Hp Proliant Ml150 G6 Drivers Linux Hp

20.09.2019

  1. Hp Proliant Dl380 G6 Drivers

Your HP ProLiant ML150 server. Listed below are the HP drivers required for specific NOSs and the HP utilities. These drivers and utilities are provided on the HP Startup CD-ROM. Chipset driver Video driver LAN driver SCSI backplane driver SCSI driver HP drivers ZCR driver HP Server Diagnostics for Windows® Microsoft® Windows®.

Hp Proliant Ml150 G6 Drivers Linux Hp
  • Drivers and support for hp proliant ml150 g5 in installing windows server 2003 - HP ProLiant ML150 G5 Server question. Search Fixya. Browse Categories Answer Questions. HP ProLiant ML150 G5 Server. Since this is a server and supposed to run either Linux or Server2003 or 2008.
  • Solution: When doing the Windows 2008 install, you should be prompted at some point to install drivers. You'll need to have a USB thumb drive with the storage.

Contents. Installer Compatibility Table This table is a community maintained matrix of builds and their compatibility with various HP ProLiant systems. This page does not infer official support from HP. Information on official HP support offerings for Debian can be found on. There is a HP support documentation about Debian GNU / Linux 6.0 Squeeze installation on ProLiant servers. (Hostname downloads.linux.hp.com referred in PDF file should be read downloads.linux.hpe.com.) You may need firmware blobs found at and and instructions found at installation manual.

System Config Installer Installation Report Summary Stretch MicroServer Gen10 AMD Opteron Processor (X3xxx) stretch-4.9.0-4-amd64-netinst Nothing unusual in kernel logs. Works fine, but after reboot no display visible. HP recommends to, but it does not work with Stretch. Adding 'nomodeset' to kernel command line works around the issue in Stretch. Solution is to install firmware-linux-nonfree Jessie MicroServer Gen8 G2020T Intel Pentium Processor G2020T (original), 2 x KTH-PL316E/8G = 16 GB RAM, Ethernet 1Gb 2-port 332i Adapter (original), Dynamic Smart Array B120i Controller (Single disk, RAID 0) (original), No MicroSD or internal USB jessie-8.6.0-amd64-netinst Nothing unusual in kernel logs.

Works fine, no firmware needed. No need to disable AHCI if boot order is configured appropriately in BIOS or iLO4. (System will beep before bootloader starts however.) DL380 Gen9 Smart Array P440ar, SAS to HP 1-8 G2 Tape Autoloader, RAID-1 and 10 debian-8.5.0-amd64-CD-1.iso Used HP's 'Intelligent Provisioning' to configure RAID devices before starting installation. Installation itself straightforward (100 MB UEFI boot, 500 MB boot, rest LVM PV).

After installation and boot from internal storage some fixes: 1) firmware-linux-nonfree required for tg3. 2) Tape Autoloader not detected until installed kernel 4.6.3 from Jessie backports. 3) kernel parameters: nofb nomodeset nosplash vga=normal video=vesafb:off (may not all have been necessary) to get more than first few boot messages on local console. DL380 Gen9 Smart Array P440ar, SAS, RAID-1 debian-8.2.0-amd64-DVD-1.iso Worked fine.

Post-install warnings about missing tg3 firmware in update-initramfs: installed firmware-linux-nonfree. DL380 Gen9 Smart Array P440ar, SAS, RAID-6 debian-8.1.0-amd64-CD-1.iso (1) Before installation, extract and place all tg3 files to root folder of the USB thumb drive for loading network driver during installation (2) Set UEFI BIOS in bootup setting (3) Manual partition during installation, create a 100MB partition and set as type EFI Worked fine DL320 G5p Serial ATA debian-8.1.0-amd64-CD-1.iso Worked fine G1610T Gen8 Microserver Smart Array B120i, Broadcom NICs debian-8.3.0-amd64-netinst.iso Worked fine, no firmware required. Had to set 'Enable SATA AHCI' under 'System Options' in BIOS to get it booting from hard drive. Wheezy DL360p Smart Array 420i, SAS, RAID-5 firmware-7.4.0-amd64-netinst.iso Worked fine, firmware cd used for tg3 DL360 G2 Smart Array 5i, RAID-0 firmware-7.3.0-i386-netinst.iso The Debian installer complains when it tries to detect the cd-rom/dvd. It says it's unable to detect it or it would just hang on that page.

I'm not sure why but to fix it: press alt-f1 then enter. It will take you to a shell - check /dev and mount what you suspect is your optical drive (mount /dev/. /mnt works, no need for options) and if it works then you're good to go, alt-f2 to go back to the installer menus. I have no idea why this was necessary, I had /dev/cdrom dvd and sg0 and they all mounted fine which basically means there we're 3 devices pointing to my optical drive and yet the installer is not able to detect it. If you use the installer on the link it should work fine except for what was mentioned on the installation report. The installer comes pre-loaded with additional non-free firmware blobs which helps as you don't need to modify the official iso's.

Hp Proliant Dl380 G6 Drivers

I know this is a really, really old server but all the more you'd want Debian/linux on it. It's zooming now! MicroServer G7 N54L Serial ATA RAID-1 debian-7.6.0-amd64-netinst.iso You only need to edit the installer commandline to add dmraid=true as explained in wiki page. On booting I found the message 'modprobe: module dm-raid45 not found in modules.dep' which I fixed editing /usr/share/initramfs-tools/hooks/dmraid and changing dmraid-45 into dmraid Works fine. VGA is Radeon, and complains about the firmware missing (no acceleration, reduced 2D performance).

Installing the firmware-linux-nonfree package solves this issue (not sure if not installing it penalizes the CPU too much though).

Our HP Proliant ML150 is configured as RAID in the BIOS, and created a 'Logical drive' (using two 250GB HD) as RAID 1+0. The procedure seems to be Ok. However, when installing the OS (Ubuntu 10.10) the partitioner utility still shows our two HD /dev/sda /dev/sdb I was expecting to see only one drive, since the two HD are RAIDed.

Drivers

Is there a special step missing (checked again at boot, the RAID logical drive is still alive)? Edit It seems Ubuntu does not recognize the logical RAID drive. Edit2 RAID 1+0 is possible with two disks.

RAID 1+0: mirrored sets in a striped set (minimum two disks but more commonly four disks to take advantage of speed benefits; even number of disks).

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