Users Guide

Fast initialization
The fast initialize operation initializes all physical disks included in the virtual disk. It updates the metadata
on the physical disks so that all disk space is available for future write operations. The initialize task can be
completed quickly because the existing information on the physical disks is not erased, although future
write operations overwrite any information that remains on the physical disks.
Fast initialization only deletes the boot sector and stripe information. Perform a fast initialize only if you
are constrained for time or the hard drives are new or unused. Fast Initialization takes less time to
complete (usually 30-60 seconds).
CAUTION: Performing a fast initialize causes existing data to be inaccessible.
The fast initialize task does not write zeroes to the disk blocks on the physical disks. It is because the Fast
Initialize task does not perform a write operation, it causes less degradation to the disk.
A fast initialization on a virtual disk overwrites the first and last 8 MB of the virtual disk, clearing any boot
records or partition information. The operation takes only 2-3 seconds to complete and is recommended
when you are recreating virtual disks.
A background initialization starts five minutes after the Fast Initialization is completed.
Full or slow initialization
The full initialization (also called slow initialize) operation initializes all physical disks included in the virtual
disk. It updates the metadata on the physical disks and erases all existing data and file systems. You can
perform a full initialization after creating the virtual disk. In comparison with the fast initialize operation,
you may want to use the full initialize if you have trouble with a physical disk or suspect that it has bad
disk blocks. The full initialize operation remaps bad blocks and writes zeroes to all disk blocks.
If full initialization of a virtual disk is performed, background initialization is not required. During full
initialization, the host is not able to access the virtual disk. If the system reboots during a full initialization,
the operation terminates and a background initialization process starts on the virtual disk.
It is always recommended to do a full initialization on drives that previously contained data. Full
initialization can take up to 1-2 minutes per GB. The speed of initialization depends on the controller
model, speed of hard drives, and the firmware version.
The full initialize task initializes one physical disk at a time.
NOTE: Full initialize is supported only in real-time. Only few controllers support full initialization.
Encrypting virtual disks
When encryption is disabled on a controller (that is, the security key is deleted), manually enable
encryption for virtual disks created using SED drives. If the virtual disk is created after encryption is
enabled on a controller, the virtual disk is automatically encrypted. It is automatically configured as an
encrypted virtual disk unless the enabled encryption option is disabled during the virtual disk creation.
NOTE: This task can only be staged and real-time is not supported.
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