Storage array performance during virtual disk copy, Setting copy priority, Stopping a virtual disk copy – Dell POWERVAULT MD3600I User Manual

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Storage Array Performance During Virtual Disk Copy

The following factors contribute to the overall performance of the storage array:

I/O activity

Virtual disk RAID level

Virtual disk configuration — Number of drives in the virtual disk groups

Virtual disk type — Snapshot virtual disks may take more time to copy than standard virtual disks

Snapshots created using older RAID controller firmware versions (legacy snapshots) will take longer to

complete

During a virtual disk copy, resources for the storage array are diverted from processing I/O activity to completing a
virtual disk copy. This affects the overall performance of the storage array. When you create a new virtual disk copy,
you define the copy priority to determine how much controller processing time is diverted from I/O activity to a virtual
disk copy operation.

Setting Copy Priority

You can use the Copy Manager to select the rate at which a virtual disk copy completes for a selected copy pair. You
can change the copy priority for a copy pair at any of these times:

Before the virtual disk copy begins

While the virtual disk copy has a status of In Progress

When you re-create a virtual disk copy

To set copy priority:

1.

In the AMW, select the Storage & Copy Services tab and select Copy Services → Virtual Disk Copy → Manage

Copies.
The Copy Manager window is displayed.

2.

In the table, select one or more copy pairs.

3.

Select Change → Copy Priority.
The Change Copy Priority window is displayed.

4.

In the Copy Priority area, select the appropriate copy priority, depending on your system performance needs.

NOTE: There are five copy priority rates available:

– lowest
– low
– medium
– high
– highest

If the copy priority is set at the lowest rate, I/O activity is prioritized, and the virtual disk copy takes longer.

Stopping A Virtual Disk Copy

You can stop a virtual disk copy operation that has an In Progress status, a Pending status, or a Failed status. Stopping a

virtual disk copy that has a Failed status clears the Needs Attention status displayed for the storage array.

Keep these guidelines in mind when you stop a virtual disk copy:

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