3 ranks, Figure 4-3, Array site 1 raid array – IBM TotalStorage DS6000 Series User Manual

Page 93: Creation of an array, Array site 2, Rank, Extents, Extent type

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Chapter 4. Virtualization concepts

69

Figure 4-3 Creation of an array

So, an array is formed using one or two array sites, and while the array could be accessed by
each adapter of the device adapter pair, it is managed by one device adapter. Which adapter
and which server manages this array is defined later in the configuration path.

4.2.3 Ranks

In the DS6000 virtualization hierarchy there is another logical construct, a

rank

.

When you define a new rank, its name is chosen by the DS Storage Manager, for example:
R1, R2, or R3, and so on. You have to add an array to a rank.

The available space on each rank is divided into

extents

. The extents are the building blocks

of the logical volumes. An extent is striped across all disks of an array as shown in Figure 4-4
on page 70
and indicated by the small squares in Figure 4-5 on page 71.

The process of forming a rank does two things:

The array is defined for either fixed block (open systems) or CKD (zSeries) data. This
determines the size of the set of data contained on one disk within a stripe on the array.

The capacity of the array is subdivided into equal sized partitions, called

extents.

The

extent size depends on the

extent type,

FB or CKD.

An FB rank has an extent size of 1 GB (where 1 GB equals 2

30

bytes).

People who work in the zSeries environment do not deal with gigabytes but think of storage in
metrics of the old 3390 volume sizes. A 3390 Model 3 is three times the size of a Model 1,

Array Site 1

RAID
Array

Spare

Data
Data
Data
Data
Data
Data
Parity

Creation of
an array

D1

D7

D13

...

D2

D8

D14

...

D3

D9

D15

...

D4

D10

D16

...

D5

D11

P

...

D6

P

D17

...

P

D12

D18

...

Array Site 2

Spare

Note: In the current DS6000 implementation, a rank is built using just one array.

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