To power on or to power off the system, complete the steps
in this procedure in the order given.
Powering on the system
Attention:
- Avoid powering on the system with any open bays or slots.
Open bays or slots disrupt the internal air flow, causing the
drives to receive insufficient cooling.
- Every unused drive bay must be occupied by a filler panel.
To power on the system, complete the following steps:
- Power on all expansion enclosures by
connecting both power supply units of the enclosure to their power
sources, using the supplied power cables.
- If the power sources have circuit breakers
or switches, ensure that they are turned on. The enclosure does
not have power switches. Repeat this step for each expansion
enclosure in the system.
Note: Each enclosure has two power supply
units. To provide power failure redundancy, connect the two
power cords to separate power circuits.
Check the LEDs
on each expansion canister as shown in Figure 1.Figure 1. Expansion canister LEDs
The expansion canister is ready with no critical errors when Power is illuminated, Status is illuminated, and Fault is off. If a canister is not ready, see the troubleshooting
procedure about understanding the system status using the LEDs.
- Wait for all expansion canisters to finish
powering on.
- Power on the control enclosure by connecting both power
supply units of the enclosure to their power sources, using the supplied
power cables.
If the power sources have circuit breakers or
switches, ensure that they are turned on. The enclosure does
not have power switches.
Note: Each enclosure has two power supply units. To provide
power failure redundancy, connect the two power cords to separate
power circuits.
Check the LEDs on each node canister
in the control enclosure, as shown in
Figure 2.
Figure 2. Node canister LEDs
The node canister is ready with no critical errors when
Power is illuminated,
Status is illuminated, and
Fault is off.
If a canister is
not ready, see the troubleshooting
procedure about understanding the system status using the LEDs.
Before you power off the system
To remove
all input power to a system (for example, the machine room power
must be shut down for maintenance), you must shut down the system
before power is removed. Shutting down the system causes all nodes
in the system to store data to the internal drive and then enter
a standby state. In standby state, volumes provided by the system
are no longer accessible.
If the system is not shut down
before power to the nodes is turned off, the nodes detect the
loss of power and continue to run on battery power until all data
that is held in memory is saved to the internal drive.
When
input power is restored to the enclosures, the batteries in the
nodes recharge. However, the nodes do not permit any I/O activity
until the batteries have sufficient charge to enable all the data
on the nodes to be saved in the event of an unexpected power loss.
This might take as long as two hours if the batteries have been
discharged because nodes have run on battery power. Shutting down
the system prior to removing input power to the batteries prevents
the battery power from being drained and makes it possible for
I/O activity to resume as soon as input power is restored.
Powering off the system
To power off your system, complete the following steps:
- Stop all host I/O to volumes on the system.
- Shut down the system by using the management GUI. Select . From the Actions menu, select Power Off.
- Wait for the power LEDs on all node canisters in all control enclosures
to blink at 1 Hz, indicating that the shutdown operation has completed.
(See Location of the power LED on a node canister for the location of the power LED.)
Figure 3. Location of the power LED on a node canister
- Disconnect the power cords from both power supplies in each control
enclosure.
- Disconnect the power cords from both power supplies in each expansion
enclosure.