Arrays, Configuring arrays from physical drives – HP ProLiant SB460c SAN Gateway Storage Server User Manual

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Include the appropriate number of physical drives in the arrays to create logical storage elements
of desired sizes.

Arrays

See

Figure 2

. With an array controller installed in the system, the capacity of several physical drives

(P1–P3) can be logically combined into one or more logical units (L1) called arrays. When this is
done, the read/write heads of all the constituent physical drives are active simultaneously, dramatically
reducing the overall time required for data transfer.

NOTE:

Depending on the storage server model, array configuration may not be possible or necessary.

P1

P3

P2

L1

gl0042

Figure 2 Configuring arrays from physical drives

Because the read/write heads are simultaneously active, the same amount of data is written to each
drive during any given time interval. Each unit of data is termed a block. The blocks form a set of
data stripes over all the hard drives in an array, as shown in

Figure 3

.

S1

S2

S3

S4

B1

B4

B7

B2

B5

B8

B11

B10

B12

B6

B3

B9

gl0043

Figure 3 RAID 0 (data striping) (S1-S4) of data blocks (B1-B12)

For data in the array to be readable, the data block sequence within each stripe must be the same.
This sequencing process is performed by the array controller, which sends the data blocks to the drive
write heads in the correct order.

A natural consequence of the striping process is that each hard drive in a given array contains the
same number of data blocks.

NOTE:

If one hard drive has a larger capacity than other hard drives in the same array, the extra capacity is
wasted because it cannot be used by the array.

HP ProLiant SB460c SAN Gateway Storage Server

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