume. If the specified value exceeds the amount of free space in the vdisk, a dialog lets.
How do you rebuild a degraded Vdisk in a HP MSA P2000?
- In the HP MSA Storage Management Utility, Right click on the affected vdisk and select Configuration > Manage Dedicated Spares.
- Your disk should appear in the list of available drives with a state of AVAIL.
- The disk will be re-joined to the array.
- The array will begin the Reconstruction process automatically.
How do I connect to MSA 2050?
To connect the MSA 2050 array to a remote management host, connect an RJ-45 Ethernet cable from theEthernet network management port on each MSA 2050 controller to a switch that users management host canaccess (Preferably on the same subnet).
How do I connect to MSA 1040 server?
Connecting remote management hosts
- Connect a RJ-45 ethernet cable to the network management port on each MSA 1040 controller.
- Connect the other end of each ethernet cable to a network that the management host can access (preferably on the same subnet).
How do I set up a SAN network?
Configuring SAN storage
- Configure the SAN to create the LUNs to be used by queue managers, and allow access from the appliance host bus adapters.
- Define a volume for each LUN, using the LUID to identify it.
- Initialize the file system for the volume.
How do I reset my HP MSA 2040 password?
Connect to the MSA CLI interface over the USB serial port using putty, minicom or your preferred serial terminal emulator (see HPE documentation). Hit enter to display to the MSA welcome banner and login prompt. Proceed to login with username restoredefaults and the serial number of the MSA module as the password.
What is the difference between SAN and NAS?
NAS is a single storage device that serves files over Ethernet and is relatively inexpensive and easy to set up, while a SAN is a tightly coupled network of multiple devices that is more expensive and complex to set up and manage.