Thin virtual disks, Advantages of thin virtual disks – Dell POWERVAULT MD3600I User Manual

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The I/O characteristic types shown below are only presented during the create virtual disk process.
When you choose one of the virtual disk I/O characteristics, the corresponding dynamic cache prefetch setting and
segment size that are typically well suited for expected I/O patterns are populated in the Dynamic cache read prefetch
field and the Segment size field.
To change the I/O type:

1.

To enable read caching, select Enable read caching.

2.

To enable dynamic cache read prefetch, select Enable dynamic cache read prefetch.

3.

To enable write caching, select Enable write caching.

4.

Select one of the following:

– Enable write caching with mirroring — Select this option to mirror cached data across two redundant RAID

controller modules that have the same cache size.

– Enable write caching without batteries — Select this option to permit write caching to continue even if the

RAID controller module batteries are discharged completely, not fully charged, or are not present.

NOTE: Cache is automatically flushed if you disable Enable write caching.

5.

Click OK.

6.

In the confirmation dialog, click Yes.
A progress dialog is displayed, which indicates the number of virtual disks being changed.

Thin Virtual Disks

When creating virtual disks from a disk pool, you have the option to create thin virtual disks instead of standard virtual

disks. Thin virtual disks are created with physical (or preferred) and virtual capacity, allowing flexibility to meet

increasing capacity requirements.

When you create standard virtual disks, you allocate all available storage based on an estimation of how much space
you need for application data and performance. If you want to expand the size of a standard virtual disk in the future, you
must add physical disks to your existing disk groups or disk pools. Thin volumes allow you to create large virtual disks
with smaller physical storage allocations that can be increased as required.

NOTE: Thin virtual disks can only be created from an existing disk pool.

Advantages Of Thin Virtual Disks

Thin virtual disks, also known as thin provisioning, present a more logical storage view to hosts.

Thin virtual disks allow you to dynamically allocate storage to each virtual disk as data is written. Using thin provisioning
helps to eliminate large amounts of unused physical capacity that often occurs when creating standard virtual disks.
However, in certain cases, standard virtual disks may provide a more suitable alternative compared to thin provisioning,
such as in situations when:

you anticipate that storage consumption on a virtual disk is highly unpredictable or volatile

an application relying on a specific virtual disk is exceptionally mission critical

Physical Vs Virtual Capacity On A Thin Virtual Disk

When you configure a thin virtual disk, you can specify the following types of capacity:

physical (or preferred)

virtual

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