Hp Cciss Driver Linux
Your Red Hat account gives you access to your profile, preferences, and services, depending on your status. Register If you are a new customer, register now for access to product evaluations and purchasing capabilities. HP DL360 G5 and CentOS 7 (cciss RAID driver) Showing 1-4 of 4 messages. HP DL360 G5 and CentOS 7 (cciss RAID driver) Ignacio Bravo. Thanks to Montana Linux, I. The cciss driver has been removed from RHEL7 and SLES12. If you really want cciss on RHEL7 checkout the elrepo directory. A new Smart Array driver called 'hpsa' has been accepted into the main line linux kernel as of Dec 18, 2009, in linux-2.6.33-rc1.This new driver will support new Smart Array products going forward, and the cciss driver will eventually be deprecated.
HP Smart Array CCISS driver HP Smart Array CCISS driver • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Here you will find source RPMs and source tarballs for the cciss driver for HP's Smart Array line of hardware RAID controllers. Epson m188d driver windows 7 64 bits. Most likely, you do not need these, as the cciss driver has been in the Linux kernel for a very long time, and most distributions will already have a cciss driver which will work for you as is. From time to time there may be instances in which hardware or driver features are not supported by the cciss driver which comes with your distribution or kernel, because it is too old, or the hardware is too new, etc. In these instances you may wish to try the source RPMs or tarballs provided here. If you are looking for binary RPMs or driver diskette images We do not supply any binary RPMs from this page.
HP does supply binary RPMs and driver diskettes (for loading drivers during OS installation) for supported Linux distributions on hp.com. You can use these if you have a supported distribution running a supported kernel. News 5/29/2018 ***** ***** 1/15/2016 ***** ***** 9/4/2014 ***** ***** The cciss driver has been removed from RHEL7 and SLES12.
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If you really want cciss on RHEL7 checkout the directory. A new Smart Array driver called 'hpsa'. This new driver will support new Smart Array products going forward, and the cciss driver will eventually be deprecated. Initially, there was some overlap in the boards which these two drivers support. The current list of supported controllers for hpsa. The following list of controllers are supported by cciss on distributions based on kernels before 2.6.33: • Smart Array P212 • Smart Array P410 • Smart Array P410i • Smart Array P411 • Smart Array P812 • Smart Array P712m • Smart Array P711m • Smart Array P222 • Smart Array P420 • Smart Array P420i • Smart Array P421 • Smart Array P822 • Smart Array P220i • Smart Array P721 • Smart Array P430 • Smart Array P430i • Smart Array P431 • Smart Array P830 • Smart Array P830i • Smart Array P831 • Smart Array P731m • Smart Array P230i. In the case of kernels with cciss and hpsa drivers which do have overlapping sets of supported controllers, by default, cciss will claim these devices if it is loaded prior to hpsa (which it normally will be).
If you're already running cciss on these devices, and upgrade to a kernel containing the hpsa driver, you shouldn't have to do anything, as cciss will continue to claim these devices. If you would like to run hpsa instead, there is a new module parameter to cciss, 'cciss.cciss_allow_hpsa=1', which will cause the cciss driver to ignore the controllers on the above list, which will permit the hpsa driver to claim those devices.
NOTE: The hpsa driver is a SCSI driver, while the cciss driver is a block driver. This means that logical drives which would be presented with devices nodes like '/dev/cciss/c0d0', etc. Will now be presented as '/dev/sda', etc. This means that if you are currently using cciss with the above controllers and decide to switch to hpsa, you've got to adjust your /etc/fstab, grub configuration files, etc. To make this work. For a new install of a distribution using the hpsa driver, the 'cciss.cciss_allow_any=1' boot parameter should allow hpsa to be used easily.
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If you've been using cciss already on these controllers, it is not recommended that you attempt to upgrade your running system to switch from cciss to hpsa unless you have a very good reason to do so and know what you are doing. This is simply because making the switch is somewhat complex and it is easy to make a mistake or forget something and get your system into an unbootable state. With all the various distributions, it is difficult to come up with a set of bulletproof universal instructions for making such a switch, so we recommend that you simply continue to use cciss in such instances. Hpsa should be fine for new installs on these controllers, however. The cciss driver previously contained a feature which would enable it by default to run on Smart Array controllers which it did not explicitly recognize except so far as to be able to determine that they were some sort of Smart Array. This feature has been removed, as any Smart Arrays not known to cciss are now presumed to be claimed by the hpsa driver. The hpsa driver has the ability to claim unknown Smart Arrays, however this is turned off by default so that it does not try to claim older controllers meant to be claimed by the cciss driver.