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Hi all I have an DL360 GEN 8 Machine. And I need to install ubuntu server on it. However. Accourding to HP, THE Dyanamic Smart Array System is not support. Since I would love to make use of array.. Given that I have 4 Terra bytes of disk .. Which I need to configure Raid 1.

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Is there any possible way to achive this Raid without HP Dynamic Array system. ???

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Below is the message from HP. Which says that I need to disable Smart array before I can be able to run Ubuntu

HP Dynamic Smart Array System is certified with Dynamic Smart Array disabled. To disable Dynamic Smart Array:

  • Press F9 to boot into RBSU

  • Navigate to System Options > HP Dynamic Smart Array B320i and select disable

  • Go to System options > SATA Controller options and select Legacy SATA or AHCI

  • Reboot the machine and now you will be able to install the OS

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  • I am looking for a way to use software raid instead of HP hardware Raid! This is the point I am making!
    – John Kings
    Aug 21, 2015 at 13:15
  • Okay. What's the problem? If you disable the hardware RAID, you then have to use software RAID. You'd configure that in Ubuntu.
    – ewwhite
    Aug 21, 2015 at 13:17

1 Answer 1

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Don't use Ubuntu!!

Use a Linux distribution that's actually supported for this hardware!

The HP Dynamic Smart Array B110i/B120i/B320i controller driver for Ubuntu 12.04 is not available. The Ubuntu 12.04 certification was completed in SATA mode.

See:

Poor SQL performance on HP ProLiant ML310e Gen8 v2 with raid10

HP ProLiant DL380e Gen8 server - SPP use

Install Oracle Linux 6.4 on HP ProLiant DL380e Gen8 server

Installing Ubuntu 12.04 on HP Proliant DL380e with 1TB SAS Drive

Oracle Enterprise Linux installation can't see local disks on HP ProLiant DL360e Gen8

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    He doesn't say which version of Ubuntu he's using, but based on this, both LTS 14.04 and LTS 12.04 are supported on the DL360 Gen8's.
    – GregL
    Aug 21, 2015 at 13:06
  • @GregL The Ubuntu certification was completed without using the RAID controller. There's no array driver for the RAID controller for Ubuntu. So technically, the system can run Ubuntu if you disable all hardware RAID functionality. I'd deem that as "unsupported" and definitely not ideal.
    – ewwhite
    Aug 21, 2015 at 13:10
  • Right.. It does seem a little strange that one would buy a shiny new server and then throw out the RAID controller. That said, if he's running LTS 14.04 then he's fine. Presumably he's now however, or else he wouldn't be in this predicament. Thanks for clarifying.
    – GregL
    Aug 21, 2015 at 13:14
  • @GegL Thanks for the insite. So crazy, one invest losts of money on a new system. with hard disk and ram. And have to learn the hard way, that the system will not do what its is meant to do. And reading a thread that says that a desktop may run faster than this most expensive server. does not make me feel happy either. I am thinking of moving to Red Hat Linux which is natively supported. And just pray that no issues comes up again
    – John Kings
    Aug 21, 2015 at 14:10
  • It's an Ubuntu problem. I don't think Ubuntu places a priority on hardware support, whereas some of the other commercial distributions (RHEL, SuSE) do have an emphasis on working with hardware vendors for support. CentOS works just fine on this hardware, too.
    – ewwhite
    Aug 21, 2015 at 14:17

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