Mac Mini Server ımı Mavrick e yüksettim :(

Server uygulamam çalışmaz hale geldi. Mavrickte çalışmayacak mı yoksa, Mountain Lion downgrade mi yapmam gerekiyo

You're being told to purchase it because that's the way Apple is handling this upgrade.
The OS X 10.9 Mavericks upgrade requires re-purchasing Server.app.
The OS X Server features have always been tied to a particular version of OS X.
But if you don't want or need the server features, then there's no reason to purchase Server.app 3 here, though.

Similar Messages

  • I am having keyboard problems when trying to boot up an OS (bootcamp on Mac Mini Server)

    I recently tried using bootcamp on my new Mac Mini Server.
    I uploaded a windows ISO Image perfectly the way it asked, Windows 7, I followed the correct steps, euqally divided one of the hard drives, and I was ready to actually set up the new Windows section of my computer. During this booting session, my dog came in the room with her ball and knocked the computer plug out of the socket. Now when I turn on the mac, the fan still works, the same Macintosh sound comes up, the screen turns that usual very bright gray, but it stays on that gray. After a minute or two, the screen turns black, with a blinking underline, as if it were confused to choose which operating system it has to boot.
    My problem here is that I use a wireless keyboard (not by Apple) -- and I suppose that bluetooth syncronizes with the OS and not the computer system itself -- so my keyboard commands do not get recognized in order for me to navigate into Windows 7 or OS X Mountain Lion. I tried solving this problem by purchasing a brand-new USB keyboard (since Mac Mini Servers do not have the PS/2 entrance). I guess this new USB keyboard didn't work, I imagine, either because the USB slots on the machine are not recognized by the computer's internal system, only by the Operating Sysytems (which I hope isn't true), or that the mac had never used that USB Keyboard and wasn't going to be capable of using it until it had installed the necessary drivers, but without the OS running that would become impossible.
    So my question is: Is there a way that I can connect a keyboard to the mac so I can continue installing my alternate Operating System? Is it maybe another problem all together?

    It is starting to sound more like Bootcamp failed to install properly.
    Have a look at > Boot Camp 5: Frequently asked questions
    then perhaps > Failed bootcamp instlation - Google Search

  • Website on Mac Mini Server not accessible. Error 403 index document not available.

    Dear all,
    I'm trying to host a website on my Mac Mini Server. As far as I can see, my DNS is working correctly. Also my firewall is setup correctly. (I'm hosting another website which works OK). But I setup a new site. Basically a copy of the working site. But this site doesn't reflect an index.htm page. I receive an Error 403 with further information that there is no index document or that the site is secured. There is a contact link on this page directing to my webmaster. So I conclude that something is working, but no index.htm page. Has anyone similar experience? And offcourse a solution?
    Many thanks.

    Launch Terminal.app and issue the commands:
    cd /Library/Webserver/Documents/
    ls -al
    And see if the files are readable by the web server.   Here's an example index file listing that's owned by root and with group access for admin folks, and this file is marked as readable and writable for the owner and the group, and is readable for everybody else:
    -rw-rw-r--    1 root  admin   5094 Jul 25  2009 index.html
    In this configuration, the web server would be using the other access; the web server can read this file, but not write to it.  Here is how to duplicate these ownership and access settings on your own index.html file, assuming that you have that file present in the ls listing above, and assuming that you have issued the cd (change default directory) command shown above:
    sudo chown root:admin index.html
    sudo chmod ug=rw,o=r index.html
    You will need to enter your administrative password for the sudo command.
    I would very strongly suggest that you start learning some basics of bash and of Apache, because you're going to be needing those skills very soon.

  • How to set up my mac mini server to use two drives seamlessly?

    I have a mid 2010 mac mini server, with OSX Lion installed. It has dual 500gb hard drives.
    I've been moving all my important files to it, and I've always assumed that once I filled one disc, it would seamlessly transfer over to the other and continue backing up. This does not seem to be the case.
    I'm at roughly 495gb of data, and when I try to move a 10gb file onto my server, it tells me that I don't have enough disc space to continue the operation.
    What can I do to make use of both drives?
    -Thanks

    It sounds like what you're asking for is to have the two drives in a RAID 0, where the two 500 Gb drives look like a single 1 Tb drive. I'm not sure the exact procedure for installing RAID 0 on a mini's internal drives, but the process would involve backing up, reconfiguring for RAID (which destroys all data,) restoring data from the backup, and more risk than I would personally find acceptable. I'd expect to lose a full day with the backup and restore steps. I can guarantee, there will be pain.
    Instead, I'd suggest looking at what's consuming the 500Gb, and seeing if there are particular folders that can be moved. For example, a shared folder is pretty easy. Copy it over. In file sharing setup, edit the share to point to the new location. Make sure remote users disconnect, and reconnect to the "new" share. When you're happy there is no data loss, delete the old location.
    User's home directories can also move, but the process has a few more steps, and depends on how the accounts are built (local vs. OD)
    If the majority of the data is in a single "your backup files" folder, shared or otherwise, then I would just set up a second folder on the second drive and write to it, leaving the first alone. If it is truly a backup, then you could make the first folder read-only at this point for extra protection. If you go the 2 folder route, keep in mind your boot drive is operating with 1% free space, I like my drives to have at least 15% free, and OS drives more like 25% (you'll find some range in recommended %-free, but most will agree 1% is too little) so move SOME stuff to the new folder, before closing the old.

  • Using a Mac Mini Server quad Core i7 for FCPX ?

    I am a student trying to
    configure a final cut pro X edit system with a budget of around $4K.
    I have over 400 hours of video (some Hi-8 but mostly mini-DV tapes).
    For the Mini-DV tapes I plan on ingesting video into FCPX
    directly from the camera via firewire DV. I will be using a Sony GV D800 to ingest
    the Hi-8 tapes via firewire DV as well. I already have a 30" Apple Cinema Display.
    H.264 will be used to deliver finished content to the web and/or Blu-ray.
    I was leaning toward the macbook pro 17" but then I realised that a Mac Mini Server
    could be configured with the same number of cores and RAM for less money.
    Mac mini Server
    2.0 GHz Quad Core Intel i7 -- same number of cores as macbook pro 17"
    8 GB RAM
    750 GB Serial ATA Drive 7200rpm + 256 GB Solid State Drive
    Mini DisplayPort to Dual-Link DVI Adapter
    Apple Magic Mouse + Magic Trackpad
    Other Peripherals:
    Promise Pegasus 8TB R4 Raid System in RAID 5 configuration or equivalent
    Sonnet Echo Express PCIe 2.0 Thunderbolt Expansion Chassis with
    Matrox Compress HD MAX encoding card
    LaCie d2 Blu-ray 12x
    Do the extra cores in the server make up for the difference in GPU?
    (2.7 GHz Mini dual-core i7 with AMD Radeon HD 6630M graphics processor with 256MB of GDDR5 memory) VS (2.0 GHz Mini Server quad - core i7 with Intel HD Graphics 3000 processor and 384MB of DDR3 SDRAM shared with main memory)
    Am I thinking about this configuration the right way? Is there
    any overhead given that the mini will be a server? Anything missing?
    thanks for your help,
    Tom

    Take it back for a replacement while you are within 14 days from purchase.

  • Using a Mac Mini Server as a traditional stand alone desktop

    Hello all, currently I have a late 2008 model 17" MacBook pro, Time Capsule, Apple TV and an Iphone 3GS and Ipod Traditional. I would like to add a desktop system to coordinate all of these items, to be the centerpiece is you will, in my home. I'm interested in buying a mac mini, I began to do research however and saw the Mac Mini Server which has greater memory capacity 4GB vs 2GB RAM, and dual 500Gb vs the standard Mac Mini which has one at 320GB. I would like to take advantage of these upgrades as I'm a writer and will be constantly on the web for work as well as likely keep a lot of items on the hard drive.
    However I noticed the Mac Mini server utilizes Mac OSX snow leopard SERVER as opposed to the user grade Mac OSX. *My question is if the Mac Mini Server with MAC OSX server can still be used as a stand alone desktop, connecting it to a spare LCD television I have and a mac wireless keyboard/mouse?*
    I'm aware that unlike the other mac mini and imacs it does not come with ilife and other pre-installed software, and *I want to know if it's still possible to purchase after market and install said software utilizing them in the traditional manor?*
    Thank you in advance for any feedback you can provide and I apologize if my question was difficult to comprehend due to my lack of computer knowledge. I also apologize if this question is similar to others you've received lately as I did a quick scan of google and these forums and did not seem to find the specific answer I was looking for.

    Welcome to the Apple Discussions!
    Let me clear up a misperception that you have. Both the Mac mini and the Mac mini Server have a capacity to address 8 GB of RAM. There are two SO-DIMM slots in each model. The mac mini comes preconfigured by Apple with 2 GB of RAM (2 x 1 GB). The mini Server comes preconfigured with 4 GB of RAM (2 x 2 GB). You can buy and install yourself up to 8 GB of RAM (2 x 4 GB).
    You can even install Mac OS X Snow Leopard client, which will meet your needs a bit better than Server, now that folks have figured out how to do it;
    http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=2539663&tstart=0
    And yes you can buy and install iLife, and pretty much everything else that you want to include in your kit. Either model of mini works fine with wireless keyboards and mouses. If your LCD TV has an HDMI port, then a simple HDMI to HDMI cable would be the simplest manner to connect it to the mini.
    Dah•veed

  • Is the mac mini server the same hardware as the other mac minis (except for the quad core i7 and dual hard drives) with different software or is it configured differently?

    I have a mac mini with an i7 dual core processor. It is perceptably slower than my macbook pro with a quad core i7. Does the mac mini server have the same hardware configuation as the regular mac mini with server software or is the hardware different (aside from the i7 quad core and dual hard drives)? I want a mini with a quad core i7...

    Your assumption is correct.  The server does however only
    have the Intel HD3000 graphics like the base model with
    no option, at this time, for the discrete graphics chip.  So,
    depending on what you are using it for, that could be a deal
    breaker.  Remember that your MBP does have a discrete
    graphics chip.
    I have a 2011 Mini Server connected to a Thunderbolt display
    that gets used as an engineering workstation and general
    personal use (some photo editing, LP restoraton, general
    internet browsing).  You simply just not enable any of the
    server services.  I find the combination to work quite well
    for my purposes.  I also have a 13" 2.7 GHz i7 Macbook Pro
    which is pretty much strictly for work.  As far as CPU
    power it is pretty much equivelent to your Mini.  For the most
    part I find the Mini does outperfom my MBP.  I heavily use
    Parallels and Windows7 virtual machines, so the more cores
    the better.
    So, If you do a lot of CPU intensive stuff that is multithreaded,
    the Server may help.  If it is graphics intensive and your software
    heavily leaverages the GPU, you may actually take a hit on
    performance.

  • Mountain Lion Mac Mini Server Ethernet Port Not Working

    I have a Mac Mini Server and once I upgraded to Mountain Lion Server the Ethernet port is unresponsive. It worked before upgrading. Is there something with Mountain Lion Server that is causing the Ethernet port not to work properly?

    Make a "Genius" appointment at an Apple Store.
    Back up all data on the internal drive(s) before you hand over your computer to anyone. If privacy is a concern, erase the data partition(s) with the option to write zeros* (do this only if you have at least two complete, independent backups, and you know how to restore to an empty drive from any of them.) Don’t erase the recovery partition, if present.
    Keeping your confidential data secure during hardware repair
    *An SSD doesn't need to be zeroed.

  • Please help me decide on a Mac mini server or MacBook Pro i7 for Logic

    Hi folks,
    I've really taxed my brain trying to figure out what's the smartest way to go. I'd love to know what any of you think I should do.
    My current setup:
    2007 MacBook Pro 2.33 GHz Core 2 Duo
    2GB Ram
    FSB 667 MHz
    M-Audio ProFire 610
    WD-Passport external drive for samples and audio files
    Logic 8 (looking to upgrade to 9)
    Record 1.5
    Various AU plugins including Omnisphere, Miroslav Philharmonic, Amplitude 2, FM-8, BFD 2 and Korg Legacy Analogue
    Final Cut Studio (latest version) for modest HD editing but sometimes multiclips as well
    I tend to use lots of tracks - around 10 vocals, 4 guitars and lots of software instruments.
    As you can imagine, Omnisphere runs like a dog past 2 instances and BFD practically makes everything grind to a halt.
    Since going to Record 1.5, rewiring also seems to be unusably slow.
    I'd love a new iMac or Mac Pro but I make several plane journeys to visit my Mum in another country. My solution has to be mobile, although I have got monitors, a keyboard and mouse that I can use at my Mum's.
    As far as I can see, there are 2 options:
    1
    A new MacBook Pro 2.66 Ghz i7
    2
    A Mac Mini Server 2.66 Ghz Core 2 Duo
    Physically, the Mac Mini is the better option:
    - much lighter in my hand luggage so I could take it in addition to my existing MacBook Pro.
    - more USB ports
    My worries with getting a Mac Mini are:
    - Is it powerful enough or at least significantly better than my MacBook Pro?
    - Will it run the latest version of Final Cut Studio (a little off-topic, I know but I couldn't seem to find any straight answers elsewhere).
    - Is it noisy when under a heavy workload?
    - There is no Superdrive so can I use my MacBook Pro to install the software DVDs across a network?
    Thanks for reading this. Let me know what you think.
    Kind regards,
    Steve

    The mini will be about as powerful as your current MBP. You could have more RAM in the mini, 2 GB is certainly not enough for any serious work.
    People on this list were initially(LP 9.0.0) underwhelmed by the MBP i7 dual core, it is a step up from your older MBP, but don't expect miracles. Get lots of RAM/a SSD for optimum performance.
    9.1.3 may have improved performance, not sure,
    Fast and relatively cheap: iMac i7 quad core. Not very portable, though.
    Not ideal either is your M-audio interface, its drivers are below par making your Mac sweat more than necessary.
    My 2c,
    Zip

  • Using DVI to VGA adaptor with HDMI to DVI port on Mac Mini Server

    Hi - I couldnt find anything on this, so I decided to post a new topic. We just recently purchased a Mac Mini server at work for iOS development. Before we launch in in one of our data centers and start remoting into the system, we need to conduct basic setup on the system.
    For this, we pulled out an old stock VGA montior we have around the office, and found an apple DVI to VGA adaptor (http://i51.tinypic.com/2mzb4lc.jpg)
    The problem is, the pins dont exactly line up... on the DVI to VGA adaptor there are 2 extra pins above and below the horzontial pin on the left hand side (http://i52.tinypic.com/2mxhg1j.jpg) that do no exist on the Mac Mini HDMI to DVI adaptor (http://i53.tinypic.com/2ywesrp.jpg).
    Ive checked other converters and it seems that all of them are setup the same way, with two pins above and below.
    Has anyone else had to deal with this issue? I really dont want to go and buy the Mini DisplayPort to VGA adaptor for one-time use.
    Thank you!

    Welcome to  Discussions!
    What you are seeing is the difference between an analog and digital DVI connector, as DVI as a specification can provide both types of signal, depending on implementation. When used in a mode where only one or the other type of signal is provided, the different connectors prevent a mismatch. VGA being analog, the DVI to VGA adapter is using an analog DVI connector. The other connector you are dealing with is a digital only connector. HDMI is digital only, hence the HDMI to DVI adapter being digital only. Thus you can not adapt from the HDMI port to VGA with just passive adapters, you would need a conversion device between. It would be cheaper and more effective to use a Mini DisplayPort to VGA adapter.

  • Monitor Not Going To Sleep on Mac Mini Server With Lion

    Summary: I am attempting to configure a Mac Mini Server that runs OS X Lion. This machine was originally shipped with OS X Lion; it is not an upgrade. My current specific problem is that my Viewsonic VX2835wm monitor will not go to sleep when the minutes setting on the Display Sleep setting for Energy Saver has been reached. Instead, the screen goes blank for a couple of seconds and is replaced with a blank blue backlit monitor. (Ironcially, the display sleep menu cautions: "Never letting your display go to sleep may shorten its life".) I very much want and need the ability to have my monitor go to sleep so as to save energy and to extend the monitor's life for as long as possible.
    Additional Background: I have had a couple of calls with Mac support and they have been unable to tell me whether this is a "design feature" or a flaw in the Lion OS because they have had no similar reports and they do not have the latest hardare available running Lion Server to test to see if this happens with other monitors. (They also, of course, don't have the VX2835wm monitor.)
    I do, however, know the following:
    (1) My HDMI monitor is connected to my Mac mini via a DVI KWM switch (ATEN CS1784) such that the HDMI output from my Mac is converted to DVI (using the DVI to HDMI converter that came with my Mac Mini) and is then run through the KVM and then converted back to HDMI (using a full pin DVI to HDMI cable). However, I have tested the monitor with a straight HDMI to HDMI cable running directly from the Mac Mini to the monitor and it has not changed anything.
    (2) The Lion operating system correctly recognizes (in Hardware / Displays) the model of my ViewSonic monitor.
    (3) I have a MacBook Pro running Leopard (OS X 10.5.8) that is connected to the same monitor through the same KVM switch (by way of a BookEndz docking station) which properly shuts down the monitor when there has been no activity for however many minutes are set in the Display Sleep setting under Energy Saver. (Indeed, all I want is the same functionality on my Mac Mini that I have enjoyed for the last two years with this MacBook Pro.)
    (4) When fully connected to the KVM, if I switch from my Mac Mini to my MacBook Pro and my Mac Mini display goes to sleep while I am working on my MacBook Pro, when I switch back to the Mac Mini, my monitor backlight will be off (and the power light will be standby yellow rather than the blue on) until I wake my computer up by touching the mouse of keyboard. I wonder if this may mean that the Mac Mini's signalling of the change in status from on to standby is somehow dysfunctional.
    (5) Shutting down the server functions (and other open applications) has no effect.
    I would greatly appreciate feedback from anyone out there running a Mac Mini with Lion regarding whether or not their monitors go into standby mode when the Display Sleep time is reached (please note whether or not you are running the Server or Client version, whether or not it is a new install or upgrade, and what monitor you are using).
    Thanks in advance to anyone who can help.

    No, I didn't solve the problem. The monitor still goes to sleep with WIndows but not with my Mac Mini. About 8 months ago I basically wore out the power switch on my monitor so I bought a wireless power switch to shut it off at the outlet. The VX2835wm monitor itself is now starting to fail as well-- a couple of times it's gone through a weird sequence of flashing screen colors on power up and ended up in an overscan mode (that took me for ever to figure out how to fix). I have decided to replace my VX2835wm with a Dell u2412m once it fails for good partly because I really want to keep the 16:10 resolution (very hard to find these days) and partly because I want to see if a different make of monitor will go to sleep properly based upon my Mac Mini power down settings.

  • I am trying to get Zen-Cart on my mac mini server lion 10.6

    I am trying to get Zen-Cart on my mac mini server lion 10.6 and am stuck getting mysql installed.
    Bassiclly what I am trying to do is have a cart for my site I host locally  I used iWeb to creat the site and it has no cart plug in I am aware of which makes it useless for ecommerce.  Other than that it is nice to use maybe im missing somethin?  So I am looking for solutions to get Zen Cart installed (easilly) to include mysql since OSX does not have it.  Some questions
    Is there a good free packaged installer for mysql and or zencart?
    is there a better OS cart solution for OS X ?
    Can iWeb be updated by me to host an e cart, or is there a plug in I can get?
    Other?

    Hello,
    Is this Win 7 32 bit version?
    If so & you don't want to upgrade to the 64 bit version...
    There is Parallels...
    http://www.parallels.com/
    VmWare Fusion...
    http://www.vmware.com/mac
    VirtualBox...
    http://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads

  • Installing Snow Leopard on Mac Mini Server

    I recently purchased a 1Tb 4Gb Mac Mini Server, running Snow Leopard Server. I want to use it as a central repository for my other macs: storing music, movies, backup, screen sharing (it's hooked up to my 32-inch TV) but I also want to be able to run Logic Pro, Ableton Live, etc. I also have a Macbook Pro running Snow Leopard Client, which contains all of my programs, plugins, data, etc. I realize that Snow Leopard Server does not have migration assistant, so I have tried to install a retail copy of Snow Leopard onto the secondary drive, but when it gets to the restart stage it crashes every time. I think this is a firmware issue, because the Mac Mini has a different hardware configuration to other macs. I do not have access to the mid-2010 Snow Leopard Client for Mac Mini which would allow me to install Client and use migration assistant from there. What I would like to know is:
    1/ Can I manually migrate my plugins/settings/programs to the server? If so, how? What is most crucial (and what I don't understand) is copying my audio units and audio programs (e.g. Logic Pro, Pro Tools). Because of the firmware issue, it seems more difficult than cloning my MacBook Pro to a time machine HDD and running from there... I would really like to purely clone my MacBook Pro, because I am very happy with the way it is set up.
    2/ Should I just wait for OSX Lion (July/August) which seems to be a combined server/client os, install that on both machines and run migration assistant from there?
    3/ Is there another method I can use? Something I am overlooking?
    Thanks in Advance.

    Thanks for your reply. I talked to the Apple Support again and they told me the server edition could only be used on that OS and if I wanted to use it as something else I could chose not to use the server applications, or buy a regular Mac mini. And that was all they said. Interesting since it was one of their sales persons who told me I could install Snow Leopard.
    Anyway, I got hold of a client disc and it all worked like a charm.

  • Windows 7 on mac mini server and raid 1

    I just purchased a 2011 mac mini server with the hopes of installing windows 7 alongside lion.  Then my goal was to have the two drives mirrored.  I successfully mirrored the two drives using disk utility and then proceeded to install lion.  This all went fine.  Imagine my shock when I loaded up bootcamp to see an error message describing it's inability to install windows on a raided system.  The thought hadn't even occured to me that this would be an issue. 
    I have searched through various forums and other places on the internet and haven't found a solution.  I am curious if I can get anyone with any experience in this area.  Is it possible to have mac and windows installed on a drive... and have that drive mirrored to the second drive... regardless of what os i'm booted into?
    Thanks for your help guys

    The GUI version of Disk Utility is very limited in what sort of RAID configurations you can create. It will only allow you to have a single partition on the disk and to make a RAID using that.
    Boot Camp requires creating additional partitions on the disk and hence it complaining.
    There is a commandline version of Disk Utility called diskutility (duh!). It has far more options available. Details for this command can be obtained by typing man diskutility in Terminal.app.
    It appears that in theory you might be able to do the following.
    Start off with both disks not setup for RAID
    Use Boot Camp to create the Windows partition. Repeat this on each disk.
    Then in Terminal.app manually convert the boot Mac partition to a RAID using diskutil appleraid enable
    Then add the matching partition on the second drive to make it a working mirror using diskutil appleraid add
    Then in Terminal.app manually create a RAID for the Windows partition using both drives and use FAT32 as the format using diskutil appleraid create
    Then boot and run the Windows installer and tell it to erase the Windows partition as NTFS
    I cannot gurantee the above will work and you should obviously have backups if needed. Another option would be to have the Mac partition covered by RAID but not the Windows partition, this would result in three volumes one Mac RAIDed volume, and two other non RAIDed volumes even though you have two physical disks.

  • RAID on Mac mini Server (2011 i7)

    I just purchased a new Mac mini Server today (the base configuration 2011 Quad Core i7 with 4GB RAM and 2x 500GB 7200RPM magnetic hard disks) and wanted to share what I've learned about setting up RAID on the system.
    First, as you may have heard, the Mac mini Server does not include any installation/reinstallation media (I was hoping for a USB reinstall key, but it seems that the new systems don't include these or optical discs; last year's Mac mini Server included handy reinstall DVDs even though the system didn't have an optical drive).  Out of the box, the new Mac mini Server has Mac OS X Lion, the iLife suite, and the Mac OS X Lion Server tools pre-installed on one of the two 500GB internal drives; the other disk is formatted as a separate, second drive.
    If this is the configuration you're looking for, you're good to go right out of the box.  As an aside, this shipping configuration is ideal for using the second disk as a Time Machine drive.  I would argue that Time Machine would be a better use of the second volume than a RAID 1 configuration, as Time Machine provides versioned backups and you don't incur the write performance penalty RAID 1 requires every time data is saved to the disk.  I would further caution that, while an internal Time Machine disk is a convenient safety measure, any critical data should be backed up outside of the system as well.
    Now for those like me who were intrigued by the opportunity to mate the Quad Core i7 with a RAID 0/striped configuration for a performance boost (or if you want to use RAID 1), a RAID configuration is possible, but it there are a few caveats.
    First, Apple has two recovery options for the new Macs: a small hidden recovery partition on the boot drive and their Internet Recovery system.  While it's possible to boot other systems from a Lion installation DVD extracted from the App Store Lion installer, such bootable optical discs will not boot the Mac mini Server at this time (this may change if Apple modifies the App Store Lion installer).  Therefore, as of right now, the recovery partition or the Internet Recovery system are the best options for installing/reinstalling on a RAID set.
    Second, if you boot the system using Command+R to access the recovery partition, you can wipe the two drives and create a RAID set, but this process will remove the recovery partition and is incompatible with FileVault encryption (a warning to this effect comes up when you try to start an install/reinstalll on a RAID set, but at that point, you've likely already erased the recovery partition in Disk Utility).  If the system boots after the recovery partition is deleted, the only install/reinstall option is Apple's Internet Recovery.
    Third, as might be expected depending upon your internet bandwidth, the Internet Recovery system can take a while to boot the recovery tools (10-15 minutes to boot on a standard cable modem connection) and to reinstall the OS (50+ minutes on a standard cable modem connection).  Internet Recovery currently reinstalls only Mac OS X Lion and the Server tools on the mini Server; there's no option to install iLife during the OS install (Apple could always change this by updating their servers, and there is a Customize button on the installer, but it is greyed out and cannot be clicked at the present).
    Fourth, once the OS is reinstalled, it's possible to reinstall the iLife applications by launching the App Store from within Mac OS and selecting Purchased.  The store will indicate that the system is eligible to download the iLife apps and you can do so by agreeing to upload system-identifying information to Apple and signing in with your Apple ID.
    I hope all this helps.  Here's a more concise step-by-step of how to set up the system with RAID:
    THINGS YOU NEED
    A fast Internet connection for the mini
    Patience
    Hold Command+R on the keyboard at start up to boot from the system's recovery partition (if the recovery partition has been deleted, the system should start from Apple's Internet Recovery system; you may need to connect to WiFi if wired ethernet isn't available)
    Once you get into the recovery utility, select Disk Utility and for each of the two hard drives:
    highlight the drive
    select the Partition tab
    select 1 Partition from the Partition Layout pulldown menu
    select Free Space from the Format pulldown menu
    click Apply
    After you've wiped both of the drives, highlight one of the disks and click the RAID tab, then create a RAID set (striped or mirrored, as you prefer)
    Quit Disk Utility and from the main recovery utility menu select Reinstall Lion (from this point on, if you have any trouble, you can restart the mini from the Internet Recovery system and return to this point, but the recovery partition will be gone as long as you keep the RAID set)
    After you install and configure Mac OS X Lion Server (which can take well over an hour to download and install), you should be able to reinstall the iLife applications by launching the App Store App and selecting Purchased, then logging in with your Apple ID and agreeing to send your system info to Apple to download the iLife Applications
    If you're using the mini as a production server, I highly suggest setting up some local, external recovery tool, as you don't want to have system downtime protracted by having to wait for an Internet Recovery boot/reinstall.  I would also beg Apple to consider this sort of scenario and to provide more supported methods for recovering and reinstalling from local media.
    Best of luck to you all.

    I found the basic principle on another forum thanks to a guy called 'e-whizz' and this what I did to make RAID 1 work on a mac mini server with LION server.
    You can easily configure the second drive on a mac mini server for a Mirrored RAID 1 set with Lion Server without either reinstalling or erasing your existing setup.
    The initial setup process takes about 30 minutes, though the rebuilding of the mirror disk will take several hours, depending on the amount of data you have on the drive. It took around 3 hours on a new mac mini server with lion server installed, nothing else configured.
    Before you start, please ensure you have a current backup of the server. Getting the following commands wrong can render you server unusable.
    What you need to use is the command line version of Disk Utility, diskutil.
    Before you start, clone the hard drive. You can use SuperDuper (or similar, I have used SuperDuper) with copying all files onto a USB memory stick. If Lion is freshly installed, 8Gb will do. SuperDuper will create a bootable copy on the USB.
    Boot the mac mini from the external USB. To do that, reboot and hold down the option key while restarting. You will see a window, select the USB drive to boot from.
    Launch the terminal and type the following command:
    diskutil list
    This gives you a list of all the drives and partitions your system knows about.
    You need to find the Server HD partition (the first disk) and the HD2 partitions (the second disk). These are the two main ~500GB drives. You will be using the disk IDENTIFIERs when issuing the diskutil commands. For a stock standard Mac Mini Server, the commands below are correct, but if you have previously changed the volume names, or repartitioned at any stage the disk identifiers and volume names may differ.
    First enable RAID mirroring on existing Server HD volume. This will create a single disk, unpaired mirror, without affecting your data.
    Using this syntax:
    diskutil appleRAID enable mirror disktomirror
    where disktomirror is your disk identifier for Server HD
    On my mac mini server, Server HD was disk0s2, so I used this command:
    diskutil appleRAID enable mirror disk0s2
    You now need to run diskutil list again to see the disk identifier for the new RAID volume. The new RAID volume will be listed as disk# on its own at the bottom of the list.
    On my mac mini server this was disk3 (disk 2 was the USB I booted from, disk 0 the first disk and disk 1 the second disk)
    Next add the disk HD2 to the Server HD raid mirror volume (on my mac, as I said before, this is disk3) as a new member.
    This step will erase disk HD2 and begin an auto repair of the Server HD.
    Using this syntax:
    diskutil appleRAID add member newdisk raidvolume
    replacing newdisk and raidvolume with your particular disk identifiers
    On my server this was:
    diskutil appleRAID add member disk1s2 disk3
    To follow the progress of rebuilding the mirror set, type
    diskutil list
    It will show you the progress in % of the rebuilding under status
    Once finished, reboot and your RAID 1 is up and running and you have also a working backup on your USB (coz' that's where you booted from ;-)
    After reboot you can check the status of your RAID with
    diskutil appleRAID list
    Both drives should show ONLINE under status, interestingly, the device node for the RAID changed on my mac mini server from disk3 to disk2
    That's it

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