Striping at a higher level, Striping at a higher l – Apple Xsan 1.4 User Manual

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Chapter 1

Overview of Xsan

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These files are managed by the Xsan metadata controller, but are stored on SAN

volumes, not on the controller itself. By default, metadata and journal data are stored

on the first storage pool you add to a volume. You can use Xsan Admin to choose

where these files are stored when you add storage pools to a new volume.

Striping at a Higher Level

When you write a file to a RAID array using RAID 0 (striping), the file is broken into

segments that are spread across the individual disk drives in the array. This improves

performance by writing pieces of the file in parallel (instead of one piece at a time) to

the individual disks in the array. Xsan applies this same technique at a second, higher

level in the storage hierarchy. Within each storage pool in a volume, Xsan stripes file

data across the individual LUNs that make up the storage pool. Once again,

performance is improved because data is written in parallel.

You can tune SAN performance by adjusting the amount of data written to each LUN in

a storage pool (the “stripe breadth”) to suit a critical application.

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