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RAID controllers typically simulate a (logical) disk for each array of (physical) disks to the OS. Access to SMART functionality relies on ATA or SCSI pass through I/O controls providing direct access to each physical disk. But the standard I/O controls available are usually not designed to make this distinction between logical and physical disks. Therefore, smartmontools has to use vendor specific I/O controls. Support for disks behind RAID controllers is highly dependent on both platform and controller type.
RAID-Controller | Directive | Supported in OS | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Linux | FreeBSD | MS-Windows | NetBSD/ OpenBSD |
Solaris | MacOS/ Darwin |
||
3ware SATA RAID controller | -d 3ware,N | Yes 1 | Yes 2 | Yes 3 | ? | ? | ? |
Areca SATA RAID controller | -d areca,N | Yes 4 | No | No | ? | ? | ? |
HighPoint RocketRAID SATA RAID controller | -d hpt,L/M/N | Yes 5 | Yes 6 | No | ? | ? | ? |
CCISS (HP/Compaq Smart Array Controller) | -d cciss,N | Yes 7 | Yes | No | ? | ? | ? |
LSI MegaRAID SAS RAID controller Dell PERC 5/i,6/i controller |
-d megaraid,N | Yes 8 | No | No | ? | ? | ? |
See the notes below and the INSTALL file for information about kernel and driver requirements on your platform. Also consult the man pages for controller specific smartmontools options or directives.