Virtual disks and disk groups, Supported raid levels – Dell PowerVault MD3000 User Manual

Page 35

Advertising
background image

Using Your RAID Enclosure

35

Virtual Disks and Disk Groups

When configuring a storage array, you would normally proceed in this order:

Organize the physical disks into disk groups.

Create virtual disks within these disk groups.

Determine which hosts you want to grant access to which virtual disks, then create mappings to
associate the virtual disks with the hosts.

NOTE:

Host access must be created prior to mapping virtual disks to them.

Disk groups are always created in the unconfigured capacity of a storage array; virtual disks are created
within the free capacity of a disk group. Unconfigured capacity is comprised of the available physical disk
space that is not already assigned in the storage array. Free capacity is the space in a disk group that has
not been assigned to a virtual disk.

Creating a Virtual Disk

To create a virtual disk, use one of the following methods:

Create a new disk group from unconfigured capacity. You can define the RAID level and capacity (the
number of physical disks) for the disk group, then define the parameters for the first virtual disk in the
new disk group.

Create a new virtual disk in the free capacity of an existing disk group. You only need to specify the
parameters for the new virtual disk.

Virtual Disk States

The RAID controller module recognizes the following virtual disk states.

Supported RAID Levels

RAID levels determine the way in which data is written to physical disks. Different RAID levels provide
different levels of accessibility, redundancy, and capacity.

Table 3-2.

RAID Controller Virtual Disk States

State

Description

Optimal

The virtual disk contains physical disks that are all online.

Degraded

The virtual disk with a redundant RAID level contains an inaccessible physical disk.
The system can still work properly, but performance may be affected and additional
disk failures may result in data loss.

Offline

A virtual disk with one or more member disks in an inaccessible (failed, missing, or
offline) state. Data on the virtual disk is no longer accessible.

Advertising