1 /ADG
Specifies the RAID type for the existing UNIT to be Advanced Data Guard (ADG). This qualifier should be used only with the /MIGRATE qualifier to migrate from any existing RAID level to ADG.
2 /CACHE
Determines whether the controller's cache should be used for the UNIT. Caching is ON by default. To disable caching, use a /NOCACHE qualifier with SET UNIT or ADD UNIT commands.
3 /DEL_SPARE
Specifies the spare disks to be removed from use for a unit. Multiple disks must be enclosed in parenthesis. Format: /DEL_SPARE=(disk numbers[,...]) Note: If you delete a spare disk (that is, assigned to more than one LUNs) from one unit, then the disk specified in the DEL_SPARE qualifier will be deleted from all the units in a disk group.
4 /DISKS
Specifies the disks to be used to form the UNIT. Multiple disks must be enclosed in parenthesis. This qualifier should be used only in conjunction with the /EXPAND qualifier to expand the disks used by the existing unit. Format: /DISK=(disk numbers[,...]) Note: The disk numbers for the existing disks can be obtained using the SHOW DISKS command.
5 /EXPAND
Allows the specified logical unit and all units in the disk/ disk group to utilize more disks. The EXPAND command does not increase the size of the logical unit but it merely adds more disks, appending extra space on each individual disk. To increase the size we need to use the "/EXTEND" qualifier after expanding the unit. During expansion of units of a drive group the RAID level of certain units might be changed. For example, if an unit of RAID level 1 with 2 disks is expanded to 3 disks, then the RAID level will change to RAID 5 as RAID 1 unit does not support odd number of disks. When expanding a unit with other units present on the same set of drives, all units will undergo volume expansion. Format: SET UNIT <Unit_n>/EXPAND/DISK=<diskrange> where Unit_n = (0-31) Note: - Diskrange must include both pre-expand disks and the additional disks. Examples of diskrange are: 101, (101,112,314,..) - Only /DISK qualifier should be used in conjunction with the /EXPAND qualifier - The disk numbers for the existing disks can be obtained using the SHOW DISKS command.
6 /EXTEND
Extends or increases the size of an existing logical unit. To specify a new size for the unit, use the /SIZE qualifier. The size specified must be greater than the current unit size. When extending a unit with other units present on the same set of drives, some units may be moved (undergo volume expansion) to make space for the additional size required. Note that even though the UNIT size increases on SET UNIT/EXTEND command completing successfully, the increased size will reflect in OpenVMS only after the appropriate Dynamic Volume Expansion (DVE) steps such as SET VOLUME/LIMIT and SET VOLUME/SIZE are executed successfully at the DCL prompt. For more details, refer to Chapter 9 on Dynamic Volume Expansion (DVE) in "VSI OpenVMS System Manager's Volume 1: Essentials manual". Note: The /SIZE qualifier should be used only in conjunction with the /EXTEND qualifier. Format: SET UNIT <Unit_n> /EXTEND/SIZE=S where Unit_n = (0-31) s=size in MB or GB (ex:10MB/20GB)
7 /IDENTIFIER
Specifies the unit number to be used by OpenVMS. The value of the identifier can be between 1 and 9999. Note: Identifier is not required for Smart Array controllers. Format: /IDENT= n
8 /JBOD
Specifies the RAID type to be JBOD. This is also synonymous to RAID 0.
9 /MIGRATE
Migrates the fault tolerance (RAID) level or Stripe size or both of an existing logical unit. When migrating a unit with other units present on the same set of drives, some units may undergo volume expansion. Format: SET UNIT <Unit_n>/MIGRATE [/RAID_LEVEL=R] [/STRIPE_SIZE=S] where Unit_n = (0-31) R=(0,1,5) S=(8,16,32,64,128,256) Note: - /ADG or /JBOD can also be used instead of /RAID_LEVEL - Only RAID level and Stripe size can be modified using the /MIGRATE qualifier - Cannot migrate any RAID units (RAID 1, RAID 5 and so on) that have spare disks to RAID 0 or JBOD units.
10 /RAID_LEVEL
Specifies the RAID type of the UNIT. The supported values for this qualifier are 0, 1, 5, 50, and 60. - RAID 0 is Data Striping - RAID 1 is Disk Mirroring - RAID 5 is Data Striping with Striped Parity - RAID 50 is Data Striping across RAID 5 arrays - RAID 60 is Data Striping across RAID 6 arrays Note: /RAID_LEVEL should be used only in conjunction with the /MIGRATE qualifier. Format: /RAID=[(0 | 1 | 5 | 50 |60)]
11 /SIZE
Specifies the new size of the UNIT. Note: The /SIZE qualifier should be used only in conjunction with the /EXTEND qualifier. Format: /SIZE=#(Gb | Mb | Kb | %)
12 /SPARES
Specifies the disk to be designated as the Spare disk(s). Multiple disks must be enclosed in parenthesis. Assigning a spare disk to an unit in a drive group will assign the spare disk to all the configured units in the drive group. If an unit is created on a disk group to which a spare disk is assigned, then the spare disk will be configured to the new unit (if it is not a RAID 0 unit). One spare disk can be assigned to multiple drive groups. Ensure that the size of the spare disk is at least equal to the size of the smallest drive in the drive group. Format: /SPARE=(disk_number[,...]) Note: The disk numbers for the existing disks can be obtained using the SHOW DISKS command.
13 /STRIPE_SIZE
Specifies the new stripe size for a given RAID volume. Stripe size must be one of 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, and 256 values. Raid 5 and ADG are limited to a maximum 64 KB stripes. SAS Smart Array Controllers with Firmware 5.0 onwards support 512 KB stripe size with RAID5. Note: The /STRIPE qualifier can only be used in conjunction with the /MIGRATE qualifier. Format: /STRIPE=(stripe_size)
14 /VERBOSE
Provides logging that can be interpreted by engineering.