On Tue, May 04, 2010 at 03:03:00PM +0200, Georghy wrote:
> (1)Download that driver : 
> http://downloadcenter.intel.com/Detail_Desc.aspx?agr=Y&ProdId=3117&DwnldID=18570&lang=fra
> from the intel support web site
> 

You should have started your installation with "linux dd" and the initrd would
have been automatically created for you... (if xenserver works as CentOS-5)

http://downloadmirror.intel.com/18570/eng/ESRT2_RHEL4-5_SLES9-10-11_ver.13.13.1021.2009_Readme.txt

3.1.3 Installing RHEL5 (with or without Update 1, Update 2, Update 3, Update 4) 
on RAID
-----------------

In order to support XEN mode, the system needs to have its Virtualization 
feature enabled in BIOS as a first step, and XEN software package in the OS 
needs to be loaded during installation.

1) Create a RAID array using the Intel(R) Embedded Server RAID Technology II 
RAID BIOS Console.
2) Connect USB floppy drive and insert the floppy disk with RAID driver
3) Boot your system using RHEL5.0 DVD
4) At boot prompt type "linux dd noprobe=ata1 noprobe=ata2 noprobe=ata3 
noprobe=ata4"
5) And then you'll see a page that shows "loading usb-storage driver", and then 
it will ask you "Do you have a driver disk". Choose "Yes"
6) Then it will ask you which one do you choose as a driver disk, choose "sda" 
which is the USB floppy disk. And then click OK to continue, you'll see the 
message "Reading driver disk",  after it finishes, it will ask "Do you wish to 
load any more driver disks?" choose No if you do not have any more driver to 
load.
7) (If XEN mode feature is needed, the OS installatng KEY is necessary and then 
XEN software package needs to be loaded)  Then continue with the RHEL automatic 
installation, you can see that in the page where we select drives to use for 
installation, you can only see 1 disk (Intel MegaSR), this means the raid is 
recognized. 
8) At the last step of the installation (after all the packages are installed) 
RHEL5 prompts you to reboot. Do not click reboot button. Press Ctr+Alt+F2 to go 
to the text console prompt.
9) type "cat /proc/partitions" you will see some info about the partition.  For 
example, you might find several rows, one row might include sdb. You might find 
like this

major   minor   #blocks name
8       16      1440    sdb

10) type "mknod /dev/sdb b 8 16"  (8 and 16 are copied from the major and minor 
numbers in step #9, so that the numbers could change according to what is seen 
in step #9)
11) type "mkdir /temp"
12) type "mount /dev/sdb /temp"
13) type "ls /temp" and you can find all the driver files are now in /temp
14) Use cd command to enter /temp directory
15) type "./replace_ahci.sh" to execute the script. It will remove ahci from 
/etc/modprobe.conf and blacklist ahci in /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist 
(replace_ahci.sh is also an example, and please implement the script even if 
the *.sh is with other name).
16) Go back to graphic screen and reboot the system in order to finish the 
installation.

Tru
-- 
Tru Huynh (mirrors, CentOS-3 i386/x86_64 Package Maintenance)
http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0xBEFA581B

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