Journal volumes in restore journal groups, Bandwidth of data transfer paths, Journal transfer speed of dkcs – HP StorageWorks XP Remote Web Console Software User Manual

Page 51

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Continuous Access XP Journal user guide

51

The total capacity of the journal volumes in each journal group must exceed the value illustrated above.

Journal volumes in restore journal groups

When a failure occurs at a host, one failure recovery measure is to reverse the primary and secondary

data volumes (that is, change the copy direction). To reverse the primary and secondary data volumes, you

must usually ensure that the data transfer speed is the same before and after you reverse the data volumes.

Therefore, when you plan for master journal volumes and restore journal volumes, you must apply the same

scheme to the master and restore journal volumes.
If you do not want to reverse the primary and secondary data volumes, you can cope with a temporary

increase in data transfers and a communications path failure between the primary and secondary disk

arrays if the master journal volume satisfies the conditions mentioned earlier. Therefore, the data transfer

speed and volume capacity required for restore journal volumes are smaller than those required for master

journal volumes. The data transfer speed for journal volumes must exceed the data transfer speed in

“normal status.”

Factors that determine the data transfer speed between the primary and secondary disk arrays

The speed of data transfer between the primary and secondary disk arrays depends on the following

factors:

Bandwidth of the data transfer paths

DKC’s journal transfer speed

The data transfer speed between the primary and secondary disk arrays must exceed the data transfer

speed in “normal status” shown in

Figure 13

. If a temporary increase in transferred data occurs and the

data transfer speed between the primary and secondary disk arrays is exceeded, excess data is stored

temporarily in journal volumes.

Figure 13

Data transfer speed between primary and secondary disk arrays

Bandwidth of data transfer paths

The bandwidth (that is, the data transfer speed) of data transfer paths between the primary and secondary

disk arrays depends on your environment. The bandwidth must exceed the data transfer speed in “normal

status” mentioned previously.

Journal transfer speed of DKCs

The journal transfer speed of a DKC depends on the number of paths used for transferring journals. The

number of paths for transferring journals must be large enough that the journal transfer speed exceeds the

data transfer speed in the “normal status” mentioned previously. The maximum number of paths for each

pair of the primary and secondary DKC is 8.

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