Choosing the windows id mapping method, Checking volume fragmentation, Choosing the – Apple Xsan 1.4 User Manual

Page 101

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Chapter 3

Managing SAN Storage

101

Choosing the Windows ID Mapping Method

Use the Windows ID Mapping setting to specify how Windows clients map user and

group information to Xsan-compatible user IDs (UIDs) and group IDs (GIDs), which they

need in order to access Xsan volumes.

For more information, see “Mapping Windows User and Group IDs” on page 112.

Checking Volume Fragmentation

When you create a file, Xsan breaks the file into pieces and distributes these pieces

efficiently over the LUNs that make up one of the volume’s storage pools. Over time, as

the file is modified, its pieces can become scattered in less efficient arrangements. You

can use the

cvfsck

utility to check on the state of file fragmentation on your volumes.

To check volume fragmentation:

1

Open Terminal (in /Applications/Utilities/).

2

If you are not working at the SAN controller computer, use SSH to log in to the

controller remotely:

$ ssh user@computer

where

user

is an administrator user on the controller computer and

computer

is the

controller’s name or IP address.

3

Run the

cvfsck

command-line utility (in /Library/Filesystems/Xsan/bin/) with the

-f

option:

$ sudo cvfsck -f volume

For more information, see the

cvfsck

man page.

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