HPE SSD drives could fail at this critical moment

(Image credit: Hewlett Packard Enterprise)

Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) is warning customers to install a critical firmware patch for its Serial-Attached SCSI solid-state drives (SAS SSDs) in order to prevent them from failing after 32,768 hours of operation (3 years, 270 days and 8 hours).

These drives are currently used in multiple enterprise server and storage products from HPE ProLiant, Synergy, Apollo, JBOD D3XXX, D6XXX, D8XXX, MSA, StoreVirtual 4335 and StoreVirtual 3200.

The HPE Support Center warned customers of the fact that their SAS SSDs could soon fail if not updated with a firmware patch in a customer bulletin, which reads:

“This HPD8 firmware is considered a critical fix and is required to address the issue detailed below. HPE strongly recommends immediate application of this critical fix. Neglecting to update to SSD Firmware Version HPD8 will result in drive failure and data loss at 32,768 hours of operation and require restoration of data from backup in non-fault tolerance, such as RAID 0 and in fault tolerance RAID mode if more drives fail than what is supported by the fault tolerance RAID mode logical drive. By disregarding this notification and not performing the recommended resolution, the customer accepts the risk of incurring future related errors.”

SAS SSD bug

HPE was warned about the bug by the manufacturer of the SSDs, though it did not name the company.

The bug affects all HPE SAS SSDs with a firmware version lower than HPD8. However, upgrading the SSD firmware to version HPD8 fixes the problem and means the drives won't fail after 32,768 hours.

Some of HPE's SAS SSD models received a patch in November while a second set of SSD models will receive a patch to fix the issue during the second week of December.

If your organization is running HPE SAS SSDs, you can find firmware download links in the official HPE advisory alongside instructions on how to correctly apply the firmware update.

Via Bleeping Computer

Anthony Spadafora

After working with the TechRadar Pro team for the last several years, Anthony is now the security and networking editor at Tom’s Guide where he covers everything from data breaches and ransomware gangs to the best way to cover your whole home or business with Wi-Fi. When not writing, you can find him tinkering with PCs and game consoles, managing cables and upgrading his smart home. 

Latest in Pro
Google DeepMind panel discussion
“More sovereignty and protection” - Google goes all-in on UK AI with data residency, upskilling projects, and startup investments
A graphic showing someone on a tablet working through a supply chain.
Security issue in open source software leaves businesses concerned for systems
European Union technical background
EU tech companies push for digital sovereignty, reducing reliance on US and others
ransomware avast
One of the most powerful ransomware hacks around has been cracked using some serious GPU power
person at a computer
Infamous ransomware hackers reveal new tool to brute-force VPNs
3D version of the Adobe logo
Adobe Summit 2025 - all the news and updates as it happens
Latest in News
Pebble smartwatch countdown
Pebble confirms its smartwatch announcement is just hours away
Logo of YouTube Shorts
Is YouTube auto-playing Shorts when you open the app? Well, you’re not alone - here’s how to fix it
Google DeepMind panel discussion
“More sovereignty and protection” - Google goes all-in on UK AI with data residency, upskilling projects, and startup investments
Nintendo Switch 2
Nintendo Switch 2 expected to have AI upscaling and I can't wait to finally play Tears of the Kingdom with upgraded graphics
PowerColor Red Devil AMD RX 9070 XT graphics card shown side-on
Your next GPU could be from AMD, not Nvidia, if Team Red’s success with PC gamers continues
Intel Lunar Lake concept
Intel's Panther Lake processors won't arrive until Q1 2026 - corroborates previous delay rumors despite former Intel CEO's promise of 2025 launch