Clear RAID card configuration!

Hello All-
Thank you in advance for your help. I have a Mac Pro (8 Core (2.93), 16GB ram) and I have a RAID card with 4x1TB hard drives that I am trying to put into a RAID 5. The computer fell asleep when building the RIAD off the OS X live disk and became completely unresponsive. I let it sit for a few days, and finally decided to start over.
I tried running the Delete RAID option on the RAID Utility, but after a few days of letting that sit, it does not seem to be doing anything.
I have pulled all the drives, removed their partition tables and formated, but when I put the drives back in, the RAID card still sees the RAID array.
Is there a way that I can reset the RAID card? Or am I missing a step?
Any ideas would help. Thank you very much!

For those of you who find this topic in search of a solution to the same problem, here is my latest achievement. I too played the waiting game of nearly 48 hours waiting for my 4 1TB drives to complete the transition from the factory single drive RAID setup to RAID 5 (just got this MacPro last week). I then couldn't cancel it and when booting to the OS disk as am able to in all my other server RAID configurations, the system pretty much locks up on disk retrieves.
My next thought was to delete the RAID set, that too sat for an hour and I finally decided to kill the power and start over. I booted to the DVD again but this time I had removed all 4 drives from the RAID card. No RAID configurations came up in RAID utility so I plugged one back in (hot swap, right? right.) and it showed up. I created a RAID set with it only, wiped the RAID configuration information off it by creating this new RAID set and when it was done creating the new set, I deleted it. I then plugged drive 2, 3 and 4 completing the same process for each. Once all 4 drives were back in the system and the back migration configuration was removed, I created a new RAID 5 set and it was done in less than a minute. So, this was going really well and I created a new Volume. It is running now and hopefully will complete by morning (about 10 hours from now). I'll post back once it is done, but hopefully the information thus far may help someone who has a corrupted RAID set to easily remove it and start over. I won't have my system boot back up with data in tact, but this is a fresh install and that was not important to me now. If I had imaged the server either by means of TimeMachine or disk image, then restoring it would be the next step.
Good luck!
Rob

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    Darwin Kernel Version 13.0.0: Thu Sep 19 22:22:27 PDT 2013; root:xnu-2422.1.72~6/RELEASE_X86_64
    Kernel UUID: 1D9369E3-D0A5-31B6-8D16-BFFBBB390393
    Kernel slide:     0x0000000017400000
    Kernel text base: 0xffffff8017600000
    System model name: MacPro3,1 (Mac-F42C88C8)
    System uptime in nanoseconds: 91308918786320
    last loaded kext at 89490169308794: com.apple.filesystems.smbfs          2.0.0 (addr 0xffffff7f99714000, size 335872)
    last unloaded kext at 1120636252260: com.apple.driver.StorageLynx          3.3.5 (addr 0xffffff7f99714000, size 8192)
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    com.apple.filesystems.smbfs          2.0.0
    com.apple.driver.AudioAUUC          1.60
    com.apple.filesystems.autofs          3.0
    com.apple.driver.AppleBluetoothMultitouch          80.14
    com.apple.iokit.IOBluetoothSerialManager          4.2.0f6
    com.apple.driver.AppleUpstreamUserClient          3.5.13
    com.apple.driver.AppleMCCSControl          1.1.12
    com.apple.kext.AMDFramebuffer          1.1.4
    com.apple.iokit.CSRBluetoothHostControllerUSBTransport          4.2.0f6
    com.apple.AMDRadeonX3000          1.1.4
    com.apple.driver.AppleUSBDisplays          360.8.14
    com.apple.driver.AppleHDA          2.5.3fc1
    com.apple.driver.AppleMCEDriver          1.1.9
    com.apple.kext.AMD5000Controller          1.1.4
    com.apple.driver.AppleLPC          1.7.0
    com.apple.iokit.IOUserEthernet          1.0.0d1
    com.apple.Dont_Steal_Mac_OS_X          7.0.0
    com.apple.driver.AppleHWAccess          1
    com.apple.driver.ACPI_SMC_PlatformPlugin          1.0.0
    com.apple.driver.XsanFilter          404
    com.apple.driver.Oxford_Semi          3.3.5
    com.apple.iokit.SCSITaskUserClient          3.6.0
    com.apple.AppleFSCompression.AppleFSCompressionTypeDataless          1.0.0d1
    com.apple.AppleFSCompression.AppleFSCompressionTypeZlib          1.0.0d1
    com.apple.BootCache          35
    com.apple.driver.AppleIntel8254XEthernet          3.1.3b1
    com.apple.driver.AppleRAIDCard          401
    com.apple.driver.AppleUSBHub          650.4.4
    com.apple.driver.AppleAHCIPort          2.9.5
    com.apple.driver.AppleIntelPIIXATA          2.5.1
    com.apple.driver.AppleFWOHCI          4.9.9
    com.apple.driver.AppleUSBEHCI          650.4.1
    com.apple.driver.AppleUSBUHCI          650.4.0
    com.apple.driver.AppleACPIButtons          2.0
    com.apple.driver.AppleRTC          2.0
    com.apple.driver.AppleHPET          1.8
    com.apple.driver.AppleSMBIOS          2.0
    com.apple.driver.AppleACPIEC          2.0
    com.apple.driver.AppleAPIC          1.7
    com.apple.driver.AppleIntelCPUPowerManagementClient          216.0.0
    com.apple.nke.applicationfirewall          153
    com.apple.security.quarantine          3
    com.apple.driver.AppleIntelCPUPowerManagement          216.0.0
    com.apple.kext.triggers          1.0
    com.apple.driver.IOBluetoothHIDDriver          4.2.0f6
    com.apple.driver.AppleMultitouchDriver          245.13
    com.apple.iokit.IOSerialFamily          10.0.7
    com.apple.driver.AppleSMBusController          1.0.11d1
    com.apple.iokit.IOBluetoothHostControllerUSBTransport          4.2.0f6
    com.apple.iokit.IOAcceleratorFamily          98.7.1
    com.apple.driver.DspFuncLib          2.5.3fc1
    com.apple.vecLib.kext          1.0.0
    com.apple.iokit.IOAudioFamily          1.9.4fc11
    com.apple.kext.OSvKernDSPLib          1.14
    com.apple.iokit.IONDRVSupport          2.3.6
    com.apple.iokit.IOFireWireIP          2.2.5
    com.apple.kext.AMDSupport          1.1.4
    com.apple.AppleGraphicsDeviceControl          3.4.12
    com.apple.iokit.IOSurface          91
    com.apple.iokit.IOBluetoothFamily          4.2.0f6
    com.apple.driver.AppleHDAController          2.5.3fc1
    com.apple.iokit.IOGraphicsFamily          2.3.6
    com.apple.iokit.IOHDAFamily          2.5.3fc1
    com.apple.driver.AppleSMC          3.1.6d1
    com.apple.driver.IOPlatformPluginLegacy          1.0.0
    com.apple.driver.IOPlatformPluginFamily          5.5.1d27
    com.apple.driver.AppleUSBHIDMouse          180.9
    com.apple.driver.AppleHIDMouse          180.9
    com.apple.driver.AppleUSBHIDKeyboard          170.15
    com.apple.driver.AppleHIDKeyboard          170.15
    com.apple.iokit.IOUSBHIDDriver          650.4.4
    com.apple.driver.AppleUSBMergeNub          650.4.0
    com.apple.driver.AppleUSBComposite          650.4.0
    com.apple.iokit.IOFireWireSerialBusProtocolTransport          2.5.1
    com.apple.iokit.IOFireWireSBP2          4.2.5
    com.apple.iokit.IOSCSIMultimediaCommandsDevice          3.6.0
    com.apple.iokit.IOBDStorageFamily          1.7
    com.apple.iokit.IODVDStorageFamily          1.7.1
    com.apple.iokit.IOCDStorageFamily          1.7.1
    com.apple.iokit.IOATAPIProtocolTransport          3.5.0
    com.apple.iokit.IONetworkingFamily          3.2
    com.apple.iokit.IOSCSIParallelFamily          3.0.0
    com.apple.iokit.IOSCSIBlockCommandsDevice          3.6.0
    com.apple.iokit.IOSCSIArchitectureModelFamily          3.6.0
    com.apple.iokit.IOUSBUserClient          650.4.4
    com.apple.iokit.IOAHCIFamily          2.6.0
    com.apple.iokit.IOATAFamily          2.5.2
    com.apple.iokit.IOFireWireFamily          4.5.5
    com.apple.iokit.IOUSBFamily          650.4.4
    com.apple.driver.AppleEFINVRAM          2.0
    com.apple.iokit.IOHIDFamily          2.0.0
    com.apple.driver.AppleEFIRuntime          2.0
    com.apple.iokit.IOSMBusFamily          1.1
    com.apple.security.sandbox          278.10
    com.apple.kext.AppleMatch          1.0.0d1
    com.apple.security.TMSafetyNet          7
    com.apple.driver.AppleKeyStore          2
    com.apple.driver.DiskImages          371.1
    com.apple.iokit.IOStorageFamily          1.9
    com.apple.iokit.IOReportFamily          21
    com.apple.driver.AppleFDEKeyStore          28.30
    com.apple.driver.AppleACPIPlatform          2.0
    com.apple.iokit.IOPCIFamily          2.8
    com.apple.iokit.IOACPIFamily          1.4
    com.apple.kec.corecrypto          1.0
    com.apple.kec.pthread          1
    System Profile:
    Model: MacPro3,1, BootROM MP31.006C.B05, 8 processors, Quad-Core Intel Xeon, 2.8 GHz, 18 GB, SMC 1.25f4
    Graphics: ATI Radeon HD 5870, ATI Radeon HD 5870, PCIe, 1024 MB
    Memory Module: DIMM Riser B/DIMM 1, 2 GB, DDR2 FB-DIMM, 800 MHz, 0x0000, 0x000000463732353642363145353830304600
    Memory Module: DIMM Riser B/DIMM 2, 2 GB, DDR2 FB-DIMM, 800 MHz, 0x0000, 0x000000463732353642363145353830304600
    Memory Module: DIMM Riser A/DIMM 1, 1 GB, DDR2 FB-DIMM, 800 MHz, 0x80AD, 0x48594D5035313241373243503844332D5335
    Memory Module: DIMM Riser A/DIMM 2, 1 GB, DDR2 FB-DIMM, 800 MHz, 0x80AD, 0x48594D5035313241373243503844332D5335
    Memory Module: DIMM Riser B/DIMM 3, 4 GB, DDR2 FB-DIMM, 800 MHz, 0x0000, 0x000000463732353142363445363830304600
    Memory Module: DIMM Riser B/DIMM 4, 4 GB, DDR2 FB-DIMM, 800 MHz, 0x0000, 0x000000463732353142363445363830304600
    Memory Module: DIMM Riser A/DIMM 3, 2 GB, DDR2 FB-DIMM, 800 MHz, 0x0000, 0x000000463732353642363145353830304600
    Memory Module: DIMM Riser A/DIMM 4, 2 GB, DDR2 FB-DIMM, 800 MHz, 0x0000, 0x000000463732353642363145353830304600
    Bluetooth: Version 4.2.0f6 12982, 3 services, 22 devices, 1 incoming serial ports
    Network Service: Ethernet 1, Ethernet, en0
    PCI Card: ATI Radeon HD 5870, Display Controller, Slot-1
    PCI Card: ATI Radeon HD 5870, ATY,LangurParent, Slot-1
    PCI Card: Apple RAID Card, RAID Controller, Slot-4
    Parallel ATA Device: PIONEER DVD-RW  DVR-112D
    USB Device: Hub
    USB Device: Keyboard Hub
    USB Device: Apple Optical USB Mouse
    USB Device: Apple Keyboard
    USB Device: XD-0405-U
    USB Device: Apple Cinema HD Display
    USB Device: USB2.0 Printer (Hi-speed)
    USB Device: Bluetooth USB Host Controller
    FireWire Device: built-in_hub, Up to 800 Mb/sec
    FireWire Device: unknown_device, Iomage HDD, Up to 800 Mb/sec
    FireWire Device: unknown_device, Unknown
    Thunderbolt Bus:

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  • How do I determine what needs attention on my Apple RAID card?

    Every time I turn on the computer, I get a message that says," The Apple RAID Card installed in your system requires your attention."
    This is what I have: RAID 065-7214 Mac Pro RAID Card
    Why do I keep getting this message? I am not sure what needs to be done to rectify any error. If there is no error and the warning is just due to battery charging, then I would like the warning to stop appearing--or do I just have to continuously click "Ignore"? Any insight into this?
    When I open RAID Utility it says: RAID set R0-1 has been mounted with indeterminate data loss. ( Is this just due to improper shutdown?)
    Also: Controller reports RAID system 72-hour battery reserve unavailable-System is configured to run without battery.
    Message was edited by: Darlyne

    I have had the exact same error message. When you open Raid Utility (that is where you can read what "attention" is needed you will see under the "Status" section what happened, and under the "Tasks" you will see the raid card "initializing" your RAID set. The first time I saw this I freaked, thinking that my drives were being reformatted, and my data would be lost. This is not the case. If you look down on the left side, you will (hopefully) see green lights next to your drives. The initialization seems to be a verification of the raid structure -- basically checking to make sure everything is redundant.
    So, back to the original question: it seems from my poking around that you SHOULD NEVER TURN OFF your Mac Pro with an Apple Raid Card installed. The firmware is not able to spin down the drives correctly, so when you turn your machine back on, you get the error message we have been discussing.
    I would recommend you get a good battery backup (UPS, like an APC) and just power off your monitor when not using your machine. I did not see this in the documentation, I am not 100% sure, but this is what I will be doing. In my case it takes many hours for the Raid Util to initialize my Raid again.
    Hope this helps.
    Theo

  • I replaced the battery on my RAID card, when I booted my mac pro up, I get the folder with the question mark. I used a boot USB drive to boot and when I looked in the RAID utility, my RAID 5 volumes were no longer showing, advise.

    I replaced the battery on my RAID card, when I booted my mac pro up, I get the folder with the question mark. I used a boot USB drive to boot and when I looked in the RAID utility, my RAID 5 volumes were no longer showing, advise.
    Ernest

    Not sure if I'm following you. I have 4 hard drives installed on my Mac Pro. I had a RAID 5 configured and functional for about 5 months. My battery died on the RAID card. I replaced the battery, seated the RAID card back in the slot I removed it from. When I booted to the USB drive to look in the RAID utility, I could see the battery is charged but my volumes are not showing.
    The drives don't show in disk Utility. I built the RAID with the RAID Utility and they did show there. I have a early 2008 Mac Pro, Mavricks OS running Mac Server

  • Removing RAID card from MacPro (2006)

    I have a Mac Pro 1,1 (2006) which had been used as a server. It has an Apple RAID card installed (the first version, blue one, part number A1247).
    I am now using this computer at home. The RAID card has failed. I'd like to remove it, reformat the drives and use the computer as a non-RAID version.
    I have physically removed and unplugged the RAID card from the connector. I reinstalled the hard drives. However, when I boot up off the Snow Leopard Install DVD, Disk Utility cannot find the four hard drives that had previously been plugged into the RAID Card.
    Am I missing a step somewhere? Is there more hardware beyond just the RAID card itself I needed to remove, and if so, can someone point me to the instructions on how to do it?
    Thanks!
    Matt

    Just to elabroate on The hatter's post and in case anyone else stumbles upon this thread when searching about removing the Apple RAID card from the Mac Pro (pre-2009), the answer is within the first link in The hatter's post, namely this Apple user guide on installing the RAID card: http://manuals.info.apple.com/en/MacPro_RAIDCard_Installation.pdf
    Basically, there's an iPass cable that connects the hard drives to the motherboard - but when you have your Mac configured with an Apple RAID card the iPass cable is connected to the RAID card instead of the motherboard. So when you remove the RAID card you need to connect the iPass cable back to your motherboard and that involves removing the fans, which is a tad fiddly. Make sure you've got a good magnetic screwdriver that doesn't chew screws!
    Hope this helps someone out there
    I've finally managed to replace my RAID card and dual SAS drives with a Vertex 2 SSD and I'm loving the speed, quietness and most importantly the fact I can now put my Mac Pro to sleep!!

  • 3rd Party SATA raid cards for internal drives?

    All --
    Apart from the discussion as to if RAID actually benefits a home desktop system, I am wondering if anyone has the lowdown on using 3rd party SATA raid cards to support the INTERNAL hard drives on the Mac Pro series?
    My Mac Pro is still slated to be built at Apple and for now I have the minimum memory and HD spec being requested at Apple, with the plan to upgrade the memory and drives from OWC or another vendor.
    I've toyed with the idea of utilizing Disk Utility's software RAID features (e.g. RAID 0 for scratch disks, RAID 1 for boot, RAID 0+1 for all else.) I've also toyed with the notion of searching for a hardware raid solution which would allow me to transfer the internal SATA cable runs from the motherboard to a host adapter card for an internal multi-channel experience (with options to create and break mirrors to external devices for backup purposes.)
    So....
    Has anyone experience or utilized 3rd party hardware raid controllers which can connect to the internal HD bays? Are there limitations to this (ie, does the boot drive HAVE to reside off the internal motherboard controllers, or can an internal hardware controller successfully boot the system) of which ought be noted?
    Finally, in the event that a host adapter card cannot drive the interna bays, can anyone give feedback to hardware SATA cards to power external drive bays with support for Disk Utility (to allow RAID1 pairings of internal drives to external snapshot-backup drives)?
    Thanks for your time,
    Ian Poulin
    Richmond, Va

    I am wondering if anyone has the lowdown on using 3rd party SATA raid cards to support the INTERNAL hard drives on the Mac Pro series?
    There are many 3rd party controllers that support the internal HDs if an internal iPass connector is used. The problem is that some are bootable but most are not.
    The Areca ARC-1680ix-12 and the HighPoint RocketRAID 4320 are bootable. However, the system cannot be installed via the Apple DVD. Instead the user needs to clone a boot drive with the proper drivers to the boot volume on the controller and then boot from the 3rd party controller.
    The other issue I found is that these controllers do not support Boot Camp. If Boot Camp is desired, my recommendation would be to leave the internal HDs on the Mac Pro internal bus intact and use the 3rd party controller for external storage. This method provides four internal bays that are bootable, support Boot Camp and can be used for system backups. I use the 3rd party controller for external storage for large RAID sets and hot swapping hard disks.
    With the internal bays intact and external hot swap RAID storage available the user can support Boot Camp, multiple system volumes and large external RAID sets. From my experience using a 3rd party controller with the internal HD bays always has some limitations. The user usually does not realize it unit later when Boot Camp does not work or the computer fails on a system upgrade or the controller does not work at all with a new version of Mac OS X.
    Staying with the standard internal Mac Pro bay configuration will be the best configuration to avoid compatibility issues with future versions of Mac OS X. It is rumored that the new Snow Leopard may require 64-bit drivers. If that is the case, I would expect most if not all existing 3rd party controller drivers to fail. Some drivers will be upgraded after a few months while others may not. Having the internal Mac Pro SATA controller intact should at least allow the Mac Pro to boot if my guess about compatibility issues is correct.
    can anyone give feedback to hardware SATA cards to power external drive bays with support for Disk Utility (to allow RAID1 pairings of internal drives to external snapshot-backup drives)?
    There are a large number of external controllers that work with Disk Utility. Here are some of my favorites.
    1. FirmTek SeriTek/2SE2-E and the SeriTek/5PM
    http://firmtek.stores.yahoo.net/sata5pm2se2.html
    http://www.amug.org/amug-web/html/amug/reviews/articles/firmtek/5pm/
    2. Sonnet Tempo E4P
    http://www.amug.org/amug-web/html/amug/reviews/articles/sonnet/mac-pro/
    3. DAT Optic eSATA_PCIe8
    http://www.amug.org/amug-web/html/amug/reviews/articles/datoptic/pcie8/
    Have fun!

  • RAID Utility & RAID Card

    I have my new super-duper Mac Pro tower 3.2 GHz with RAID card and I installed 4 identical 1 TB drives and made a RAID 5 array. Now, the issue is that I have had two power outages, and my UPS seems to have missed picking them up (I have a new UPS now for the tower), but here is the deal, I get the bad event, clear the event log, "initialize" the array (~1 day), Verify the array (~3 days) and RAID Utility can still give me the message that the array is "bad".
    So, I have, in sequence, a failure, a rebuild, a verify, a reboot (clean) and it goes back and complains it needs to rebuild from scratch even though it already has done so ...
    Also, clearing the errors does not seem to clear the errors from the log ...
    So, is it me ... or does the RAID Utility stink?

    FeistMeister wrote:
    Um, that was the point.
    I did a rebuild between the crash and the next one, and a verify ...
    I missed that.
    And after the second crash I did a complete initialize and verify with clean bill of health and all green dots....
    Now I am 3-4% into the initialize which will take until tomorrow sometime to finish ... then I can reverify ... but the point is that it does not seem to want to forget the past ... and "clearing" the log does not seem to make it forget the past either ...
    Well, it still boots off the array, and seems to run fine so I suppose I should not be TOO annoyed, but I expected better from Apple ... and better speed off of a dedicated $800 RAID card ... Oh, and the battery is fully charged ....
    I have never used RAID, probably because I never needed, but also I have read here and there of the requisite maintenance needed, and of problems similar to yours.
    I wish you well.

  • Workaround for Hardware Raid-Card and Bootcamp

    I have ordered my new Mac Pro with the optional raid-card by Apple. Since there are no drivers for Windows XP or Vista available, harddrives attached to the card cannot be used for bootcamp to boot from. But it seems the Apple ships teh new Mac Pros with all drive bays connected to the raid-card. I was wondering if i could bypass the card by detaching one of the SATA-cables and plug it into the mainboard directly to use the first (or last) drive bay for a separate boot drive (WD velociraptor 300 GB) with a partition for Mac OSX 10.5 and Windows XP (each 150 GB) on this drive. I want use the rest of the harddrives attached to the RAID-card for a raid 0 under Mac OSX only. Windows XP will use an external storage case connected by Firewire 800.

    Hi,
    I believe the iPass cable connects all four hard disks with a single connector. This makes it difficult to remove one bay from the Apple Card. My experience is that you either use the card for all four bays or you disconnect the card and use the stock motherboard SATA interface.
    I found using an external RAID box allows me to have all four internal hard disk bays available for boot disk or boot camp use. The external SeriTek/5PM provides my RAID. I can use the HighPoint RR2314 for a five disk RAID 5 configuration or the Sonnet Tempo E4P if I want a RAID created by Disk Utility. Using multiple SeriTek/5PM enclosures can increase the performance.
    http://www.amug.org/amug-web/html/amug/reviews/articles/firmtek/5pm/
    http://firmtek.stores.yahoo.net/sata5pm.html
    If you want even higher RAID performance and SAS compatibility and don't mind spending more $$$ the HighPoint RocketRAID 4322 RAID 5/6 Controller provides amazing performance with the Enhance RS16 JS SAS expander enclosure. The AMUG tests show this combination can provide RAID 6, sixteen disk average write performance of 696MB/sec. and 833MB/sec. read performance.
    http://www.amug.org/amug-web/html/amug/reviews/articles/highpoint/4322/
    http://www.amug.org/amug-web/html/amug/reviews/articles/enhance/rs16js/
    http://www.amug.org/amug-web/html/amug/reviews/articles/datoptic/rm16_ex8/
    There are lots of RAID solutions available for the Mac Pro. However, I find the internal Apple RAID lack of Boot Camp support is too restrictive and higher performance is available from 3rd party solutions at a better performance to cost ratio.
    Have fun!

  • XServe 2006 RAID Card Issues

    Basically, I was gifted (some gift!) a Late 2006 XServe 2.0GHz Dual QX, with 4 GB RAM, and basically was told 'It does not boot. We give up.'
    So heres what I have found so far..
    It has an Apple Raid Card (don't ask me much more than that, or ill have to tear it apart again). But the 10.4.10 Install disk doesnt show the Raid card or drives (SATA Apple Drive Module 80.0). So is my card toast? Not supported by 10.4? Need a direction to run at because this thing is starting really get under my skin.
    If I use a SATA Drive bay via USB (WD 80GB Drive), the disk appears, but the Server won't last long before it Kernel Panics, but it works during Installation Media Verification..
    In the meantime, Ill tear apart the server again (Only a few minutes) and get the Raid Card ID.

    An easy way to see if it's a raid card is on the part of the RAID/Backplane you can see when you slide the top cover off, if it has 2 chips with silver heatsinks on it's a RAID card if it's 1 chip it's a backplane. The RAID Card also has a small connection for a RAID battery..
    as for why it doesn't work.. Have a look at the following
    1) Do the drives light up when you start the machine.. You should see a green light (always on) and a blue activity light which should flash.
    2) If it doesn't then there is an orange ribbon cable that goes from the RAID/Backplane to the logic board. Make sure this is properly connected and doesn't have any breaks in it.
    The RAID card will work in a non raid configuration so you don't need to get rid of it if you don't want to. An easy option to check the server would be to install 10.6 or Lion on a USB stick and start the server up for it by plugging it in and holding down the ALT key when you power on the server. From the system profiler you should be able to see if it recognises the RAID card (Hardware RAID) and also if it passes it's diagnostics test.
    There are of course a lot of things that could be wrong with it.. You can remove the RAID/Backplane board and start the server up from USB/Firewire to narrow down your testing.. One thing the 2006/2008 servers are pretty cheap on eBay in working form so you might find it better to get one from there. The 2009's hold their value a lot more as you can still install the current OS on them..
    Hope that helps
    Beatle

  • Erase old error messages of MacPro RAID Card?

    Hi there.
    I changed HDDs in my MacPro, they were configured as an RAID 1 using Apples RAID Card.
    After mirroring the old System to the new (RAID 5) System, there are several error messages left in RAID Utility - where are they located to delete them?
    Maybe I was wrong simply to change the HDDs, but is there a chance to solve that issue?
    Thanks in advance.

    Get someone on ebay to buy your over priced under supported card.
    Or accept the 2.2TB (some people only got the 800GB portion which needs to be set as free space).
    Or use 2TB drives.
    Or external RAID but watch out for ATTO SAS and their Java program that doesn't work.
    WD RED 3TB drives are designed for NAS RAID, firmware to support RAID TLER.
    SoftRAID 4 makes a nice software RAID and does a good mirror with three drives in stripe reads (mirror only begins with minimum of two).
    NO Apple just won't can't whatever offer a card and firmware. Odd with all their GUID support for large volumes isn't it.
    It is designed for smaller SAS drives in today's world. And for RAID5 on 3TB and issues with battery... POS throw it up on ebay!

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