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Summary
Product:
RocketRAID 1742
Vendor:
HighPoint Technologies
Tested operating systems:
CentOS, Slackware Linux
Most recent version of this submission:
RocketRAID 1742
Average Rating:
Tagged as:
RocketRAID
Submit a new result for this product
2008-10-30 00:13:30 - Operating System/Rating: CentOS
2009-01-07 23:48:25 - Operating System/Rating: Slackware Linux
Anonymous
Post License:
GNU LGPL
Post License:
GNU LGPL
We did not have success with this RAID controller.
The 1742 is a fakeraid which offloads most of its processing to the CPU. The people who worked on the project before me tried using the RAID controller on Mandravia and using the rpms supplied by Highpoint. The system would lock up during boot up. They put it on the back burner until I took over the project.
I used Slackware 12.1 and compilied the Highpoint supplied drivers without any errors. I could not configure a RAID using the cli tool. I could see the drives and initialize them. However, I could not put them into a RAID. Whenever I tried, the audio alarm would go off as soon as the RAID was initialized and say the drives had failed. It worked fine when I pulled out the card and drives, configured them in a Window's box, and returned them to the slackware box, they would work; but could not create a second RAID.
I gave up on Slackware and installed FreeBSD since Highpoint supplies pre-compilied binaries for FreeBSD. It worked without a hitch on FreeBSD.
My advise is to skip this one. Either use mdadm that comes with most Linux distributions and create a software RAID. Or, use a real RAID, not the RAID's equivelent of the winmodem.
The 1742 is a fakeraid which offloads most of its processing to the CPU. The people who worked on the project before me tried using the RAID controller on Mandravia and using the rpms supplied by Highpoint. The system would lock up during boot up. They put it on the back burner until I took over the project.
I used Slackware 12.1 and compilied the Highpoint supplied drivers without any errors. I could not configure a RAID using the cli tool. I could see the drives and initialize them. However, I could not put them into a RAID. Whenever I tried, the audio alarm would go off as soon as the RAID was initialized and say the drives had failed. It worked fine when I pulled out the card and drives, configured them in a Window's box, and returned them to the slackware box, they would work; but could not create a second RAID.
I gave up on Slackware and installed FreeBSD since Highpoint supplies pre-compilied binaries for FreeBSD. It worked without a hitch on FreeBSD.
My advise is to skip this one. Either use mdadm that comes with most Linux distributions and create a software RAID. Or, use a real RAID, not the RAID's equivelent of the winmodem.
Post License:
GNU LGPL
Open source drivers installed
http://www.highpoint-tech.com/BIOS_Driver/rr1740/Linux/rr174x-linux-src-v2.1-080710-1311.tar.gz
I had issues with this card whilst the sata_mv kernel module was loaded. Either remove
/lib/modules/`uname -r`/kernel/drivers/ata/sata_mv.ko or
Modify /etc/init.d/hptdriver like so
#Unload sas_mv before loading rr174
rmmod sata_mv
modprobe rr174x