Assign hot spares
You can assign a hot spare as a standby drive for additional data protection in RAID 1, RAID 5, or RAID 6 volume groups. If a drive fails in one of these volume groups, the controller reconstructs data from the failed drive to the hot spare.
Before you begin
RAID 1, RAID 5, or RAID 6 volume groups must be created. (Hot spares cannot be used for pools. Instead, a pool uses spare capacity within each drive for its data protection.)
A drive that meets the following criteria must be available:
Unassigned, with Optimal status.
Same media type as the drives in the volume group (for example, SSDs).
Same interface type as the drives in the volume group (for example, SAS).
Capacity equal to or larger than the used capacity of the drives in the volume group.
About this task
This task describes how to manually assign a hot spare from the Hardware page. The recommended coverage is two hot spares per drive set.
What happens next?
If a drive within a RAID 1, RAID 5, or RAID 6 volume group fails, the controller automatically uses redundancy data to reconstruct the data from the failed drive to the hot spare.