Notes on creating pools, Defining pool capacity – HP StorageWorks XP Remote Web Console Software User Manual

Page 28

Advertising
background image

28

Using Snapshot XP

Use RAID Manager XP commands to operate Snapshot XP pairs. However, whether the operations

complete normally or not depends on the pair status.

Table 7

shows the pair status and results of the RAID

Manager commands.

When the command executes the process and ends normally, the pair status changes according to the

process. For more information about how the pair status changes when the command ends normally, see

Figure 4

and the corresponding text.

Notes on creating pools

When creating pools, you must be careful about the pool capacity and types of volumes specified as

pool-VOLs. This section describes notes on pool capacity definitions and using external LUs as pool-VOLs.

Defining pool capacity

Pool capacity is the total capacity of pool volumes defined in the pool. If pool capacity is insufficient, the

status of Snapshot XP pairs could change to PSUE. When creating a pool, you must estimate the copy

capacity (for example, the capacity of snapshot data to be copied to the pool) and set enough pool

capacity for the estimated copy capacity. If copy capacity changes according to the time period, set

enough pool capacity for the largest copy capacity.

NOTE:

When snapshot data is copied to a pool, a multiple of 256 KB of the pool is used. Even if the snapshot

data capacity is less than 256 KB, you need 256 KB in the pool for the data.

If the same P-VOL area is updated more than once, snapshot data for the area is copied to the pool

only when the first update occurs. Therefore, when the same P-VOL area is updated only once, written

data capacity is equal to copied data capacity. However, when the same P-VOL area is updated

repeatedly, copy capacity is smaller than written data capacity.

HP recommends using a volume with a capacity that is a multiple of 256 KB as a pool-VOL. If the

capacity of the volume specified as a pool-VOL is not a multiple of 256 KB, the capacity that is less

than 256 KB is rounded off. For example, if you add a volume with 100.125 MB as a pool-VOL,

125 KB is rounded off and the pool’s capacity increases by only 100 MB.

When estimating copy capacity, consider whether there is only one snapshot data or more than one

snapshot data.

Table 7

Pair status and results of RAID Manager XP commands

Pair status

RAID Manager XP command

1

1. OK: Command executes the process and ends normally.

NOP: Command does not execute the process, but ends normally.

No: Command ends abnormally (that is, command is rejected).

paircreate paircreate

-split

pairsplit pairresync pairresync

-restore

pairsplit -S pairsplit -E

SMPL

OK

No

No

No

No

NOP

No

COPY

NOP

No

No

NOP

NOP

No

No

PAIR/PFUL

NOP

OK

OK

NOP

NOP

OK

No

PSUS/PFUS

No

NOP

NOP

OK

OK

OK

No

SMPL(PD)

No

No

No

No

No

NOP

No

COPY(RS)

NOP

No

No

NOP

NOP

No

No

COPY(RS-R)

NOP

No

No

NOP

NOP

No

No

PSUE

NO

No No

OK

2

2. If you issue the

pairresync

command for a pair whose status has changed to PSUE because of a shortage of shared

memory for the V-VOL management area, the command is rejected and ends abnormally.

No

OK

NOP

Advertising