Storage array performance during virtual disk copy, Setting copy priority – Dell PowerVault MD3000 User Manual

Page 91

Advertising
background image

Virtual Disk Copy

91

5 Set the copy priority for the virtual disk copy and click Next.

The source virtual disk, the target virtual disk, and the copy priority setting

that you selected appear on the

Create virtual disk copies—Confirm

Copy Settings dialog. The higher priorities allocate more resources to the

virtual disk copy at the expense of the storage array’s performance. For

more information, see "Setting Copy Priority" on page 91.

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 might take more time to copy

than standard virtual disks

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

The Copy Priority setting defines how much of the storage array’s resources

are used to complete a virtual disk copy, rather than to fulfill I/O requests.

Changing the copy priorities sets the rate at which a virtual disk copy is

completed.
Five copy priority rates are available: lowest, low, medium, high, and highest.

If the copy priority is set at the lowest rate, I/O activity is prioritized and the

virtual disk copy takes longer. At the highest priority rate, the virtual disk copy

is prioritized, and I/O activity for the storage array is slower.

Advertising