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SAS and SATA hard drive LED combinations. Remove a hot-plug SAS or SATA hard drive. Re-entering the server serial number and product ID. Hard drive bay 1. Hard drive bay 2. Server blade release lever. Index 103 required information 91 resources 67 resources, troubleshooting 67.
Your earliest PC's did not store unique identifying information anywhere. Of course, as PC's have evovled, serial numbers have been introduced into more and more things. • The burned-in MAC address of any network cards (The burned-in MAC cannot be changed) • The serial number of any hard drives • A serial number is encoded into RAM modules that can be read over the I2c bus. • Intel introduced a processor serial number, which can be queried with CPUID, around the time of the Pentium III.
Seems to say it's no longer present on CPUs. • Keys derived from the TPM endorsement (root) key ought to be unique • stores a motherboard serial number • Many PCI and USB peripherals store some sort of serial number accessible in some manner. Computers manufactured in the last decade should have a UUID.
Its the Universally Unique Identifier. Creative labs model number ct4830 driver for windows xp. MAC is good and all, but UUID is specific to a computer.
According to PCMag.com: (Universally Unique ID) A unique number generated for any purpose, but that cannot be accidentally duplicated by another party and wind up in conflict later on. The UUID is a 128-bit number that is so large that it is infinite for all intents and purposes; however, there are different algorithms used to create it. The original algorithm uses the MAC address of the Ethernet adapter in the machine and the time of day. Subsequent versions use similar and dissimilar methods for computing the number. See GUID and OID.
Using Powershell you can discover the UUID of a remote system. Get-wmiobject Win32_ComputerSystemProduct -computername RANTPC Select-Object -ExpandProperty UUID replace -computername with the hostname obviously. Flag 3d screensaver 11 serial.
Code: Checking status of zfs pools: NAME SIZE ALLOC FREE EXPANDSZ FRAG CAP DEDUP HEALTH ALTROOT Pool1 12.6T 3.50T 9.12T - 9% 27% 1.00x DEGRADED /mnt freenas-boot 464G 2.20G 462G - - 0% 1.00x ONLINE - pool: Pool1 state: DEGRADED status: One or more devices could not be opened. Sufficient replicas exist for the pool to continue functioning in a degraded state. Action: Attach the missing device and online it using 'zpool online'.
I actually saw this while researching my issue and will be creating a similar spreadsheet. I don't think that's to much Data, it looks just right This device is not supposed to be supporting any prod data and isn't 'really' but my 3 VM hosts have local storage right now which is being moved to a QNAP, the local disks are being removed and installed in the QNAP (fairly new Intel enterprise SSD's). So in the mean time I have to move the VMs somewhere during the migration and my FreeNAS test box is the only spot I have that is large enough.
The joys of IT where you need Enterprise equipment but have a small business budget. Code: Let's pretend that I want to replace the first drive in raidz3-0 with the following gptid. Gptid/f5aa938b-334d-11e5-b15f-0a We need to correlate gptid to the name of the drive. Glabel status will give you the output of all the drives but it's annoying to sort through all the info so we use grep to find the drive we are looking for. [root@nas] ~# glabel status grep gptid/fd7ca0b8-334d-11e5-b15f-0a gptid/fd7ca0b8-334d-11e5-b15f-0a N/A da5p1 Then we can use smartctl to find the serial number of da5.
SAS and SATA hard drive LED combinations. Remove a hot-plug SAS or SATA hard drive. Re-entering the server serial number and product ID. Hard drive bay 1. Hard drive bay 2. Server blade release lever. Index 103 required information 91 resources 67 resources, troubleshooting 67.
Your earliest PC\'s did not store unique identifying information anywhere. Of course, as PC\'s have evovled, serial numbers have been introduced into more and more things. • The burned-in MAC address of any network cards (The burned-in MAC cannot be changed) • The serial number of any hard drives • A serial number is encoded into RAM modules that can be read over the I2c bus. • Intel introduced a processor serial number, which can be queried with CPUID, around the time of the Pentium III.
Seems to say it\'s no longer present on CPUs. • Keys derived from the TPM endorsement (root) key ought to be unique • stores a motherboard serial number • Many PCI and USB peripherals store some sort of serial number accessible in some manner. Computers manufactured in the last decade should have a UUID.
Its the Universally Unique Identifier. Creative labs model number ct4830 driver for windows xp. MAC is good and all, but UUID is specific to a computer.
According to PCMag.com: (Universally Unique ID) A unique number generated for any purpose, but that cannot be accidentally duplicated by another party and wind up in conflict later on. The UUID is a 128-bit number that is so large that it is infinite for all intents and purposes; however, there are different algorithms used to create it. The original algorithm uses the MAC address of the Ethernet adapter in the machine and the time of day. Subsequent versions use similar and dissimilar methods for computing the number. See GUID and OID.
Using Powershell you can discover the UUID of a remote system. Get-wmiobject Win32_ComputerSystemProduct -computername RANTPC Select-Object -ExpandProperty UUID replace -computername with the hostname obviously. Flag 3d screensaver 11 serial.
Code: Checking status of zfs pools: NAME SIZE ALLOC FREE EXPANDSZ FRAG CAP DEDUP HEALTH ALTROOT Pool1 12.6T 3.50T 9.12T - 9% 27% 1.00x DEGRADED /mnt freenas-boot 464G 2.20G 462G - - 0% 1.00x ONLINE - pool: Pool1 state: DEGRADED status: One or more devices could not be opened. Sufficient replicas exist for the pool to continue functioning in a degraded state. Action: Attach the missing device and online it using \'zpool online\'.
I actually saw this while researching my issue and will be creating a similar spreadsheet. I don\'t think that\'s to much Data, it looks just right This device is not supposed to be supporting any prod data and isn\'t \'really\' but my 3 VM hosts have local storage right now which is being moved to a QNAP, the local disks are being removed and installed in the QNAP (fairly new Intel enterprise SSD\'s). So in the mean time I have to move the VMs somewhere during the migration and my FreeNAS test box is the only spot I have that is large enough.
The joys of IT where you need Enterprise equipment but have a small business budget. Code: Let\'s pretend that I want to replace the first drive in raidz3-0 with the following gptid. Gptid/f5aa938b-334d-11e5-b15f-0a We need to correlate gptid to the name of the drive. Glabel status will give you the output of all the drives but it\'s annoying to sort through all the info so we use grep to find the drive we are looking for. [root@nas] ~# glabel status grep gptid/fd7ca0b8-334d-11e5-b15f-0a gptid/fd7ca0b8-334d-11e5-b15f-0a N/A da5p1 Then we can use smartctl to find the serial number of da5.
...'>Hdd Led 1 103 Serial Number(31.10.2018)SAS and SATA hard drive LED combinations. Remove a hot-plug SAS or SATA hard drive. Re-entering the server serial number and product ID. Hard drive bay 1. Hard drive bay 2. Server blade release lever. Index 103 required information 91 resources 67 resources, troubleshooting 67.
Your earliest PC\'s did not store unique identifying information anywhere. Of course, as PC\'s have evovled, serial numbers have been introduced into more and more things. • The burned-in MAC address of any network cards (The burned-in MAC cannot be changed) • The serial number of any hard drives • A serial number is encoded into RAM modules that can be read over the I2c bus. • Intel introduced a processor serial number, which can be queried with CPUID, around the time of the Pentium III.
Seems to say it\'s no longer present on CPUs. • Keys derived from the TPM endorsement (root) key ought to be unique • stores a motherboard serial number • Many PCI and USB peripherals store some sort of serial number accessible in some manner. Computers manufactured in the last decade should have a UUID.
Its the Universally Unique Identifier. Creative labs model number ct4830 driver for windows xp. MAC is good and all, but UUID is specific to a computer.
According to PCMag.com: (Universally Unique ID) A unique number generated for any purpose, but that cannot be accidentally duplicated by another party and wind up in conflict later on. The UUID is a 128-bit number that is so large that it is infinite for all intents and purposes; however, there are different algorithms used to create it. The original algorithm uses the MAC address of the Ethernet adapter in the machine and the time of day. Subsequent versions use similar and dissimilar methods for computing the number. See GUID and OID.
Using Powershell you can discover the UUID of a remote system. Get-wmiobject Win32_ComputerSystemProduct -computername RANTPC Select-Object -ExpandProperty UUID replace -computername with the hostname obviously. Flag 3d screensaver 11 serial.
Code: Checking status of zfs pools: NAME SIZE ALLOC FREE EXPANDSZ FRAG CAP DEDUP HEALTH ALTROOT Pool1 12.6T 3.50T 9.12T - 9% 27% 1.00x DEGRADED /mnt freenas-boot 464G 2.20G 462G - - 0% 1.00x ONLINE - pool: Pool1 state: DEGRADED status: One or more devices could not be opened. Sufficient replicas exist for the pool to continue functioning in a degraded state. Action: Attach the missing device and online it using \'zpool online\'.
I actually saw this while researching my issue and will be creating a similar spreadsheet. I don\'t think that\'s to much Data, it looks just right This device is not supposed to be supporting any prod data and isn\'t \'really\' but my 3 VM hosts have local storage right now which is being moved to a QNAP, the local disks are being removed and installed in the QNAP (fairly new Intel enterprise SSD\'s). So in the mean time I have to move the VMs somewhere during the migration and my FreeNAS test box is the only spot I have that is large enough.
The joys of IT where you need Enterprise equipment but have a small business budget. Code: Let\'s pretend that I want to replace the first drive in raidz3-0 with the following gptid. Gptid/f5aa938b-334d-11e5-b15f-0a We need to correlate gptid to the name of the drive. Glabel status will give you the output of all the drives but it\'s annoying to sort through all the info so we use grep to find the drive we are looking for. [root@nas] ~# glabel status grep gptid/fd7ca0b8-334d-11e5-b15f-0a gptid/fd7ca0b8-334d-11e5-b15f-0a N/A da5p1 Then we can use smartctl to find the serial number of da5.
...'>Hdd Led 1 103 Serial Number(31.10.2018)