Intel Computer Hardware SRCSASPH16I User Manual

®
Intel RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I  
Hardware Guide  
Intel Order Number: E33256-001  
Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Hardware Guide  
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Preface  
This is the primary reference and user’s guide for the Intel® RAID Controller  
SRCSASPH16I, which can be used for SAS and SATA disk drives. It contains installation  
instructions and specifications.  
For details on how to configure the storage adapters, and for an overview of the software  
drivers, see the Software Users Guide on the Resource CD.  
Audience  
This document assumes that you have some familiarity with RAID controllers and related  
support devices. The people who benefit from this book are:  
• Engineers who are designing a RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I storage adapter into  
a system.  
• Anyone installing a RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I storage adapter in a RAID  
system.  
Organization  
This document includes the following chapters and appendixes:  
• Chapter 1 provides a general overview of the Intel® RAID Controller  
SRCSASPH16I.  
• Chapter 2 describes the procedures for installing the RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I  
storage adapter.  
• Chapter 3 provides the characteristics and technical specifications for the RAID  
Controller SRCSASPH16I storage adapter.  
• Appendix A lists and explains the terms and abbreviations used in this manual.  
Related Publication  
The Software Users Guide on the Resource CD that is included with the RAID controller.  
Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Hardware Guide  
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Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Hardware Guide  
 
Figures  
Figure 1. Inserting the Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I into a  
PCI Express* Slot...................................................................................................................... 8  
Figure 2. Connecting the Disk Drive.......................................................................................... 9  
Figure 3. SAS and SATA Plugs and SAS Backplane Connector............................................ 10  
Figure 4. Card Layouts............................................................................................................ 12  
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Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Hardware Guide  
 
Contents  
Preface ........................................................................................................................iii  
Audience ............................................................................................................................... iii  
Organization ......................................................................................................................... iii  
Related Publication ............................................................................................................... iii  
Chapter 1, Overview ...................................................................................................1  
Summary of SAS RAID Controller Features ..........................................................................1  
Usability .........................................................................................................................2  
Redundancy and Error Handling ...................................................................................3  
SAS and SATA Features ...............................................................................................4  
Online Capacity Expansion and RAID Level Migration Rules .......................................4  
Beep Codes ...................................................................................................................5  
Benefits of Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) ................................................................................5  
®
Chapter 2, Intel RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Hardware Installation ..............7  
Requirements ........................................................................................................................7  
Installation ..............................................................................................................................8  
Connecting the Cables ........................................................................................................10  
Configuring the Storage Adapter .........................................................................................11  
Replacing a Controller .........................................................................................................11  
Resolving a Configuration Mismatch ...................................................................................11  
®
Chapter 3, Intel RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Characteristics ......................12  
Technical Specifications ......................................................................................................13  
Array Performance Features .......................................................................................14  
Fault Tolerance ............................................................................................................15  
Electrical Characteristics .............................................................................................16  
Thermal and Atmospheric Characteristics ...................................................................16  
Safety Characteristics ..................................................................................................17  
A. Glossary of Terms and Abbreviations ...............................................................18  
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Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Hardware Guide  
 
Tables  
Table 1. Jumper Descriptions ..................................................................................................12  
Table 2. Specifications ............................................................................................................14  
Table 3. Array Performance Features .....................................................................................14  
Table 4. Fault Tolerance Features ..........................................................................................15  
Table 5. Maxium Power Requirements ...................................................................................16  
Table 6. Environmental Specifications ....................................................................................16  
Table 7. Storage and Transit Specifications ............................................................................16  
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1 Overview  
This chapter provides a general overview of the Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I.  
It consists of the following sections:  
• Summary of SAS RAID Controller Features  
• Benefits of Serial Attached SCSI (SAS)  
The Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Storage Adapter is a high-performance  
intelligent PCI Express* SAS RAID controller. It provides reliability, high performance,  
and fault-tolerant disk subsystem management. This is an ideal RAID solution for the  
internal storage needs of workgroup, departmental, and enterprise systems. The RAID  
Controller SRCSASPH16I offers a cost-effective way to implement RAID in a server for  
internal and external storage.  
The SAS controller allows you to use SATA and SAS hard disk drives in the same system,  
so you can take advantage of the benefits of each type of drive. The controller can connect  
up to eight drives directly and use expanders to connect to additional drives. See the ANSI  
SAS standard, version 1.0 specification for more information about the use of expanders.  
As the second generation PCI Express storage adapter, the RAID Controller  
SRCSASPH16I addresses the growing demand for increased data throughput and  
scalability requirements across midrange and enterprise-class server platforms. Simplified  
cabling between drives is an additional benefit.  
The optional Intel® RAID Smart Battery for cached data protection allows system  
builders to protect cached data during catastrophic system failures.  
Summary of SAS RAID Controller Features  
The Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I is an intelligent low-profile RAID adapter  
with:  
• An Intel® IOP333 I/O processor running at 500 MHz.  
• An LSI 1068 SAS (including SATA) controller.  
• 256 MB RAM.  
• Sixteen independent internal ports provided via four SFF8087 connectors.  
• Support for both enterprise-class SAS devices and desktop-class SATA drives.  
• Support for up to 122 SAS or SATA drives and 64 logical drives.  
• PCI Express* connector that fits into a x8 PCI Express slot capable of 2.5 Gbps per  
lane over PCI Express x1, or x16.  
• 3.0 Gbps point-to-point transfer rate.  
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Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Hardware Guide  
 
The SAS controller supports the ANSI Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) standard, version 1.0.  
In addition, the controller supports the Serial ATA (SATA) protocol defined by the Serial  
ATA specification, version 1.0a.T he SAS controller is a versatile controller that  
supporting both the SAS and SATA interfaces and provides the backbone of both server  
and high-end workstation environments.  
Protocols supported include:  
• Serial SCSI Protocol (SSP): Communication with other SAS devices.  
• SATA II Protocol: Communication with other SATA II devices.  
• Serial Management Protocol (SMP): Topology management information sharing with  
expanders.  
• Serial Tunneling Protocol (STP) support for SATA II through expander interfaces.  
Usability  
• Smaller, thinner cabling with serial point-to-point 3.0 Gbps data transfer rates.  
• Allows mixed connections to SAS or SATA targets.  
• Support for non disk devices and mixed capacity drives.  
• Support for intelligent XOR RAID levels 0, 1, 5, 6, 10, 50 and 60.  
• Dedicated or global hot spare with auto rebuild if an array drive fails.  
• User defined stripe size per drive (8, 16, 32, 64 (def), or 128 KB).  
• Advanced array configuration and management utilities that provide:  
— Online Capacity Expansion (OCE) adds space to existing drive or new drive.  
— Online RAID level migration (upgrade of RAID mode, may require OCE).  
— Drive migration.  
— Drive roaming.  
— No reboot necessary after expansion.  
• An upgradeable Flash ROM interface.  
• Allows for staggered spin up, hot plug, lower power consumption.  
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• User specified rebuild rate (% of system resources to use from 0-100%).  
Warning: Exceeding 50% rate may cause operating system errors caused by  
waiting for controller access.  
• Background operating mode can be set for rebuilds, consistency checks, initialization  
(auto restarting consistency check on redundant volumes), migration, OCE, and patrol  
read.  
Redundancy and Error Handling  
• Enclosure management support, including LEDs.  
• Activity and fault indicators per drive, port selector (dual-port drives).  
• Drive coercion (auto resizing to match existing disks).  
• Auto-detection of failed drives with transparent rebuild. Disk activity (I/O to the  
drive) must be present for a missing drive to be marked as failed.  
• Auto-resume on reboot of initialization or rebuild (must be enabled before virtual disk  
creation).  
• Smart initialization automatically checks consistency of virtual disks if there are five  
or more disks in a RAID 5 array which optimizes performance by enabling read-  
modify-write mode. RAID 5 arrays of only three or overdrives use peer read mode.  
• Dirty cache LED plus cache write to disk error reporting.  
• Smart Technology predicts failures of drives and electronic components.  
• Patrol Read checks drives and maps bad sectors.  
• Commands are retried at least four times.  
• Firmware provides best effort to recognize an error and recover from it if possible.  
• Failures are logged from controller and drive firmware, SMART monitor, SAF-TE  
controller.  
• Failures are logged in NVRAM, viewable from OS Event Log, Intel® RAID Web  
Console 2; CIM, LEDs, and via alarm.  
• Multiple cache options provide choice of speed, redundancy:  
— Write: The data written / (done) signal is returned when data is written to drive or  
only to cache:  
^
Write-back (default): Faster, because it since doesn't wait for the disk, but  
data will be lost if power is lost.  
^
Write-through: Slower, but ensures data is on the disk.  
— Read Ahead: Predicts the next read will be sequential and buffers this data into  
the cache:  
^
NonRead Ahead: Always reads from the drive after determining the exact  
location of each read.  
^
Adaptive Read Ahead: Will read ahead and cache data only if doing  
sequential reads.  
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— I/0 setting: Determines whether to read/write from cache to improve performance:  
^
^
Cache I/O: Writes to the cache and next read checks the cache first.  
Direct I/O: Never uses cache, all data goes from host to disk to host.  
• Redundancy through:  
— Configuration stored in nonvolatile RAM and on the drives (COD).  
— Hot swap support.  
— Optional battery backup for cache memory. Controller provides fast or trickle  
charges.  
SAS and SATA Features  
• Provides sixteen independent PHYs, each supporting 3.0 Gbps and 1.5 Gbps SAS and  
SATA data transfers.  
• Scalable interface that supports up to 16 directly attached SAS/SATA devices, 64  
logical devices, or 122 SAS devices via expanders.  
• Transfers data using SCSI information units.  
• Supports SSP to enable communication with other SAS devices.  
• Supports SMP to communicate topology management information.  
• Supports single PHY or wide ports consisting of 2, 3, or 4 PHY within a single quad  
port.  
• Allows addressing of multiple SATA targets through an expander if using SATA 2.0-  
compliant hard disk drives.  
• Allows multiple initiators to address a single target (in a fail-over configuration)  
through an expander.  
Online Capacity Expansion and RAID Level Migration Rules  
• Migration must occur to the same or larger capacity configuration.  
• Migration cannot occur if there is more than one virtual disk in a logical array.  
• Migration and OCE cannot be done on Spanned Arrays (RAID 10, 50).  
• Migrations supported are: RAID 1 to RAID 0, RAID 5 to RAID 0.  
• With OCE, migrations supported are RAID 0 to RAID 1, RAID 0 to RAID 5, RAID 1  
to RAID 5.  
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Operating System Support  
The RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I supports major operating systems, including:  
• Microsoft Windows Server 2008*, Microsoft Windows Server 2003*, and Microsoft  
Windows XP*  
• Red Hat* Enterprise Linux 4.0 and 5.0 (32 and 64 bit)  
• SuSe* Linux Enterprise Server 9 and 10 (32 and 64 bit)  
Note: The operating systems supported by this controller may not be supported by your server  
board. See the tested operating system list for your server board at  
operating system list for the RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I to make sure the RAID card  
supports your operating system.  
Beep Codes  
• Short beep, 1 second on, 1 second off: The array is degraded, but no data is lost  
• Long beep, 3 seconds on, 1 second off: The array has failed and data has been lost.  
• Short beep, 1 second on, 3 seconds off: Using hot spare in rebuild. The alarm will  
continue during the rebuild with a different sound at completion.  
To disable the alarm, choose Disable Alarm. To disable the alarm only until the next event  
or until the next power cycle, choose Silence Alarm. To enable the alarm, choose Enable  
Alarm.  
Benefits of Serial Attached SCSI (SAS)  
SAS is a serial, point-to-point, enterprise-level device interface that leverages the proven  
SCSI protocol set. SAS is a convergence of the advantages of SATA, SCSI, and FC, and is  
the future mainstay of the enterprise and high-end workstation storage markets. SAS  
offers a higher bandwidth per pin than parallel SCSI, and improves signal and data  
integrity.  
The SAS interface uses the proven SCSI command set to ensure reliable data transfers,  
while providing the connectivity and flexibility of point-to-point serial data transfers. The  
serial transmission of SCSI commands eliminates clock skew challenges. The SAS  
interface provides improved performance, simplified cabling, smaller connectors, lower  
pin count, and lower power requirements when compared to parallel SCSI.  
SAS controllers leverage a common electrical and physical connection interface that is  
compatible with Serial ATA technology. The SAS and SATA protocols use a thin, 7-wire  
connector instead of the 68-wire SCSI cable or 40-wire ATA cable. The SAS/SATA  
connector and cable are easier to manipulate, allow connections to smaller devices, and do  
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Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Hardware Guide  
 
not inhibit airflow. The point-to-point SATA architecture eliminates inherent difficulties  
created by the legacy ATA master-slave architecture, while maintaining compatibility with  
existing ATA firmware.  
Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Hardware Guide  
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®
2 Intel RAID Controller  
SRCSASPH16I  
Hardware Installation  
This chapter describes the procedures used to install the Intel® RAID Controller  
SRCSASPH16I with internal and external connectors.  
Requirements  
The following items are required to install a RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I:  
• An Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I.  
• A host system with an available x8 or x16 bi-directional PCI Express* slot.  
• The Resource CD, which contains drivers and documentation.  
• The cables provided with the RAID controller.  
• SAS or SATA hard disk drives.  
Intel Corporation strongly recommends using an uninterruptible power supply (UPS).  
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Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Hardware Guide  
 
Installation  
1. Power off the computer and all drives, enclosures, and system components. Remove  
the power cord from the computer.  
2. Remove the chassis cover and access the PCI Express add-in card slots. See your  
server chassis documentation for instructions.  
3. Align the controller’s connector with a x8 or x16 PCI Express* slot on the server  
board.  
4. Press down gently but firmly to ensure that the card is properly seated in the slot, as  
shown in Figure 1. Secure the bracket to the computer chassis.  
Bracket Screw  
Pr  
ess  
Her  
e
Pr  
ess  
Her  
e
Edge of  
Main Board  
AF002644  
Figure 1. Inserting the Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I into a  
PCI Express* Slot  
5. Connect the provided internal cables into the adapter using the 4-port combined end.  
Make sure the controller and cables are properly attached.  
Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Hardware Guide  
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— Plug the cable into connector at the inside edge of the adapter.  
Figure 2. Connecting the Disk Drive  
Note: System throughput problems can occur if using SAS cables that do not come with the  
RAID controller and that are not the correct type. To minimize the potential for problems:  
- Use cables no longer than ten meters for SAS and one meter for SATA. It is better to use  
the shortest possible cables. The cable length should be reduced by about one foot (.33  
meters) if using a backplane.  
- You may connect one device per SATA/SAS cable either as a device or as an expander.  
- Route SAS cables carefully.  
- Use only “straight” SAS cables, not “cross-over” SAS cables.  
6. Replace components you needed to remove to access the PCI Express add-in card  
slot. See your server chassis documentation for instructions.  
7. Reinstall the chassis cover and reconnect the power cord(s). See your server chassis  
documentation for instructions.  
8. Reconnect any peripheral items you needed to disconnect.  
9. Turn the power on to the server and hard drives. As the server powers up, listen to be  
sure that the SAS and SATA devices are powered up before or at the same time as the  
computer boots.  
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Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Hardware Guide  
 
10. Watch the boot process until you see a BIOS message to inform you of the key  
combination to press to enter the RAID BIOS Console. It will look similar to the  
following message:  
Press <CTRL><G> to run BIOS Console 2.  
This message will time out after several seconds and pass the option to get into the BIOS  
Console.  
The firmware takes several seconds to initialize and will then display the RAID Controller  
SRCSASPH16I number and firmware version. The numbering of the controllers follows  
the PCI slot scanning order used by the server board.  
Connecting the Cables  
This section describes the cables used on the SAS controller and provides instructions for  
connecting SAS and SATA hard disk drives to the SAS RAID controller.  
Note: Use only “straight” SAS cables, not “cross-over” SAS cables.  
A SATA connector consists of a signal connector and a power connector. The SAS  
connector adds a bridge (primary physical link) between the signal connector and the  
power connector. This means SAS backplane connectors can accept either drive type, but  
SATA backplane connectors can ONLY accept SATA drives. Figure 3 shows these  
connectors.  
SAS Primary  
Physical Link  
Serial Att ached SCSI  
Power  
SAS Backplane  
Recept acle Connector  
SAS Primary  
Physical Link  
Power  
Serial A TA  
SAS Secondary  
Physical Link  
Power  
SATA/SAS  
Primary  
Physical Link  
SATA  
Physical Link  
Note: SA TA backplane connectors  
will NOT accept SAS drives  
Figure 3. SAS and SATA Plugs and SAS Backplane Connector  
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Configuring the Storage Adapter  
After performing the Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I installation, you must  
configure the storage adapter and install the operating system driver. The Software Users  
Guide instructs you on the configuration options and how to set them on your RAID  
Controller SRCSASPH16I, and provides detailed installation instructions for operating  
system drivers.  
Replacing a Controller  
Perform the following steps to replace a failed controller.  
1. Power off the computer and all drives, enclosures, and system components. Remove  
the power cord.  
2. Remove the chassis cover and access the PCI Express add-in card slots. See your  
server documentation for instructions.  
3. Disconnect the cable(s) from the RAID controller.  
4. Remove the failed controller from the system.  
5. Insert the replacement controller into the system. Follow the instructions under  
Installation.  
Resolving a Configuration Mismatch  
If a replacement RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I has a previous configuration, a  
message displays during POST stating that there is a configuration mismatch. A  
configuration mismatch occurs when the configuration data in the NVRAM and the hard  
disk drives are different. You need to update the configuration data in the NVRAM with  
the data from the hard disk drive.  
Perform the following steps to resolve the mismatch.  
1. Press <Ctrl> <G> when prompted during the boot process to access the BIOS  
Configuration Utility.  
2. Select Configure—>View/Add Configuration. This allows viewing of the NVRAM  
and drive configurations.  
3. Select the configuration on disk because the drives contain the correct configuration.  
4. Press <Esc> and select YESto update the NVRAM.  
5. Exit and reboot.  
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Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Hardware Guide  
 
®
3 Intel RAID Controller  
SRCSASPH16I Characteristics  
This chapter describes the characteristics of the Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I.  
Figure 4 displays the connectors and headers on the controller and Table 1 describes them.  
Figure 4. Card Layout  
s
Table 1. Jumper Descriptions  
Jumper  
Description  
Type  
Comments  
Out-of-band enclosure management (SAF-TE).  
2
J1  
Keyed I C  
3-pin  
connector  
connector  
J2  
J3  
J4  
Port activity LED  
header (8-15)  
8x2 header LED signal for activity per port for 8-15 ports.  
Drive Fault LED  
header (8-15)  
8x2 header LED signal support for front panel drive fault per  
port (8-15).  
Internal SAS/SATA SFF8087  
port connector,  
Connection to SAS/SATA devices.  
ports 12-15  
J5  
Internal SAS/SATA SFF8087  
port connector,  
Connection to SAS/SATA devices.  
ports 8-11  
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Table 1. Jumper Descriptions  
Jumper  
Description  
Type  
Comments  
J6  
Dirty Cache LED  
Header  
SFF8087  
For connection to enclusure LED. When lit,  
indicates the data in the cache has not been  
written to disk.  
J9  
Internal SAS/SATA SFF8087  
port connector,  
Connection to SAS/SATA devices.  
ports 4-7  
J11  
Mode 0 select  
2-pin  
connector  
No jumper is required for normal operation.  
Setting the controller to Mode 0 holds the I/O  
processor in reset for firmware recovery.  
• "No Jumper = Normal operational mode.  
• "Jumper = Mode 0 for firmware recovery,  
requires a firmware recovery utility and  
firmware image file.  
J12  
J13  
Universal  
Asynchronous  
Receiver/  
4-pin  
connector  
For factory and debug use.  
Transmitter (UART)  
Internal SAS/SATA SFF8087  
port connector,  
Connection to SAS/SATA devices.  
ports 0-3  
J14  
J15  
J16  
Drive Fault LED  
Header (0-7)  
8x2 header LED signal support for front panel drive fault per  
port (0-7).  
Port activity LED  
header (0-7)  
8x2 header LED signal for activity per port for 0-7 ports.  
®
Intel RAID Smart  
20-pin  
connector  
Cable connector for the extrernal battery pack.  
This connector is located on the back side of the  
board.  
Battery Connector  
2
J17  
J18  
Keyed I C  
3-pin  
connector  
Out-of-band enclosure management (SES2).  
connector  
2
Keyed I C  
3-pin  
Out-of-band enclosure management (SES2).  
connector  
connector  
Technical Specifications  
The design and implementation of the Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I minimizes  
electromagnetic emissions, susceptibility to radio frequency energy, and the effects of  
electrostatic discharge. See the appendices for regulatory marks and certifications.  
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Table 2 lists the specifications for the Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I.  
Table 2. Specifications  
®
Specification  
Processor  
Intel RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I  
®
Intel 80333 I/O processor at 500 MHz  
(PCI Controller)  
Operating Voltage  
Card Size  
+3.3 V, +12 V  
Full-height PCI Express* adapter card size (6.6 inches by 4.2 inches)  
PCI Express* Rev 1.0A, x8 lane width 2.5 Gbps  
Array Interface  
to Host  
SAS Bus Speed  
SAS Controller  
3 GBps per port, point-to-point  
One LSI SAS 1068 controller  
SAS / SATA Ports  
4x4 internal ports. Supports 122 SAS/SATA devices using expanders, 64  
virtual disks.  
Cache  
Integrated 256 MB RAM, optional battery backup  
4 MB in reflashable flash ROM  
Firmware  
Compatible Devices  
Mixed capacity, mixed SATA and SAS in different enclosures; non-disk  
devices, including expanders.  
Cabling  
Small, thin cables do not restrict airflow; shared connectors for multiple  
drive types.  
Redundant  
32 Kb NVRAM and config on disk (COD) store RAID configuration.  
Configuration  
2
Enclosure  
I C out-of-band, SES2 in-band, SAF-TE (LEDs)  
Management  
Array Performance Features  
Table 3 shows the RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I array performance features.  
Table 3. Array Performance Features  
®
Specification  
Intel RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I  
PCI Express* Host  
Data Transfer Rate  
2.5 Gigabit/s per lane  
3 Gigabit/s per lane  
26 elements  
Drive Data Transfer  
Rate  
Maximum  
Scatter/Gathers  
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Table 3. Array Performance Features  
®
Specification  
Intel RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I  
Maximum Size of I/O 6.4 Mbytes in 64 Kbyte stripes  
Requests  
Maximum Queue  
Tags per Drive  
As many as the drive can accept  
Stripe Sizes  
8, 16, 32, 64, or 128 Kbyte  
255  
Maximum Number  
of Concurrent  
Commands  
Support for Multiple  
Initiators  
Yes  
Flexibility  
Drive migration, RAID level migration; drive roaming online capacity  
expansion, without reboot  
Background Services Rebuild, consistency check, initialization, migration, OCE, and patrol read  
Cache Options  
Write-back or write-through, read ahead, adaptive read ahead, non-read  
ahead, cache I/O or direct I/O  
Fault Tolerance  
Table 4 shows the RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I fault tolerance features.  
Table 4. Fault Tolerance Features  
®
Specification  
Self Monitoring  
Intel RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I  
Detects up to 70% of all predictable disk drive failures and monitors the  
Analysis and Reporting internal performance of all motors, heads, and drive electronics.  
Technology (SMART)  
support  
®
Optional Battery  
Backup  
Intel RAID Smart Battery cache backup. Trickle / fast charging.  
Charge indicator.  
Drive Replacement  
Auto detection of hard drive failure; hot-plug, hot-swap. User set rebuild  
rate.  
Drive Rebuild Using  
Hot Spares  
Automatic at drive failure; dedicated per array; global per array; auto-  
resume of initialization or rebuild on reboot  
Error Checking and  
Indication  
Parity generation and checking, automatic consistency checking; patrol  
reads; activity and fault LEDs  
Power Conservation  
Staggered spin-up, lower power requirements.  
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Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Hardware Guide  
 
Electrical Characteristics  
This section provides the power requirements for the RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I.  
Table 5 lists the maximum power requirements.  
Table 5. Maxium Power Requirements  
Storage Adapter  
SRCSASPH16I  
PCI Express* +12V  
PCI Express* +3.3V  
5.96W  
18.85W without battery  
charging; 21.85W with battery  
charging  
Thermal and Atmospheric Characteristics  
Table 6. Environmental Specifications  
Specification  
Description  
Operating temperature 0 degrees Centigrade to 55 degrees Centigrade. (The maximum  
operating temperature decreases to +45 degrees Centigrade when the  
®
Intel Remote Smart Battery AXXRSBBU3 is installed)  
Relative humidity range 5% to 90% noncondensing  
Maximum dew point  
temperature  
32 degrees Centigrade  
Airflow  
200 linear feet per minute (LFPM)  
346,879 hours at 40 degrees Celsius  
MTBF (electrical  
components)  
Table 7. Storage and Transit Specifications  
Specification  
Description  
Temperature range  
without battery  
-30 degrees Centigrade to +80 degrees Centigrade (dry bulb)  
Temperature range  
with battery  
0 degrees Centigrade to 45 degrees Centigrade (dry bulb)  
Relative humidity range 5% to 90 % noncondensing  
Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Hardware Guide  
16  
 
Safety Characteristics  
The RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I meets or exceeds the requirements of UL  
flammability rating 94 V0. Each bare board is also marked with the supplier name or  
trademark, type, and UL flammability rating. For the boards installed in a PCI Express*  
bus slot, all voltages are lower than the SELV 42.4 V limit.  
The design and implementation minimizes electromagnetic emissions, susceptibility to  
radio frequency energy, and the effects of electrostatic discharge. The adapter carries the  
CE mark, C-tick mark, FCC self-certification logo, Canadian compliance statement,  
Korean MIC, Taiwan BSMI, and Japan VCCI. The adapter meets the requirements of  
CISPR Class B. Both the adapter and battery are CCSA C22.2, No. 60950-1, UL60950-1  
First Edition listed accessory, UL filenumber E257743.  
17  
Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Hardware Guide  
 
A Glossary of Terms and  
Abbreviations  
BIOS  
Basic Input/Output System. Software that provides basic read/write capability.  
Usually kept as firmware (ROM based). The system BIOS on a server board is used  
to boot and control the system. The BIOS on your host adapter acts as an extension  
of the system BIOS.  
Configuration  
Device Driver  
The way a computer is setup; the combined hardware components (computer,  
monitor, keyboard, and peripheral devices) that make up a computer system, and the  
software settings that allow the hardware components to communicate with each  
other.  
A program that allows a microprocessor (through the operating system) to direct the  
operation of a peripheral device.  
Domain  
Validation  
A software procedure in which a host queries a device to determine its ability to  
communicate at the negotiated data rate.  
EEPROM  
Electronically Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory. A memory chip  
typically used to store configuration information. It provides stable storage for long  
periods without electricity and can be reprogrammed. See NVRAM.  
External SAS  
Device  
A SAS device installed outside the computer cabinet. These devices are connected  
together using specific types of shielded cables.  
Host  
The computer system in which a storage adapter is installed. It uses the storage  
adapter to transfer information to and from devices attached to the SCSI bus.  
Host Adapter  
Board (HAB)  
A circuit board or integrated circuit that provides a device connection to the  
computer system.  
Internal SAS  
Device  
A SAS device installed inside the computer cabinet. These devices are connected  
together using an unshielded ribbon cable.  
Main Memory  
The part of a computer’s memory which is directly accessible by the CPU (usually  
synonymous with RAM).  
NVRAM  
Non-volatile Random Access Memory. An EEPROM (Electronically Erasable  
Read-Only Memory chip) used to store configuration information. See EEPROM.  
Peripheral  
Devices  
A piece of hardware (such as a video monitor, disk drive, printer, or CD-ROM) used  
with a computer and under the computer’s control. SCSI peripherals are controlled  
through a SAS Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I.  
Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Hardware Guide  
18  
 
SAS  
Serial Attached SCSI. A serial, point-to-point, enterprise-level device interface that  
leverages the proven SCSI protocol set. The SAS interface provides improved  
performance, simplified cabling, smaller connections, lower pin count, and lower  
power requirements when compared to parallel SCSI. SAS controllers leverage a  
common electrical and physical connection interface that is compatible with Serial  
ATA. The SAS controllers support the ANSI Serial Attached SCSI standard, version  
1.0. In addition, the controller supports the Serial ATA (SATA) protocol defined by  
the Serial ATA specification, version 1.0a. Each port on the SAS RAID controller  
supports SAS and SATA devices.  
SAS Device  
Any device that conforms to the SAS standard and is attached to the SAS bus by a  
SAS cable. This includes SAS storage adapters (host adapters) and SAS peripherals.  
19  
Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I Hardware Guide  
 

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