HP Smart Storage Administrator User Manual

Page 107

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Troubleshooting 107

With an array controller installed in the system, the capacity of several physical drives can be combined into

one or more virtual units called logical drives (also called logical volumes and denoted by Ln in the figures in
this section). Then, the read/write heads of all the constituent physical drives are active simultaneously,

reducing the total time required for data transfer.

Because the read/write heads are active simultaneously, the same amount of data is written to each drive

during any given time interval. Each unit of data is called a block (denoted by Bn in the figure), and adjacent
blocks form a set of data stripes (Sn) across all the physical drives that comprise the logical drive.

For data in the logical drive to be readable, the data block sequence must be the same in every stripe. 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 physical drive in a given logical drive will contain

the same amount of data. If one physical drive has a larger capacity than other physical drives in the same

logical drive, the extra capacity is wasted because it cannot be used by the logical drive.

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