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-   -   Windows XP Driver for Compaq 64 Bit Fibre Channel Adapter (http://www.hardwarebanter.com/showthread.php?t=115504)

Will December 25th 05 07:44 AM

Windows XP Driver for Compaq 64 Bit Fibre Channel Adapter
 
Where is the Windows XP / Windows 2003 driver for the Compaq 64 Bit Fibre
Channel Adapter, Compaq spare part 161290-001 and option part 120186-b21?

If no Windows XP driver exists, what recent vintage Compaq FCA has Windows
XP support and also works with the 4100 series Compaq Fibre Channel Arrays?

--
Will



NuTCrAcKeR December 25th 05 09:16 AM

Windows XP Driver for Compaq 64 Bit Fibre Channel Adapter
 
Nope, and none.

FCAL is considered a server-only kind-of-thing

I am afraid you are SOL ....

- LC

PS: if i'm wrong, someone let me know.

thx ...


"Will" wrote in message
...
Where is the Windows XP / Windows 2003 driver for the Compaq 64 Bit Fibre
Channel Adapter, Compaq spare part 161290-001 and option part 120186-b21?

If no Windows XP driver exists, what recent vintage Compaq FCA has Windows
XP support and also works with the 4100 series Compaq Fibre Channel
Arrays?

--
Will





Will December 25th 05 11:55 AM

Windows XP Driver for Compaq 64 Bit Fibre Channel Adapter
 
Is there a Windows 2003 driver then? Windows XP and Windows 2003 use the
same device driver structure. They are basically the same product with
somewhat different facades on the same user tools and different default
configurations. But the core OS, services, and applets are the same.

If there is a Windows 2003 driver, then where is it located?

--
Will


"NuTCrAcKeR" wrote in message
...
Nope, and none.

FCAL is considered a server-only kind-of-thing

I am afraid you are SOL ....

- LC

PS: if i'm wrong, someone let me know.

thx ...


"Will" wrote in message
...
Where is the Windows XP / Windows 2003 driver for the Compaq 64 Bit

Fibre
Channel Adapter, Compaq spare part 161290-001 and option part

120186-b21?

If no Windows XP driver exists, what recent vintage Compaq FCA has

Windows
XP support and also works with the 4100 series Compaq Fibre Channel
Arrays?

--
Will







NuTCrAcKeR December 25th 05 05:01 PM

Windows XP Driver for Compaq 64 Bit Fibre Channel Adapter
 
check a server type the has 64bit slots, and windows 2003 support ... like
the ML370.

2003 drivers "might" work under XP, but i would expect a lot of trouble
getting it to work.

- LC

"Will" wrote in message
...
Is there a Windows 2003 driver then? Windows XP and Windows 2003 use the
same device driver structure. They are basically the same product with
somewhat different facades on the same user tools and different default
configurations. But the core OS, services, and applets are the same.

If there is a Windows 2003 driver, then where is it located?

--
Will


"NuTCrAcKeR" wrote in message
...
Nope, and none.

FCAL is considered a server-only kind-of-thing

I am afraid you are SOL ....

- LC

PS: if i'm wrong, someone let me know.

thx ...


"Will" wrote in message
...
Where is the Windows XP / Windows 2003 driver for the Compaq 64 Bit

Fibre
Channel Adapter, Compaq spare part 161290-001 and option part

120186-b21?

If no Windows XP driver exists, what recent vintage Compaq FCA has

Windows
XP support and also works with the 4100 series Compaq Fibre Channel
Arrays?

--
Will









Will December 25th 05 08:58 PM

Windows XP Driver for Compaq 64 Bit Fibre Channel Adapter
 
That was a great strategy, and everything works! The Windows 2003 drivers
for the older fibre channel storage card installed immediately, and without
problem, on Windows XP. In this case the driver doesn't say 64-bit
explicitly in the title, so I'm thinking the install may have put a driver
for the 32-bit card there, but I'm thankful at this point to have any
support. In my experience, the only times that drivers refuse to
cross-install between the two is when a company - out of ignorance or bad
marketing - makes a business decision to prevent the installation. I'm
sure that Microsoft sabotages many of its server installs and probably
refuses to let them run on Windows XP. But it's clear why they do this:
they have an economic self interest in making you spend more money for a
server OS.

Now I'm setting up hard links from folders on the boot volume to the fibre
channel storage system, and that works well also. I use the linkd command
for this, and because Windows XP shares the same core OS and file system
with Windows 2003, you can usually do some very sophisticated things with
the file system's organization that you would normally only expect to find
on a server. In my case this system is a home system, and I'm installing
Microsoft Flight Simulator on a SCSI drive, but I'm secretly mapping the
directory that contains thousands of terrain files onto a fibre channel
storage system with a four disk RAID 5 using the linkd command. Loading
those terrain files is extremely I/O intensive, involving sometimes the
loading of 2000 files in just 30 seconds. I can leave the fibre channel
array off during the week to save energy, and when I do need access to it I
can simply turn it on and reacquire the volume.

Now I just need to find the registry hack to turn on drive mirroring in
Windows XP, and it will be more than sufficient for a high end home system.

--
Will


"NuTCrAcKeR" wrote in message
...
check a server type the has 64bit slots, and windows 2003 support ... like
the ML370.

2003 drivers "might" work under XP, but i would expect a lot of trouble
getting it to work.

- LC

"Will" wrote in message
...
Is there a Windows 2003 driver then? Windows XP and Windows 2003 use

the
same device driver structure. They are basically the same product with
somewhat different facades on the same user tools and different default
configurations. But the core OS, services, and applets are the same.

If there is a Windows 2003 driver, then where is it located?

--
Will


"NuTCrAcKeR" wrote in message
...
Nope, and none.

FCAL is considered a server-only kind-of-thing

I am afraid you are SOL ....

- LC

PS: if i'm wrong, someone let me know.

thx ...


"Will" wrote in message
...
Where is the Windows XP / Windows 2003 driver for the Compaq 64 Bit

Fibre
Channel Adapter, Compaq spare part 161290-001 and option part

120186-b21?

If no Windows XP driver exists, what recent vintage Compaq FCA has

Windows
XP support and also works with the 4100 series Compaq Fibre Channel
Arrays?

--
Will




NuTCrAcKeR December 26th 05 12:25 AM

Windows XP Driver for Compaq 64 Bit Fibre Channel Adapter
 
4 Attachment(s)
glad the other method worked for you. native HP drivers dont often denote
the difference between a 32bit and 64bit card. they just say StorageWorks
Fibre Controller /P, or something like that. I dont have any 64bit cards,
but I have several 32bit cards and a bunch of RA4000's.


Now I just need to find the registry hack to turn on drive mirroring in
Windows XP, and it will be more than sufficient for a high end home
system.


Why a reg hack? Use DiskManagement to setup the mirrored volume.

To create a mirrored volume

Using the Windows interface

1.. Open Computer Management (Local).
2.. In the console tree, click Disk Management.
Where?

a.. Computer Management (Local)
b.. Storage
c.. Disk Management
3.. Right-click the unallocated space on one of the dynamic disks on which
you want to create the mirrored volume, and then click New Volume.
4.. In the New Volume Wizard, click Next, click Mirrored, and then follow
the instructions on your screen.
Notes

a.. To open Computer Management, click Start, and then click Control
Panel. Double-click Administrative Tools, and then double-click Computer
Management.
b.. You must be logged on as an administrator or a member of the
Administrators group in order to complete this procedure. If your computer
is connected to a network, network policy settings might also prevent you
from completing this procedure.
c.. You can create mirrored volumes only on computers running Windows 2000
Server, Windows 2000 Advanced Server, or Windows 2000 Datacenter Server.
d.. You need two dynamic disks to create a mirrored volume.
e.. You can mirror an existing simple volume.
f.. Mirrored volumes are fault tolerant and use RAID-1, which provides
redundancy by creating two identical copies of a volume.
g.. Mirrored volumes cannot be extended or striped.
h.. Both copies (mirrors) of the mirrored volume share the same drive
letter.

- LC











Will December 26th 05 04:38 AM

Windows XP Driver for Compaq 64 Bit Fibre Channel Adapter
 
If you read your own instructions, they clearly say that mirroring is only
available on the server product. On every Windows XP I have ever seen, the
"Add Mirror" menu item on Disk Manager is greyed out. Supposedly you need
to modify some registry entry under XP in order to enable mirroring.

--
Will


"NuTCrAcKeR" wrote in message
...
Why a reg hack? Use DiskManagement to setup the mirrored volume.

To create a mirrored volume

Using the Windows interface

1.. Open Computer Management (Local).
2.. In the console tree, click Disk Management.
Where?

a.. Computer Management (Local)
b.. Storage
c.. Disk Management
3.. Right-click the unallocated space on one of the dynamic disks on

which
you want to create the mirrored volume, and then click New Volume.
4.. In the New Volume Wizard, click Next, click Mirrored, and then

follow
the instructions on your screen.
Notes

a.. To open Computer Management, click Start, and then click Control
Panel. Double-click Administrative Tools, and then double-click Computer
Management.
b.. You must be logged on as an administrator or a member of the
Administrators group in order to complete this procedure. If your computer
is connected to a network, network policy settings might also prevent you
from completing this procedure.
c.. You can create mirrored volumes only on computers running Windows

2000
Server, Windows 2000 Advanced Server, or Windows 2000 Datacenter Server.
d.. You need two dynamic disks to create a mirrored volume.
e.. You can mirror an existing simple volume.
f.. Mirrored volumes are fault tolerant and use RAID-1, which provides
redundancy by creating two identical copies of a volume.
g.. Mirrored volumes cannot be extended or striped.
h.. Both copies (mirrors) of the mirrored volume share the same drive
letter.

- LC






NuTCrAcKeR December 26th 05 05:09 AM

Windows XP Driver for Compaq 64 Bit Fibre Channel Adapter
 
Yes, I know. I posted that to illustrate that you cant do it on XP. The
workstation products used to be able to do simple stripes and mirrors. im
rather suprised they dropped the support for it. In the meanwhile, use a
hardware based RAID controller. Hardware is always better than software, in
my opinion.

I wipped out my googfing and went to work. I didnt find anything, and i
doubt it would be a simple as a registry tweak.

- LC

"Will" wrote in message
...
If you read your own instructions, they clearly say that mirroring is only
available on the server product. On every Windows XP I have ever seen,
the
"Add Mirror" menu item on Disk Manager is greyed out. Supposedly you need
to modify some registry entry under XP in order to enable mirroring.

--
Will


"NuTCrAcKeR" wrote in message
...
Why a reg hack? Use DiskManagement to setup the mirrored volume.

To create a mirrored volume

Using the Windows interface

1.. Open Computer Management (Local).
2.. In the console tree, click Disk Management.
Where?

a.. Computer Management (Local)
b.. Storage
c.. Disk Management
3.. Right-click the unallocated space on one of the dynamic disks on

which
you want to create the mirrored volume, and then click New Volume.
4.. In the New Volume Wizard, click Next, click Mirrored, and then

follow
the instructions on your screen.
Notes

a.. To open Computer Management, click Start, and then click Control
Panel. Double-click Administrative Tools, and then double-click Computer
Management.
b.. You must be logged on as an administrator or a member of the
Administrators group in order to complete this procedure. If your
computer
is connected to a network, network policy settings might also prevent you
from completing this procedure.
c.. You can create mirrored volumes only on computers running Windows

2000
Server, Windows 2000 Advanced Server, or Windows 2000 Datacenter Server.
d.. You need two dynamic disks to create a mirrored volume.
e.. You can mirror an existing simple volume.
f.. Mirrored volumes are fault tolerant and use RAID-1, which provides
redundancy by creating two identical copies of a volume.
g.. Mirrored volumes cannot be extended or striped.
h.. Both copies (mirrors) of the mirrored volume share the same drive
letter.

- LC








Will December 26th 05 08:43 AM

Windows XP Driver for Compaq 64 Bit Fibre Channel Adapter
 
I found the article that talks about how to make RAID-5 on Windows XP work,
and I assume once you did that tweak you would be able to do mirroring as
well.

http://www.tomshardware.com/2004/11/...pen/index.html

--
Will

"NuTCrAcKeR" wrote in message
...
Yes, I know. I posted that to illustrate that you cant do it on XP. The
workstation products used to be able to do simple stripes and mirrors. im
rather suprised they dropped the support for it. In the meanwhile, use a
hardware based RAID controller. Hardware is always better than software,

in
my opinion.

I wipped out my googfing and went to work. I didnt find anything, and i
doubt it would be a simple as a registry tweak.

- LC




Nut Cracker December 26th 05 01:28 PM

Windows XP Driver for Compaq 64 Bit Fibre Channel Adapter
 
interesting ... i would still prefer a hardware based solution. Just out of
curiosity, if your primary drive were to fail under the mirror, do you know
what you would need to do to boot the system again ?

- LC

"Will" wrote in message
...
I found the article that talks about how to make RAID-5 on Windows XP work,
and I assume once you did that tweak you would be able to do mirroring as
well.

http://www.tomshardware.com/2004/11/...pen/index.html

--
Will

"NuTCrAcKeR" wrote in message
...
Yes, I know. I posted that to illustrate that you cant do it on XP. The
workstation products used to be able to do simple stripes and mirrors. im
rather suprised they dropped the support for it. In the meanwhile, use a
hardware based RAID controller. Hardware is always better than software,

in
my opinion.

I wipped out my googfing and went to work. I didnt find anything, and i
doubt it would be a simple as a registry tweak.

- LC







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