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

NAME
       mfiutil,	mrsasutil -- Utility for managing LSI MegaRAID SAS controllers

SYNOPSIS
       mfiutil version
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] show adapter
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] show battery
       mfiutil [-d] [-e] [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] show config
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] show drives
       mfiutil	[-D  device]  [-t  type]  [-u  unit]  show  events  [-c	class]
	       [-l locale] [-n count] [-v] [start [stop]]
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] show firmware
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] show foreign [volume]
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] show logstate
       mfiutil [-d] [-e] [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] show patrol
       mfiutil [-d] [-e] [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] show progress
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] show volumes
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] fail drive
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] good drive
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] rebuild drive
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] syspd drive
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] drive progress drive
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit]	drive  clear  drive  {start  |
	       stop}
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] start rebuild drive
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] abort rebuild drive
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] locate drive {on	| off}
       mfiutil	[-D  device] [-t type] [-u unit] cache volume [setting [value]
	       [...]]
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] name volume name
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] volume progress volume
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] clear
       mfiutil	[-D  device]  [-t   type]   [-u	  unit]	  create   type	  [-v]
	       [-s stripe_size]	drive[,drive[,...]] [drive[,drive[,...]]]
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] delete volume
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] add drive [volume]
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] remove drive
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] start patrol
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] stop patrol
       mfiutil	[-D  device]  [-t  type]  [-u  unit]  patrol command [interval
	       [start]]
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] foreign scan
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] foreign clear [config]
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] foreign diag [config]
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] foreign preview [config]
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] foreign import [config]
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] flash file
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] start learn
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] bbu setting value
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] ctrlprop	rebuild	[rate]
       mfiutil [-D device] [-t type] [-u unit] ctrlprop	alarm [0/1]

DESCRIPTION
       The mfiutil utility can be used to display or modify various parameters
       on LSI MegaRAID SAS RAID	controllers.  Each invocation of mfiutil  con-
       sists  of  zero or more global options followed by a command.  Commands
       may support additional optional or required arguments  after  the  com-
       mand.

       Currently three global options are supported:

       -D device
	       device  specifies the device node of the	controller to use.  If
	       no device node is specified, then device	will be	 made  of  the
	       type and	device.

       -t type
	       type  specifies	the type of the	controller to work with	either
	       mfi(4) or mrsas(4).  If no type is specified, then the name  of
	       the invoked tool	used to	derive the type.

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

       Various commands	accept either or both of the two options:

       -d      Print numeric device IDs	as drive identifier.  This is the  de-
	       fault.	Useful	in  combination	with -e	to print both, numeric
	       device IDs and enclosure:slot information.

       -e      Print drive identifiers in enclosure:slot form.	See next para-
	       graph on	format details in context of input rather than output.

       Drives may be specified in two forms.  First, a drive may be identified
       by its device ID.  The device ID	for configured drives can be found  in
       show  config.   Second,	a  drive  may be identified by its location as
       [Exx:]Syy where xx is the enclosure and yy is the slot for  each	 drive
       as displayed in show drives.

       Volumes	may be specified in two	forms.	First, a volume	may be identi-
       fied by its target ID.  Second, on the volume may be specified  by  the
       corresponding mfidX device, such	as mfid0.

       The mfiutil 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	 fifth
       group of	commands are used to manage controller-wide operations.

       The informational commands include:

       version
	       Displays	the version of mfiutil.

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

       show battery
	       Displays	information about the battery from the battery	backup
	       unit.

       show config
	       Displays	the volume and drive configuration for the controller.
	       Each  array  is listed along with the physical drives the array
	       is built	from.  Each volume is listed  along  with  the	arrays
	       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 [-c class] [-l locale] [-n count] [-v] [start [stop]]
	       Display	entries	 from  the  controller's  event	log.  The con-
	       troller maintains a circular buffer of events.  Each  event  is
	       tagged with a class and locale.

	       The  class parameter limits the output to entries at the	speci-
	       fied class or higher.  The default class	is "warn".  The	avail-
	       able classes from lowest	priority to highest are:

	       debug   Debug messages.

	       progress
		       Periodic	progress updates for  long-running  operations
		       such  as	background initializations, array rebuilds, or
		       patrol reads.

	       info    Informational messages such  as	drive  insertions  and
		       volume creations.

	       warn    Indicates that some component may be close to failing.

	       crit    A component has failed, but no data is lost.  For exam-
		       ple, a volume becoming degraded due to a	drive failure.

	       fatal   A component has failed resulting	in data	loss.

	       dead    The controller itself has died.

	       The locale parameter limits the output to entries for the spec-
	       ified  part  of	the  controller.  The default locale is	"all".
	       The  available  locales	are  "volume",	"drive",  "enclosure",
	       "battery", "sas", "controller", "config", "cluster", and	"all".

	       The  count parameter is a debugging aid that specifies the num-
	       ber of events to	fetch from the controller for  each  low-level
	       request.	 The default is	15 events.

	       By  default, matching event log entries from the	previous shut-
	       down up to the present are displayed.  This range  can  be  ad-
	       justed  via the start and stop parameters.  Each	of these para-
	       meters can either be specified as a log entry number or as  one
	       of the following	aliases:

	       newest  The newest entry	in the event log.

	       oldest  The oldest entry	in the event log.

	       clear   The first entry since the event log was cleared.

	       shutdown
		       The  entry  in  the event log corresponding to the last
		       time the	controller was cleanly shut down.

	       boot    The entry in the	event log corresponding	 to  the  most
		       recent boot.

       show firmware
	       Lists all of the	firmware images	present	on the controller.

       show foreign
	       Displays	 detected foreign configurations on disks for importa-
	       tion or removal.

       show logstate
	       Display the various sequence numbers associated with the	 event
	       log.

       show patrol
	       Display the status of the controller's patrol read operation.

       show progress
	       Report  the  current progress and estimated completion time for
	       active operations on all	volumes	and drives.

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

       The physical drive management commands include:

       fail drive
	       Mark drive as failed.  Drive must be an online  drive  that  is
	       part of an array.

       good drive
	       Mark  drive  as	an unconfigured	good drive.  Drive must	not be
	       part of an existing array.

       rebuild drive
	       Mark a failed drive that	is still part of an array  as  a  good
	       drive  suitable for a rebuild.  The firmware should kick	off an
	       array rebuild on	its own	if a failed drive is marked as	a  re-
	       build drive.

       syspd drive
	       Present	the drive to the host operating	system as a disk SYSPD
	       block device in the format  /dev/mfisyspdX.   Clear  this  flag
	       with good drive

       drive progress drive
	       Report  the  current  progress and estimated completion time of
	       drive operations	such as	rebuilds or patrol reads.

       drive clear drive {start	| stop}
	       Start or	stop the writing of all	0x00 characters	to a drive.

       start rebuild drive
	       Manually	start a	rebuild	on drive.

       abort rebuild drive
	       Abort an	in-progress rebuild operation on drive.	 It can	be re-
	       sumed with the start rebuild command.

       locate drive {on	| off}
	       Change the state	of the external	LED associated with drive.

       The logical volume management commands include:

       cache volume [setting [value] [...]]
	       If no setting arguments are supplied, then  the	current	 cache
	       policy for volume is displayed; otherwise, the cache policy for
	       volume  is  modified.   One  or	more  setting arguments	may be
	       given.  Some settings take  an  additional  value  argument  as
	       noted below.  The valid settings	are:

	       enable  Enable caching for both read and	write I/O operations.

	       disable
		       Disable caching for both	read and write I/O operations.

	       reads   Enable caching only for read I/O	operations.

	       writes  Enable caching only for write I/O operations.

	       write-back
		       Use write-back policy for cached	writes.

	       write-through
		       Use write-through policy	for cached writes.

	       read-ahead value
		       Set  the	read ahead policy for cached reads.  The value
		       argument	can be set to either  "none",  "adaptive",  or
		       "always".

	       bad-bbu-write-cache value
		       Control	the  behavior of I/O write caching if the bat-
		       tery is dead or missing.	 The value argument can	be set
		       to either "disable" or "enable".	 In general this  set-
		       ting  should  be	 left disabled to avoid	data loss when
		       the system loses	power.

	       write-cache value
		       Control the write caches	on the physical	drives backing
		       volume.	The  value  argument  can  be  set  to	either
		       "disable", "enable", or "default".

		       In  general  this  setting  should  be left disabled to
		       avoid data loss when the	physical  drives  lose	power.
		       The battery backup of the RAID controller does not save
		       data in the write caches	of the physical	drives.

       name volume name
	       Sets the	name of	volume to name.

       volume progress volume
	       Report  the  current  progress and estimated completion time of
	       volume operations such as consistency  checks  and  initializa-
	       tions.

       The configuration commands include:

       clear   Delete  the entire configuration	including all volumes, arrays,
	       and spares.

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

	       jbod    Creates a RAID0 volume for each drive specified.	  Each
		       drive must be specified as a separate argument.

	       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.

	       raid5   Creates	one RAID5 volume spanning the drives listed in
		       the single drive	list.

	       raid6   Creates one RAID6 volume	spanning the drives listed  in
		       the single drive	list.

	       raid10  Creates	one  RAID10 volume spanning multiple RAID1 ar-
		       rays.  The drives for each RAID1	array are specified as
		       a single	drive list.

	       raid50  Creates one RAID50 volume spanning multiple  RAID5  ar-
		       rays.  The drives for each RAID5	array are specified as
		       a single	drive list.

	       raid60  Creates	one  RAID60 volume spanning multiple RAID6 ar-
		       rays.  The drives for each RAID6	array are specified as
		       a single	drive list.

	       concat  Creates a single	volume by  concatenating  all  of  the
		       drives in the single drive list.

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

	       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 arrays and arrays	to volumes when	build-
	       ing 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.	 Valid
	       values  are  512	through	1M, though the MFI firmware may	reject
	       some values.

       delete volume
	       Delete the volume volume.

       add drive [volume]
	       Mark drive as a hot spare.  Drive must be in  the  unconfigured
	       good state.  If volume is specified, then the hot spare will be
	       dedicated to arrays backing that	volume.	 Otherwise, drive will
	       be  used	as a global hot	spare backing all arrays for this con-
	       troller.	 Note that drive must be  as  large  as	 the  smallest
	       drive in	all of the arrays it is	going to back.

       remove drive
	       Remove  the hot spare drive from	service.  It will be placed in
	       the unconfigured	good state.

       The controller management commands include:

       patrol command [interval	[start]]
	       Set the patrol read operation mode.  The	command	 argument  can
	       be one of the following values:

	       disable
		       Disable patrol reads.

	       auto    Enable periodic patrol reads initiated by the firmware.
		       The  optional  interval argument	specifies the interval
		       in seconds  between  patrol  reads.   If	 patrol	 reads
		       should  be  run continuously, then interval should con-
		       sist of the word	"continuously".	  The  optional	 start
		       argument	 specifies a non-negative, relative start time
		       for the next patrol read.  If an	interval or start time
		       is not specified, then the  existing  setting  will  be
		       used.

	       manual  Enable  manual  patrol reads that are only initiated by
		       the user.

       start patrol
	       Start a patrol read operation.

       stop patrol
	       Stop a currently	running	patrol read operation.

       foreign scan
	       Scan for	foreign	configurations and display the	number	found.
	       The  config argument for	the commands below takes the form of a
	       number from 0 to	the total configurations found.

       foreign clear [config]
	       Clear the specified foreign config or all if no config argument
	       is provided.

       foreign diag [config]
	       Display a diagnostic display of the specified foreign config or
	       all if no config	argument is provided.

       foreign preview [config]
	       Preview the specified foreign config after import or all	if  no
	       config argument is provided.

       foreign import [config]
	       Import  the  specified foreign config or	all if no config argu-
	       ment is provided.

       flash file
	       Updates the flash on the	controller with	the firmware stored in
	       file.  A	reboot is required for the new firmware	 to  take  ef-
	       fect.

       start learn
	       Start a battery relearn.	 Note that this	seems to always	result
	       in  the battery being completely	drained, regardless of the BBU
	       mode.  In particular, the controller write cache	will  be  dis-
	       abled  during  the relearn even if transparent learning mode is
	       enabled.

       bbu setting value
	       Update battery backup unit (BBU)	properties related to  battery
	       relearning.  The	following settings are configurable:

	       learn-delay
		       Add  a  delay  to  the  next  scheduled battery relearn
		       event.  This setting is given in	hours and must lie  in
		       the range of 0 to 255.

	       autolearn-mode
		       Enable  or  disable automatic periodic battery relearn-
		       ing.  The setting may be	set to "enable"	 or  "disable"
		       to  respectively	 enable	 or disable the	relearn	cycle.
		       Alternatively, a	mode of	0, 1 or	2 may be given.	  Mode
		       0  enables periodic relearning, mode 1 disables it, and
		       mode 2 disables it and logs a warning to	the event  log
		       when  it	 detects that a	battery	relearn	should be per-
		       formed.

	       bbu-mode
		       Set the BBU's mode of operation.	 This setting  is  not
		       supported by all	BBUs.  Where it	is supported, the pos-
		       sible  values  are  the integers	between	1 and 5	inclu-
		       sive.  Modes 1, 2 and 3 enable a	transparent learn  cy-
		       cle,  whereas modes 4 and 5 do not.  The	BBU's data re-
		       tention time is greater when  transparent  learning  is
		       not used.

       ctrlprop	rebuild	[rate]
	       With no arguments display the rate of rebuild (percentage)a for
	       volumes.	  With	an integer argument (0-100), set that value as
	       the new rebuild rate for	volumes.

       ctrlprop	alarm [0/1]
	       With no arguments display the current alarm enable/disable sta-
	       tus.  With a 0, disable alarms.	With a 1, enable alarms.

EXAMPLES
       Configure the cache for volume mfid0 to cache only writes:

	     mfiutil cache mfid0 writes
	     mfiutil cache mfid0 write-back

       Create a	RAID5 array spanning the first four disks in the second	enclo-
       sure:

	     mfiutil create raid5 e1:s0,e1:s1,e1:s2,e1:s4

       Configure the first three disks on a controller as JBOD:

	     mfiutil create jbod 0 1 2

       Create a	RAID10 volume that spans two arrays each of which contains two
       disks from two different	enclosures:

	     mfiutil create raid10 e1:s0,e1:s1 e2:s0,e2:s1

       Add drive with the device ID of 4 as a global hot spare:

	     mfiutil add 4

       Add the drive in	slot 2 in the main chassis as a	hot spare  for	volume
       mfid0:

	     mfiutil add s2 mfid0

       Reconfigure a disk as a SYSPD block device with no RAID

	     mfiutil syspd 0

       Configure the adapter to	run periodic patrol reads once a week with the
       first patrol read starting in 5 minutes:

	     mfiutil patrol auto 604800	300

       Display the second detected foreign configuration:

	     mfiutil show foreign 1

       Set the current rebuild rate for	volumes	to 40%:
	     mfiutil ctrlprop rebuild 40

SEE ALSO
       mfi(4), mrsas(4)

HISTORY
       The mfiutil utility first appeared in FreeBSD 8.0.

FreeBSD	13.2		       September 2, 2011		    MFIUTIL(8)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | EXAMPLES | SEE ALSO | HISTORY

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