Users Guide

6. To make sure that only encrypted physical disks are used to create the virtual disk, select Yes from the Create Encrypted
Virtual Disk drop-down list.
The RAID levels are available for selection based on the number of encrypted physical disks.
If you select No, the RAID levels are available based on the total number of physical disks present on the system.
7. Select the required RAID level from the drop-down list.
Depending on the controller, Concatenated enables you to combine the storage capacity of several disks or to create a
virtual disk using a single physical disk. For more information on the number of supported physical disks supported by
Concatenated, see Number Of Physical Disks Per Virtual Disk. Using Concatenated does not provide data redundancy or
aect the read/write performance.
Select RAID 0 for striping. This selection groups n disks together as a large virtual disk with a total capacity of n disks. Data
is alternately stored in the disks so that they are evenly distributed. Data redundancy is not available in this mode. Read/
write performance is enhanced.
Select RAID 1 for mirroring disks. This selection groups two disks as one virtual disk with the capacity of a single disk. The
data is replicated on both disks. When a disk fails, the virtual disk continues to function. This feature provides data
redundancy and good read performance, but slightly slower write performance. The system must have at least two physical
disks to use RAID 1.
Select RAID 5 for striping with distributed parity. This selection groups n disks together as one large virtual disk with a
capacity of (n-1) disks. When a disk fails, the virtual disk continues to function. This feature provides better data redundancy
and read performance, but slower write performance. The system must have at least three physical disks to use RAID 5.
Select RAID 6 for striping with additional distributed parity. This selection groups n disks as one large virtual disk with a
capacity of (n- 2) disks. The virtual disk remains functional with up to two disk failures. RAID 6 provides better read
performance, but slower write performance. The system must have at least four physical disks to use RAID 6.
Select RAID 10 for striping over mirror sets. This selection groups n disks together as one large virtual disk with a capacity
of (n/2) disks. Data is striped across the replicated mirrored pair disks. When a disk fails, the virtual disk continues to
function. The data is read from the surviving mirrored pair disk. This feature provides the best failure protection and read/
write performance. The system must have at least four physical disks to use RAID 10. For PERC controllers with rmware
version 6 and later, RAID 10 also allows you to create a single span virtual disk with 22 or 26 physical drives.
Intelligent Mirroring — Automatically calculates the span composition based on the physical disks you select.
Spans are not displayed on this page. Select Continue to view the span grouping on the Summary page. Click Exit Wizard
to cancel the virtual disk creation.
Storage Management calculates the optimum span composition as follows:
Determining span calculation:
* Calculating the number of disks that can be utilized from the selected disks.
* Maximizing the number of spans to increase the I/O performance
Determining the mirror for the physical disks: The mirror is determined in a way that ensures maximum redundancy. The
algorithm also tries to match a physical disk for its mirror, to a disk that is almost the same size. However, Intelligent
Mirroring gives priority to size over redundancy.
The algorithm determines the candidate mirror in the following order:
* Across connectors at the same level of enclosure and same size.
* Across connectors in the enclosure that are not at the same level but of same size.
* Across enclosures connected to the same connector and to a disk of the same size.
* Within the enclosure with a physical disk of acceptable size dierence.
* Across connectors at the same level of enclosure and of acceptable size dierence.
* Across connectors in the enclosure that are not at the same level of the enclosure but with a physical disk of
acceptable size dierence.
If the size dierence is not acceptable, the disk is not mirrored and hence dropped from the span. The number of spans and
disks in the span is recalculated.
NOTE: It is recommended that you use Intelligent Mirroring to create RAID 10 across enclosures for simple and
optimum conguration.
NOTE: To view the redundancy across enclosures achieved through Intelligent Mirroring, click the virtual disk and
view the physical disk IDs in each span, which are from alternate enclosures.
Select RAID 50 to implement striping across more than one span of physical disks. RAID 50 groups n*s disks as one large
virtual disk with a capacity of s*(n-1) disks, where s is the number of spans and n is the number of disks within each span.
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