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AAC(4) FreeBSD Kernel Interfaces Manual AAC(4) NAME aac -- Adaptec AdvancedRAID Controller driver SYNOPSIS options AAC_COMPAT_LINUX options AAC_DEBUG=N device pci device aac DESCRIPTION The aac driver provides support for the Adaptec AAC family SCSI Ultra2 and Ultra160 RAID controllers. These controllers support RAID 0, 1, 5, 10, and volume sets. They have four channels in the add-in version or 1-2 channels in the motherboard integrated version, and are most often found relabeled by Dell or Hewlett-Packard. Supported controllers include: +o AAC-364 +o Adaptec SCSI RAID 5400S +o HP NetRAID 4M +o Dell PERC 2/Si +o Dell PERC 2/QC +o Dell PERC 3/Si +o Dell PERC 3/Di Access to RAID containers is available via the /dev/aacd? device nodes. Individual drives cannot be accessed unless they are part of a container or volume set, and non-fixed disks cannot be accessed. Containers can be configured by using either the on-board BIOS utility of the card, or a Linux-based management application. The /dev/aac? device nodes provide access to the management interface of the controller. One node exists per installed card. The aliases /dev/afa? and /dev/hpn? exist for the Dell and HP flavors, respectively, and are required for the CLI management utility available from these ven- dors to work. Compiling the driver with the AAC_COMPAT_LINUX option enables the Linux-compatible ioctl(2) interface for the management device. Tuning The read-only sysctl hw.aac.iosize_max defaults to 65536 and may be set at boot time to another value via loader(8). This value determines the maximum data transfer size allowed to/from an array. Setting it higher will result in better performance, especially for large sequential access patterns. Beware: internal limitations of the card limit this value to 64K for arrays with many members. While it may be safe to raise this value, this is done at the operator's own risk. Note also that perfor- mance peaks at a value of 96K, and drops off dramatically at 128K, due to other limitations of the card. FILES /dev/aac? aac management interface /dev/aacd? disk/container interface /boot/kernel/aac.ko aac loadable module DIAGNOSTICS Compiling with AAC_DEBUG set to a number between 0 and 3 will enable increasingly verbose debug messages. The adapter can send status and alert messages asynchronously to the driver. These messages are printed on the system console, and are also queued for retrieval by a management application. SEE ALSO kld(4), linux(4), kldload(8), loader(8), sysctl(8) HISTORY The aac driver first appeared in FreeBSD 4.3. AUTHORS Mike Smith <msmith@FreeBSD.org> Scott Long <scottl@FreeBSD.org> BUGS This driver is not compatible with controllers that have version 1.x firmware. The firmware version is the same as the kernel version printed in the BIOS POST and driver attach messages. This driver will not work on systems with more than 4GB of memory. The controller is not actually paused on suspend/resume. Unloading driver is not supported at this time. FreeBSD 11.1 February 22, 2001 FreeBSD 11.1
NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | FILES | DIAGNOSTICS | SEE ALSO | HISTORY | AUTHORS | BUGS
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