Install Esxi Software Raid Program
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Description Type OS Version Date Combined download for multiple operating systems (6.12). Software Applications Windows 8. Windows 7. Windows Vista. 6 more 16.05.04.00 Latest 8/28/2017 Supports Intel® RAID controllers using SAS software stack (7.701.04.00). Drivers Windows Server 2016.
Windows® 10. Windows 8. Windows Server 2012. 7.701.04.00 Latest 7/7/2017 Command line utility to check status and manage the controller. Software Applications OS Independent 1.21.06 Latest 5/25/2017 Command line utility version 2.03.03.s6 to query status and manage a RAID controller. Software Applications OS Independent 2.03.03.s6 Latest 4/3/2017 Supports Intel® RAID controllers using MR software stack (6.713.05.00). Drivers Windows Server 2016.
Windows® 10. Windows 8.
Windows Server 2012. 6.713.05.00 Latest 2/27/2017 Supports Intel® RAID Controllers, Intel® Integrated RAID, ITIR RAID products, and Intel® Embedded Server RAID Technology II (15.11.00.13). Software Applications Linux. 15.11.00.13 Latest 9/23/2015 This utility supports the Intel® RAID Controller, Intel® Integrated RAID, Intel ITIR RAID products and Intel Embedded Server RAID Technology II. Software Applications Solaris.
Esxi Raid Configuration
15.05.01.00 Latest 9/23/2015 SAS Hardware RAID Driver for Solaris. 10 & 11 Drivers Solaris. 6.607.02.00 Latest 5/8/2015 This utility is a command line utility version 8.07.16 that can be used to check status and manage the RAID controller.
Software Applications SUSE Linux. 8.07.16 Latest 12/9/2014 This utility is a command line utility version 8.07.15 that can be used to check status and manage the RAID controller. Drivers OS Independent 8.07.15 Latest 3/14/2014 Hardware RAID Firmware Flash Update for DOS, Windows., Unix., Linux. and UEFI for 6GB SAS RAID controllers using the 2108 ROC Firmware OS Independent 12.14.0-0185 Latest 2/7/2014 Contains the SAS HW RAID driver for VMWare. ESX 4 Drivers VMware.
6.602.05.00.1 Latest 1/31/2014 This download contains the RAID management utility version 0.32 for VMWare ESXi. 5.
Drivers VMware. 0.32 Latest This package contains the Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) Hardware RAID Driver for SuSE. Linux. Drivers SUSE Linux. 4.33-1 Latest 10/5/2010 Contains the SAS HW RAID driver for SCO. UnixWare.
& SCO. OpenServer. Drivers OpenServer. 4.05 Latest 3/1/2010 Contains the SAS HW RAID driver for Netware. 6.5 SP6 Drivers NetWare. 1.12.00 Latest 2/26/2010.
Hi guys, I'm after picking some VMWare geeks brains! I am currently in the process of setting up a cloud based dedicated server for a local company.
I am currently running server 2012 R2 on the free vision of VMware. The server is running x3 300GB SSD drives. I am wanting to create a RAID1 (or RAID5) configuration for redundancy purposes.
Now, our cloud based provider does support hardware RAID which is perfect however, the cost monthly is pretty much double. I do appreciate that this is the best option and if I could it would be the one I would go for, but its just too much to spend with the budget we have until the company expands anyway! I know that ESXi doesn't support software RAIDs but can anybody think of some alternatives? - even if it is some kind of replication that can be switched over manually if a drive fails? Running ESXi on the cheap is a really bad way to do virtualization. Not only are you spending your money on a third-party provider, but you've selected NOT the cheapest server option, but perhaps the worst one.
Raid On Vmware
If you'd signed up for a virtual server instead of a physical one, you would have your cloud and data security as well. All you'd be missing was ESXi, which is really middleware, not your destination (well, maybe personally it is. You want to play with it, I gather). Anyway, no RAID means that when a disk dies, your whole installation dies. Now, my wacky suggestion. This will work IF you can tolerate a bit of down time, if you can tolerate recovery with an RPO in days, rather than minutes or hours.
You'll also need to be able to boot your server in a particular way. Create at least two instances of ESXi on your server. Keep your three disks separate. Install ESXi on two or three of them. Separate installations. Create your VMs on one installation and periodically copy/export them to one or both of the other installations.
This is harebrained, but it will work IF you can boot the server off the second or third drives when the need arises. It's also a lot of work, copying VMs from the primary installation to the secondary, etc. And those VMs will be out of date to some extent if you need to spin them up. I would so totally rethink what you're doing, what you have and what you signed up for.