Apple Xsan 1.4 User Manual

Page 42

Advertising
background image

42

Chapter 2

Setting Up a Storage Area Network

Performance Considerations

If your SAN supports an application (such as high resolution video capture and

playback) that requires the fastest possible sustained data transfers, design your SAN

with these performance considerations in mind:

 Set up the LUNs (RAID arrays) using a RAID scheme that offers high performance. See

“Choosing RAID Schemes for LUNs” on page 44.

 Group your fastest LUNs in storage pools reserved for the application. Reserve slower

devices for a volume dedicated to less demanding or supporting applications.

 To increase parallelism, spread LUNs across different Xserve RAID controllers. For

example, instead of creating a single 4-disk LUN on one side of an Xserve RAID, create

two 2-disk LUNs, one on each side, and add these LUNs to a storage pool. Xsan then

stripes data across the two LUNs and benefits from simultaneous transfers through

two controllers.

 To increase parallelism in a relatively small storage pool (the size of one or a few drive

modules), create a slice of similar size across all the drives on a controller instead of

creating the storage pool from just one or two drive modules.

 Spread file transfers across as many drives and RAID controllers as possible.

Try creating slices across the drives in RAID systems, and then combine these slices

into a storage pool.

 To increase throughput, connect both ports on client Fibre Channel cards to the

fabric and set the multipathing method for the storage pool to Rotate.

 Store file system metadata and journal data on a separate storage pool from user

data, and make sure the metadata LUNs are not on the same RAID controller as any

user data LUNs.

Advertising