Disk group operations – Dell PowerVault MD3000 User Manual

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Using Your RAID Enclosure

Media Verification

Another background task performed on the RAID controller module is media verification of all
configured physical disks in a disk group. The RAID controller module uses the Read operation to
perform verification on the space configured in virtual disks and the space reserved by the controller for
the metadata.

Cycle Time

The media verification operation runs only on selected disk groups, independent of other disk groups.
Cycle time is how long it takes to complete verification of the metadata region of the disk group and all
virtual disks in the disk group for which media verification is configured. The next cycle for a disk group
starts automatically when the current cycle completes. You can set the cycle time for a media verification
operation between 1 and 30 days. The firmware throttles the media verification I/O accesses to disks
based on the cycle time.

The RAID controller module tracks the cycle for each disk group independent of other disk groups on
the controller and creates a checkpoint. If the media verification operation on a disk group is preempted
or blocked by another operation on the disk group, the firmware resumes after the current cycle. If the
media verification process on a disk group is stopped due to a RAID controller module restart, the
firmware resumes the process from the last checkpoint.

Virtual Disk Operations Limit

The maximum number of active, concurrent virtual disk processes per controller is four. This limit is
applied to the following virtual disk processes: background initialization, foreground initialization,
consistency check, rebuild, and copy back.

If a redundant controller fails with existing virtual disk processes, the processes on the failed controller
are transferred to the peer controller. A transferred process is placed in a suspended state if there are four
active processes on the peer controller. The suspended processes are resumed on the peer controller when
the number of active processes falls below four.

Disk Group Operations

RAID Level Migration

Over time, you might determine that characteristics of the initial RAID level you set initially are no
longer appropriate for your enterprise. For example, you can add fault-tolerant characteristics to a stripe
set (RAID 0) by converting it to a RAID 5 set. Select the virtual disk that you want to change and select
the type of RAID level to which you want to migrate. MD Storage Manager provides information about
RAID attributes to assist you in selecting the appropriate level. You can perform a RAID level migration
while the system is still running and without rebooting, which maintains data availability.

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