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MPTUTIL(8)		    System Manager's Manual		    MPTUTIL(8)

NAME
       mptutil -- Utility for managing LSI Fusion-MPT controllers

SYNOPSIS
       mptutil version
       mptutil [-u unit] show adapter
       mptutil [-u unit] show config
       mptutil [-u unit] show drives
       mptutil [-u unit] show events
       mptutil [-u unit] show volumes
       mptutil [-u unit] fail drive
       mptutil [-u unit] online	drive
       mptutil [-u unit] offline drive
       mptutil [-u unit] name volume name
       mptutil [-u unit] volume	status volume
       mptutil [-u unit] volume	cache volume enable|enabled|disable|disabled
       mptutil [-u unit] clear
       mptutil	 [-u   unit]   create	type   [-q]   [-v]   [-s  stripe_size]
	       drive[,drive[,...]]
       mptutil [-u unit] delete	volume
       mptutil [-u unit] add drive [volume]
       mptutil [-u unit] remove	drive

DESCRIPTION
       The mptutil utility can be used to display or modify various parameters
       on LSI Fusion-MPT controllers.  Each invocation of mptutil consists  of
       zero  or	 more global options followed by a command.  Commands may sup-
       port additional optional	or required arguments after the	command.

       Currently one global option is supported:

       -u unit
	       unit specifies the unit of the controller to work with.	If  no
	       unit is specified, then unit 0 is used.

       Volumes	may be specified in two	forms.	First, a volume	may be identi-
       fied by its location as [xx:]yy where xx	is the bus ID and  yy  is  the
       target  ID.   If	 the bus ID is omitted,	the volume is assumed to be on
       bus 0.  Second, on the volume may be specified by the corresponding daX
       device, such as da0.

       The mpt(4) controller divides drives up into two	 categories.   Config-
       ured  drives  belong  to	a RAID volume either as	a member drive or as a
       hot spare.  Each	configured drive is assigned a unique device  ID  such
       as  0 or	1 that is show in show config, and in the first	column of show
       drives.	Any drive not associated with a	RAID volume as either a	member
       or a hot	spare is a standalone drive.  Standalone drives	are visible to
       the operating system as SCSI disk devices.  As a	result,	drives may  be
       specified  in three forms.  First, a configured drive may be identified
       by its device ID.  Second, any drive may	be identified by its  location
       as  xx:yy where xx is the bus ID	and yy is the target ID	for each drive
       as displayed in show drives.  Note that unlike volumes, a  drive	 loca-
       tion  always  requires  the  bus	ID to avoid confusion with device IDs.
       Third, a	standalone drive that is not part of a volume may  be  identi-
       fied by its corresponding daX device as displayed in show drives.

       The mptutil utility supports several different groups of	commands.  The
       first  group  of	commands provide information about the controller, the
       volumes it manages, and the drives it controls.	The  second  group  of
       commands	 are  used  to manage the physical drives attached to the con-
       troller.	 The third group of commands are used to  manage  the  logical
       volumes	managed	 by  the controller.  The fourth group of commands are
       used to manage the drive	configuration for the controller.

       The informational commands include:

       version
	       Displays	the version of mptutil.

       show adapter
	       Displays	information about the  RAID  controller	 such  as  the
	       model number.

       show config
	       Displays	the volume and drive configuration for the controller.
	       Each  volume  is	listed along with the physical drives that the
	       volume spans.  If any hot spare	drives	are  configured,  then
	       they are	listed as well.

       show drives
	       Lists all of the	physical drives	attached to the	controller.

       show events
	       Display	all  the entries from the controller's event log.  Due
	       to lack of documentation	this command is	not very  useful  cur-
	       rently and just dumps each log entry in hex.

       show volumes
	       Lists all of the	logical	volumes	managed	by the controller.

       The physical drive management commands include:

       fail drive
	       Mark drive as "failed requested".  Note that this state is dif-
	       ferent  from  the "failed" state	that is	used when the firmware
	       fails a drive.  Drive must be a configured drive.

       online drive
	       Mark drive as an	online drive.  Drive must be part a configured
	       drive in	either the "offline" or	"failed	requested" states.

       offline drive
	       Mark drive as offline.  Drive  must  be	a  configured,	online
	       drive.

       The logical volume management commands include:

       name volume name
	       Sets the	name of	volume to name.

       volume cache volume enable|enabled|disable|disabled
	       Enables or disables the drive write cache for the member	drives
	       of volume.

       volume status volume
	       Display	more  detailed	status about a single volume including
	       the current progress of a rebuild operation  if	one  is	 being
	       performed.

       The configuration commands include:

       clear   Delete  the  entire  configuration  including  all  volumes and
	       spares.	All drives will	become standalone drives.

       create type [-q]	[-v] [-s stripe_size] drive[,drive[,...]]
	       Create a	new volume.  The type specifies	the type of volume  to
	       create.	Currently supported types include:

	       raid0   Creates	one RAID0 volume spanning the drives listed in
		       the single drive	list.

	       raid1   Creates one RAID1 volume	spanning the drives listed  in
		       the single drive	list.

	       raid1e  Creates one RAID1E volume spanning the drives listed in
		       the single drive	list.

	       Note: Not all volume types are supported	by all controllers.

	       If the -q flag is specified after type, then a "quick" initial-
	       ization	of  the	 volume	will be	done.  This is useful when the
	       drives do not contain any existing data that need  to  be  pre-
	       served.

	       If  the -v flag is specified after type,	then more verbose out-
	       put will	be enabled.  Currently this just provides notification
	       as drives are added to volumes when building the	configuration.

	       The -s stripe_size parameter allows the stripe size of the  ar-
	       ray  to	be set.	 By default a stripe size of 64K is used.  The
	       list of valid values for	a given	type are listed	in the	output
	       of show adapter.

       delete volume
	       Delete the volume volume.  Member drives	will become standalone
	       drives.

       add drive [volume]
	       Mark  drive  as	a  hot spare.  Drive must not be a member of a
	       volume.	If volume is specified,	then the  hot  spare  will  be
	       dedicated  to  that volume.  Otherwise, drive will be used as a
	       global hot spare	backing	all volumes for	this controller.  Note
	       that drive must be as large as the smallest drive in all	of the
	       volumes it is going to back.

       remove drive
	       Remove the hot spare drive from	service.   It  will  become  a
	       standalone drive.

EXAMPLES
       Mark the	drive at bus 0 target 4	as offline:

	     mptutil offline 0:4

       Create a	RAID1 array from the two standalone drives da1 and da2:

	     mptutil create raid1 da1,da2

       Mark standalone drive da3 as a global hot spare:

	     mptutil add da3

SEE ALSO
       mpt(4)

HISTORY
       The mptutil utility first appeared in FreeBSD 8.0.

BUGS
       The  handling  of  spare	 drives	 appears to be unreliable.  The	mpt(4)
       firmware	manages	spares via spare drive "pools".	 There are eight pools
       numbered	0 through 7.  Each spare drive can only	be assigned to a  sin-
       gle pool.  Each volume can be backed by any combination of zero or more
       spare  pools.   The mptutil utility attempts to use the following algo-
       rithm for managing spares.  Global spares are always assigned  to  pool
       0,  and all volumes are always backed by	pool 0.	 For dedicated spares,
       mptutil assigns one of the remaining 7 pools to each volume and assigns
       dedicated drives	to that	pool.  In practice however, it seems that  as-
       signing	a drive	as a spare does	not take effect	until the box has been
       rebooted.  Also,	the firmware renumbers the spare pool assignments  af-
       ter  a  reboot which undoes the effects of the algorithm	above.	Simple
       cases such as assigning global spares seem to work ok (albeit requiring
       a reboot	to take	effect)	but more "exotic" configurations may not  work
       reliably.

       Drive  configuration  commands result in	an excessive flood of messages
       on the console.

       The mpt version 1 API that is used by mptutil and mpt(4)	does not  sup-
       port volumes above two terabytes.  This is a limitation of the API.  If
       you  are	using this adapter with	volumes	larger than two	terabytes, use
       the adapter in JBOD mode.  Utilize geom(8), zfs(8), or another software
       volume manager to work around this limitation.

FreeBSD	14.3			 May 24, 2023			    MPTUTIL(8)

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