Dell EMC Unity XT Hardware
Dell EMC Unity XT Hardware
HARDWARE CONCEPTS
AND FEATURES
PARTICIPANT GUIDE
PARTICIPANT GUIDE
Dell EMC Unity XT Hardware Concepts and Features-SSP
The Dell Unity XT Disk Processor Enclosure (DPE) and expansion Disk Array
Enclosures (DAE) are built with hardware availability and redundancy features.
• Dual Storage Processors (SPs) with mirrored write cache.
• Drives arranged in RAID configurations
• Dual data ports on drives
• Hot Sparing
• Vault M.2 SSDs
• Battery Backup Units
• Redundant Power Supplies
Mirrored
Cache-A
Cache-B
SPB
SPA Mirrored
Cache-B
Cache-A
Dell Unity XT systems support dual Storage Processors with mirrored write cache.
Each Storage Processor (SP) contains both primary cached data for its own LUNs
and a secondary copy of the cache for its peer Storage Processor.
Each SP enclosure can be individually removed from the DPE for maintenance and
replacement of faulted components.
RAID
RAID 5 (4+1)
RAID 1/0
RAID 6 (6+2)
Examples of stripe widths for RAID 1/0, RAID 5, and RAID 6 configurations
Dell Unity supports various RAID levels, which determine the performance
characteristics, protection and cost. The available RAID protection levels include
1/0, 5, and 6 and can co-exist in the same array simultaneously to match different
protection requirements.
For best performance from the least number of drives, match the appropriate RAID
level with the expected workload. Review the white paper Dell EMC Unity: Dynamic
Pools for more information about storage pools.
Data Ports
I/O I/O
Each disk drive in a Disk Process Enclosure (DPE) or Disk Array Enclosure (DAE)
has two data ports.
The ports provide two separate paths to each drive, one from each Storage
Processor (SP). If an SP or any component of the path fails, the drive can be
accessed by the other SP.
DYNAMIC POOL
Dell Unity XT All-Flash arrays (AFA) and Dell Unity XT Hybrid Flash arrays (HFA)
support dynamic pools by default.
Drives are arranged in Drive Partnership Groups (DPGs).
Spare space is used to replace a failing or faulted drive within the Pool.
Users can set the amount of spare space a dynamic pool reserve at time of
creation.
• One or two drives per 32 drives can be reserved.
• Spare space is labeled Hot spare capacity.
RG3 RG4
RG1 RG2
Hot spares
SAS Flash drives SAS drives
Lithium-ion
battery pack
BBU BBU
Each SP has a battery backup unit (BBU) sometimes referred to as Battery on Bus
(BoB) to allow for an orderly shutdown and cache destaging to the M.2 SSD
device. The BBU is an eight cell lithium-ion battery pack.
In the event of a graceful shutdown, the system flushes the write cache contents to
the backend drives.
In the event of unexpected power loss, the onboard BBUs are activated.
• The BBUs are designed to supply enough power to the enclosure temporarily.
• It keeps the SP online while it flushes the cached content to the M.2 device.
• Dell Unity XT models have two M.2 NVMe devices to support cache vaulting.
When power is restored, the content of the M.2s is restored to the SPs.
• In normal scenarios, both copies of cache are valid for use.
• In case one copy is invalid or outdated:
− The SP that owns the latest valid copy synchronizes its contents to the peer
SP, before reenabling write cache.
SPB SATA/PCIe
SPA SATA/PCIe
The M.2 SSD device is located inside the Storage Processor (SP) and serves as a
backup device in the event of an SP failure.
• In the event of an SP failure, the memory contents of the SP’s cache is written
to the M.2 SSD device so it can be recovered once the SP is restored.
• If the M.2 SSD device itself encounters a failure, cache data can be recovered
from the peer Storage Processor.
The M.2 SSD device also holds a backup copy of the boot image that is used to
boot the operating environment.
LCC B
LCC A
Each DAE includes two Link Control Cards (LCCs) with SAS ports.
One LCC is designated for connectivity to SPA while the other is for connectivity to
SPB.
Redundant power supplies ensure DPE SP high availability. In case a DPE power
supply fails, the other can power the entire Disk Processor Enclosure.
Disk Array Enclosures also use redundant power supplies. One DAE power supply
can provide enough energy for both LCCs, if the other PS fails.
Like the SP power supplies, each DAE power supply (PS) should be connected to
different Power Distribution Units (PDU).
The Dell Unity XT Disk Processor Enclosure (DPE) is a 2U chassis that houses two
Storage Processors (SPs), drives and I/O connections and modules.
There are LEDs on the front of the DPE for both the enclosure and drives to
indicate status and faults.
Important: The first four drive slots are reserved for system drives
which contain data that is used by the operating environment (OE)
software. Space is reserved for the system on these drives, and the
remaining space is available for storage pools. These drives should
not be moved within the DPE or relocated to another enclosure.
Front View
The Dell Unity XT 380/380F model uses a different physical chassis than the Dell
Unity XT 480/480F and higher models.
4X System Drives
Unity XT 380/380F, houses twenty-five drive slots supporting 2.5-inch SAS, and
SAS Flash drives.
Rear View
Front View
Dell Unity XT 480/480F and higher models use a different physical chassis than the
Dell Unity XT 380/380F model.
4X System Drives
The Unity XT three high-end system models are 480/480F, 680/680F, and
880/880F.
The DPE on these models houses 25x drive slots supporting 2.5-in. SAS, and SAS
Flash drives.
Rear View
The DPE on Unity XT 480/480F and higher models has different components than
Unity XT 380/380F models.
SPB
SPA
AC 100-240 VAC
Example of AC powered system with the location of Power Supply Units on SPA and SPB
A DPE draws power from two redundant intelligent Power Supplies, one for each
SP. This creates a single enclosure power zone. If the peer power supply is faulted
or removed (N+1), each power supply provides enough power to keep the entire
enclosure running at full performance.
All x80 Unity models support high line and low line power and are hot swappable.
The Power Supplies do not monitor or control the cooling fans. The exact power
supply is chosen during the ordering process.
Unity XT 380/F and 480/F models support DC power. DC power supplies are
compliant with the NEBS certification, and provide the same functionality of units
that are used on AC powered systems.
Deep Dive: Go to the support site for a detailed list of NEBS certified
parts.
Two Storage Processors (SPs) are contained in the Disk Processor Enclosure
(DPE) of Unity XT systems. The Storage Processors are the core of the platform.
Storage Processors:
• Deliver block components and services.
− Multi-core Cache (MCC) and Multi-core RAID (MCR)
• Onboard ports enable data access to attached block hosts and NAS clients.
• Provide additional data access connectivity with expansion I/O modules.
• Differ between Unity XT 380/380F models and Unity XT 480/480F, 680/680F,
and 880/880F models.
Rear View
Back-plane Contacts
Multiple backplane contact points provide connections to the DPE drive section.
With the cover removed, key components are visible for identification and
replacement, if necessary.
SP Components
4
1
6
2
3 5
1: 2. M.2 SSD: Each SP contains an M.2 device. This device is a nonvolatile device
that is used by the Operating Environment (OE) and SP memory.
2: 3. Air Baffle: A clear plastic air baffle must be removed to access some
components.
4: 5. Battery Backup Unit (BBU): The BBU provides power to the SP during a
power outage.
SP DIMM Slots
The Unity XT 380 and 380F SPs have four slots to support up to four DDR4
SDRAM modules. Each DIMM is a Customer Replaceable Unit (CRU).
Five cooling fan packs provide adaptive cooling for each SP Enclosure.
Fan Packs
Five per SP
Each Storage Processor in the Unity XT 380/380F contains a 6-Gb/s internal M.2
SSD. The M.2 device stores the operating environment (OE)1 and vault data2.
1 The Operating Environment (OE) is the software code that each Unity XT SP
loads on boot and runs to provide storage resources and services.
2 Vault Data is data written to SP cache but has not been committed to persistent
media (disk storage). If the SP looses power, the SP remains powered by the
battery backup unit. The data in SP cache is written to the M.2 device as vault data.
When power is returned, the SP boot process writes the vault data from the M.2
device to disk storage.
Each Storage Processor in the Unity XT 380/380F contains a Battery Backup Unit
(BBU).
− Does not deliver power until the main 12 VDC power drops or the SP is
removed from the DPE midplane.
Rear View
SP B
SP A
Unity XT 480/480F and higher model numbers Storage Processor rear view
In Unity XT 480/480F, 680/680F, and 880/880F models, both SPs are removable
using individual T-Latch mechanisms. The image shows the handle that is used to
pull the SP B assembly out of the chassis.
Fans
BBU
M.2 SSDs
CPUs
DIMMs
Unity XT 480/480F and higher model numbers Storage Processor top view with cover removed
The Storage Processor internal components are accessible with the top cover
removed.
With the cover removed, key components are visible for identification and
replacement, if necessary.
SP Components
4 7
2: M.2 SSD: Each SP contains two M.2 riser cards. This device is a nonvolatile
device that is used by the Operating Environment [OE] and SP memory.
4: 4-Port Mezz Card: Each Storage Processor supports a 4-Port Mezz Card for
optional 25GbE/10GbE or 10GBaseT front-end connectivity.
5: Battery Backup Unit (BBU): The BBU provides power to the SP when there is
an AC power outage.
8: SLIC Slots: Each Storage Processor supports two SLIC slots for expanding
front-end and back-end connectivity.
SP DIMM Slots
The storage processors in Dell EMC Unity XT 480/480F, 680/680F, and 880/880F
storage systems have twenty-four slots.
SP DIMM slots
SP DIMM slots
These slots are filled with up to twelve DIMMs, depending on the model.
The DIMMs are between 16 GB and 32 GB in size. If a DIMM is faulted, the system
boots into service mode so the faulted DIMM can be replaced.
Cooling Modules
SP cooling fans
These fan packs provide cool airflow to the assembly interior. If a module fault, the
remaining fan packs compensate for the faulted module.
Each Storage Processor contains a single double-sided M.2 riser card, which holds
an NVMe M.2 device and a SATA M.2 device. The riser card is between the
DIMMs.
SP M.2 SSDs
The M.2 device is used to store the operating environment (OE) for booting
purposes and as a backup device if an SP fails.
Each SP assembly has a lithium-ion battery backup unit (BBU) located in the
middle of the Cooling modules.
SP BBU
Each BBU powers its own SP and does not provide power for the peer SP. Cache
is enabled when the supporting BBU is in the ‘ready state’. If both SP BBUs are not
ready, cache is disabled. Battery life depends on usage and operating
temperatures.
The BBU is designed to power the SP long enough for the system to store SP
cache content to the M.2 SSD devices before powering off.
Chassis 2U 2U 2U 2U
Lay-out
Storage 2 2 2 2
Processors
Max I/O 4 4 4 4
Modules
*If 8 GB DIMMs can no longer be supplied, 12x16 GB DIMMs are used and limited
to 96 GB usable.
SP
B
SP
A
The Dell Unity XT 380/380F 12 Gb/s 25 drive DPE has the following ports per SP:
• 2x Onboard 1 GbE ports for management and service. Service port has a
yellow label and an image of a wrench.
• 2x Onboard 10 GBaseT ports for front-end connectivity
• 2x Onboard 12 Gb/S SAS Expansion ports
• 1x USB port
• 2x Converged Network Adapter (CNA) ports for Fibre Channel or iSCSI
connectivity
• 2x expansion I/O modules slots for front-end connectivity
Service Ethernet
Port
Management SPB
Ethernet Port
Management
SPA Ethernet Port
Service Ethernet
Port
Port Description
Service Ethernet The service port can be used to provide a Serial Over LAN
Port (SOL) connection to the array using the IPMI tool.
Onboard SP 10G BASE-T Ethernet (10 GigE) ports 2 and 3 on SPA and SPB are
used for front-end connectivity.
Port 2
Port 3
SPB
SPA
Port 3
Port 2
Port 2 and 3 support 10 GbE or 1 GbE connectivity for Block iSCSI and file IP. The
ports support custom MTU frames.
SAS Ports
Unity XT 380/380F systems support two embedded SAS ports per SP (total of four
embedded ports per array).
SAS 1
SPB
SPA
SAS 1
SAS 0
The SAS connectors are used to cable a mini-HD SAS cable to an expansion DAE
when adding capacity to an existing Dell Unity XT array.
The controller contains eight independent SAS ports and interfaces that are directly
integrated with the CPU through a PCIe Gen3 bus.
• SAS Port 0 is connected internally to the DPE disk drives, which are known as
Bus 0, Enclosure 0, (0_0), BE0 EA0.
• Dell Technologies recommends that the first attached DAE physically connects
to mini-HD SAS Port 1.
− For example, Bus 1 Enclosure 0 (1_0), BE1 EA0.
• The second attached DAE physically connects to mini-HD SAS Port 0.
Each Unity XT storage processor supports a USB port that is v2.0 and v3.0
capable.
USB Port
SPB
SPA
USB Port
• The port connects internally to the Platform Controller Hub (PCH) on the
respective CPU.
• This port is for Dell internal use and an alternative way to configure IP using a
Unity Connection Utility.
The CNA controller supports both Ethernet (iSCSI or File) or the Fibre Channel
protocols depending on which SFP is inserted.
Each SP has two CNA ports supporting hot swappable Small Form-Factor
Pluggable SFP+ optical connectors.
CNA 4
SPB
CNA 5
CNA 5
SPA
CNA 4
Ethernet iSCSI/File
For block and file protocols, users can configure a 1 GbE SFP or a 10 Gb/s SFP.
When an Ethernet SFP is inserted in the CNA ports, the ports are persisted as the
Ethernet protocol at first system boot, and cannot be changed.
The SFPs are hot swappable between 1 GbE and 10 Gb/s SFPs.
If the CNA is initially persisted with 10 Gb/s SFPs, the customer can downgrade to
1 Gb/s SFP, if necessary.
CNA ports can only be configured as a single protocol across both SPs on the
system. For example, if there are two CNA ports per SP, both must be configured
to use either a NIC or Fibre Channel connection.
For Fibre Channel connectivity, CNA ports can be configured with either multimode
or single mode SFPs. Single-mode SFPs support 16 Gb/s only.
When a Fibre Channel SFP is inserted in the CNA ports, the ports are persisted as
the FC protocol at first system boot. The setting cannot be changed.
Each Unity XT SP has two I/O module expansion slots: Slot 0 and Slot 1.
Slot 1 Slot 0
SPB
SPA
Slot 0 Slot 1
Each SP in a Unity XT DPE supports two v2.0 I/O modules (SLICs) for expansion.
Supported I/O modules are:
• 4-Port 16 Gb Fibre Channel
• 4-Port 32 Gb Fibre Channel
• 4-Port 25 GbE SFP-based
• 4-Port 10 GbE BaseT
SPB
SPA
The Embedded Module also known as the IO Personality Module (IOPM) has the
following ports:
• 2x Onboard 1 GbE ports for management and service LAN
• 2x Onboard 12 Gb/s SAS Expansion ports
• 1x USB port
• 4-Port Mezz Card for optional 25GbE/10GbE or 10GBaseT front-end
connectivity
Each Storage Processor also provides two slots for optional front-end or back-end
I/O Modules.
Ethernet Ports
Management Ethernet
Port
Service Ethernet
Port
Dell Unity XT 480/480F, 680/680F, and 880/880F storage arrays support a Base-T
dual channel 10/100/1000-Mbit LAN controller.
The IOPM provides two 1Gb/s Ethernet ports for service and management usage.
The service LAN port provides a Serial Over LAN (SOL) connection to the array
using the Intelligent Platform Management Interface (IPMI) tool.
SAS 1
SAS 0
The connectors are used to cable a mini-HD SAS cable to an expansion DAE when
adding capacity to an existing Dell Unity array.
Connectivity from the SPs to the drives in the Dell Unity XT 480/480F and higher
models is different from the Dell Unity XT 380/380F models.
• On the 480/480F and higher models, the DPE drives are on a separate internal
bus.
• There is a maximum of six ports for extra DAEs.
USB Port
Each Dell Unity XT storage processor supports a USB port that is v2.0 and v3.0
capable.
• The port connects internally to the Platform Controller Hub (PCH) on the
respective CPU.
• This port is for internal use only except when you use the connection utility to
create a USB to IP the system.
Mezz cards are optional and only available on the Dell Unity XT 480/480F,
680/680F, and 880/880F models.
• Mezz cards are installed in the IOPM.
• Because the onboard 1 GbE Port provides management access, Mezz Cards
are not used for management.
Mezz card
Configuration Description
4-Port 10 GbE This card is a Quad port Ethernet I/O module that serves
BaseT Mezz card Ethernet traffic and iSCSI block protocol. It employs a 1G/10G
BaseT (RJ45) connection to a host or to a switch port.
Dell Unity XT 480/480F, 680/680F, and 880/880F platforms support four I/O
expansion modules.
Slot 1 Slot 0
Slot 0 Slot 1
When adding new I/O modules, always install I/O modules in pairs:
• One module in SP A and one module in SP B.
• Both SPs must have the same type of I/O modules in the same slots.
Slot 0 provides a x16 lane PCIe channel/bus connection to the CPU, while slot 1
provides an x8 lane channel/bus connection.
• When a system is configured with a single I/O module per SP, the I/O module in
slot 0 of each SP is populated first.
• When a system is configured with two I/O modules per SP, slot 0 is populated
first, and then slot 1 of each SP.
When both I/O module slots are used, install higher priority cards into slot 0.
Populate slot 0 with the following I/O modules in this priority:
• 4-Port 32 Gb Fibre Channel
• 4-Port 25 GbE SFP-based
• 4-Port 16 Gb Fibre Channel
• 4-Port 10 GbE BaseT
• 12 Gb/s SAS Backend
There are multiple status LEDs on a 25-disk drive DPE of the Dell Unity XT
380/380F storage arrays.
1 2
3 4
State Description
State Description
3:
State Description
State Description
There are multiple status LEDs on a 25-disk drive DPE for Dell Unity XT 480/480F,
680/680F, and 880/880F storage arrays.
2 3
State Description
State Description
State Description
The Power Supplies (PS) as viewed from the rear of a Dell Unity XT 480/480F and
higher models.
A single power supply can provide power to the entire enclosure if the peer power
supply has been removed or is faulted.
Each power supply has three LEDs near the AC input connector which indicate the
unit state.
3. Fault Solid Amber Power supply or backup fault. Check the cable
connection.
The Power Supplies (PS) as viewed from the rear of Dell Unity XT 380/380F
models.
AC Power Input
DC Power Output
PS Fault
A single power supply can provide power to the entire enclosure if the peer power
supply has been removed or is faulted.
Each power supply has three LEDs near the AC input connector which indicate the
unit state.
PS Fault Solid Amber Power supply or backup fault. Check the cable
connection.
The Memory/Boot Fault LED is normally off. When a memory or boot fault occurs,
this indicator is solid amber. In this state, the SP cannot boot. BIOS and POST
should detect any issues with the DIMMs or M.2 module from testing at startup.
The main purpose of the Memory/Boot Fault LED is to identify a bad DIMM or bad
M.2 in a single SP. Since Unity XT is a dual SP system, the peer SP can read the
SP's System Error Log (SEL) and indicate any CRU replacement required.
Off Normal
If the SP Power LED is off, then DC power is not present to the Storage Processor.
When the LED indicator is solid green, power is present. When the Indicator blinks
green at a rate of 1 Hz [one cycle per second] the SP is in Standby Mode. This
status indicates that the SP is initializing a serial over LAN session.
SP Fault LED
Amber Blink or Blue Blink (0.25 Hz, 1 BIOS, POST, or operating system
Hz, 4 Hz) booting
Do not remove the SP from the DPE chassis if the Unsafe to Remove LED is
illuminated white. A single SP may fail in the system. With that condition, cache
data is still available on the peer SP and the Unsafe to Remove LED illuminates
white. Removing the SP means that all cached data would be lost.
Embedded SAS ports 0 and 1 activity LED are off to indicate a fault, blink blue at a
one second interval to indicate that the port is marked. When illuminated solid blue,
it indicates that the SAS port is up.
There are four Ethernet ports that are embedded on the Unity XT baseboard. Each
port has two LEDs, a Link Port LED and a Port Activity LED.
SP Power LED
The SP Power LED has three states: off, solid green, and blinking green.
SP Power Status
LED
Do not remove the SP from the DPE chassis if the Unsafe to Remove LED is
illuminated white. A single SP may fail in the system. With that condition, cache
data is still available on the peer SP and the Unsafe to Remove LED will light white.
Removing the SP means that all cached data would be lost.
SP Fault LED
Off No fault on SP
Amber or Blue (0.25 Hz, 1 Hz, 4 Hz) BIOS, POST, or operating system booting
The SAS port fault/link LEDs are off to indicate a fault and solid blue to indicate that
the SAS port is up.
Unity XT 480/480F and higher models SAS port link status LEDs
Each Ethernet port of the embedded module has two LEDs: a Link Port LED and a
Port Activity LED.
Unity XT 480/480F and higher models embedded module fault status LED
State Description
The embedded module status LED information is in the Dell Unity All Flash and
Unity Hybrid Unity 380/F, Unity 480/F, Unity 680/F, Unity 880/F Hardware
Information Guide. The guide is accessed from the Unity Info Hub site, under the
Introduction and product specs section, at the Unity XT Hardware Information
Guide link. It is provided here for the next activity. Open the guide in another
browser window or tab for reference.
Each SP assembly has two slots (slot 0 and slot 1) to install optional expansion I/O
modules. These I/O modules are also called Subscriber Line Interface Cards
(SLICs). The table shows the available I/O modules that are supported in the Dell
Unity XT storage arrays.
The 4-port 16 Gb FC I/O module is used to service the front-end Fibre Channel
block protocol over SAN.
The 4-port 32 Gb FC I/O module is used to service the front-end Fibre Channel
block protocol over SAN.
Different SFPs can be mixed within the same I/O module. Matching the peer is
recommended.
The 10 GbE Base-T expansion module is used to service front-end iSCSI block
and file storage connectivity. Ports can be configured for iSCSI block and NAS file
connections simultaneously.
The 25 GbE optical expansion module is used to service front-end iSCSI block and
file storage connectivity. Ports can be configured for iSCSI block and NAS file
connections simultaneously.
The I/O module comes with four ports that support optical 10 Gb or 25 Gb capable
SFP+ connections to a host or switch port.
• Support speeds of 25 Gb/s, 10 Gb/s, and 1 Gb/s.
A Disk Array Enclosure (DAE) is a device that houses additional drives in a storage
array. Disk Array Enclosures (DAEs) expand the capacity of a storage array.
A DAE connects to a Disk Processor Enclosure (DPE) and other DAEs using Mini-
SAS-HD cables.
380/380F 500
480/480F 750
680/680F 1000
880/880F 1500
DAE Components
Front view and rear view of the 2U, 25-Drive DAE with LCCs and power supplies
• The 2U, 25-Drive DAE supports up to 25 x 2.5-inch (6.35 cm) SAS and SAS
Flash drives.
• Drives face the front of the DAE. Two power supplies (PS) and two LCCs face
the rear.
• LCC A normally receives power from LCC A PS. LCC B normally received
power from LCC B PS.
• Each PS can power both LCCs and peer PS fans.
• A DC version of this DAE is available when ordered with Unity 3xx and 4xx
models.
• Software detects cabling issues, such as crossed or asymmetric cabling and
provides the Energy Star statistics like input power wattage and air inlet
temperature.
• Mounting rails are shipped with every DAE. DAEs ordered in a Dell rack uses
fixed rails. DAEs ordered separately includes adjustable and snap-in rails.
SAS connection
To PDU B
from DPE SPB
SAS ports
Each PS connects to the Only one type of Mini-HD SAS cable is used for
appropriate Power Distribution all DAE connections.
Unit [PDU] on the rear of the
cabinet or directly to an AC or DC
source.
Each LCC has an input and Cables have the same mini-SAS HD connector
output port for connecting to a on both ends, and are not keyed.
DPE or another DAE.
Back end supports 12 Gb/s. Available cable lengths are 1–8 meters.
Use SAS port A as the Primary 12 Gb/s SAS cables are different from 6 Gb/s
Port and port B as the Expansion SAS cables and are not interchangeable.
Port.
Enclosure Position
Backend Bus ID
ID
Power ON [Normal] AC or DC [SPS] Power is applied, and all DC Outputs are within operating
range
[Green] OFF [Fault] Any or all outputs are outside the specified operating range
− When LED is solid, it indicates that any link is established at any speed.
Blinking at 1 Hz is for marking the port.
DAE Components
Back
The 3U 15-Drive DAE holds up to 15 drives and supports SAS, NL-SAS, and SAS
Flash drives.
Chassis contains a midplane, connecting power supplies to the LCCs and disk
drives.
Each PS can supply power to both LCCs and the peer PS fans.
SAS connection
from DPE SPB
To PDU B Power Supply
SAS port
LCC B
LCC A
• Each LCC has an input and output port for connecting to a DPE or another
DAE.
− Mini-HD SAS cables provide connectivity.
o SAS Connections from DPE SPA attached the LCC A.
o SAS Connections from DPE SPB connect to LCC B.
• AC or DC power is provided by connecting the PS to the appropriate Power
Distribution Unit [PDU] on the rear of the cabinet.
− LCC A connects to the PDU on the right side, and LCC B connects to the
PDU on the left side of the cabinet.
For detailed connection instructions, see the appropriate installation guide:
Enclosure ID LCC A
display
Backend Bus ID
display
LED/Color State Status
Blue 7-segment identifies the enclosure ID, which is the position of the enclosure in
the backend chain.
LCC A
ON (Normal) AC or DC (SPS) Power is applied, and all DC outputs are within operating range
Power (Green)
OFF (Fault) Any or all outputs are outside the specified operating range
ON (Fault) Any or all outputs are outside the specified operating range
SAS Link (Blue)
OFF (Normal) All outputs are outside the specified operating range
Three LEDs on each power supply/cooling module display the status of these
components.
• The Power OK LED is on and green under normal operation and off if any or all
outputs are outside the specified operating range.
• The Power Supply Fault LED is off under normal operation and on amber if any
or all outputs are outside the specified operating range.
• The Cooling Fault LED is off under normal operation, and on amber when one
or two blower faults are detected within the unit.
4 5
3: 3 - The System Status Card (SSC) is a small card that is at the front end (below
the air-dams) of the baseboard. The SCC provides status on the health of the entire
DAE.
4: 4 - The amber System Status Card Fault LED indicates if there is a fault with the
SSC itself.
5: 5 - System Status Card Power Blue LED indicates if the SSC has power.
6: 6 - System Fault Amber LED indicates if a component within the system, such as
disk, fan, LCC, or power supply has faulted.
PS B0 PS B1 PS A0 PS A1
Expansion Ports
LCC B LCC A
Bus/Enclosure Indicator
The 80-Drive DAE four power supplies are divided between the two LCCs and
support AC power input only.
The two LCCs using the SAS ports provide physical connectivity to the DPE or
other DAEs.
• Supports either x4 lane or x8 lane cables depending on the model.
SAS Flash 2
SAS Flash 3
SAS Flash 4
1.92 TB, 3.84 TB, 7.68 TB, and 15.36 TB SAS Flash 4 drives
Important: In the hybrid models, only the 7.68 TB SAS Flash 4 drive
is supported.
SSDs have a limit for the amount of program/erase (PE) cycles that can be done
before the device becomes unreliable.
Dell Unity XT systems use a wear leveling technique to ensure that each drive is
operational until the end of the warranty period. Wear leveling optimization ensures
that the Flash drives do not prematurely wear out. The SSD optimizations limit the
number of writes to the drive. The drive is given a certain quota of writes calculated
based on wearing consumption model.
Slice allocation requests take into account the wear level. In traditional pools, wear
information is propagated at the RAID Group [RG] level per storage resource. The
Dell Unity XT system determines which RAID Group the slice is allocated from in
an attempt to balance wear across other RAID Groups. This information is not
visible to the user.
Unisphere users can view wear alerts, which are issued at 180, 90, 60, and 30-day
periods before the predicted end of life. Proactive Copy operations (PACO) are
automatically initiated at 30 days to spare drive. Also, drive health status is updated
to show faulted state and no longer usable by the system.
SAS 10 K
The mixing of different Flash drive types in the same pool is supported.
The same drive sparing rules still apply. For example, a SAS Flash 4 drive still
requires a SAS Flash 4 drive to be available for sparing.
The drive types under the Mixed Pools column can be used in mixed pools. The
drive types under the All Flash Pools column can be used in all-flash pools.
Mixed All
Pools Flash
Pools
NL-SAS SAS
Flash 3
SAS SAS
Flash 4
SAS
Flash 2
SAS
Flash 3