Users Guide
17
Protecting Your Virtual Disk With A Hot Spare
When you create a virtual disk using a RAID controller, it enables the system to continue functioning even during a disk failure. This
feature can be enabled by assigning a hot spare to the virtual disk. When a disk fails, the redundant data is rebuilt onto the hot spare
without interrupting system operations.
Related links
Dedicated Hot Spare Protection Policy
Understanding Hot Spares
A hot spare is an unused backup physical disk that can be used to rebuild data from a redundant virtual disk. Hot spares remain in
standby mode. When a physical disk that is used in a redundant virtual disk fails, the assigned hot spare is activated to replace the
failed physical disk without interrupting the system or requiring your intervention. If a virtual disk using the failed physical disk is not
redundant, then the data is permanently lost without any method (unless you have a backup) to restore the data.
The following sections describe procedures for assigning a hot spare:
• Assigning And Unassigning Global Hot Spare
• Assigning And Unassigning Dedicated Hot Spare
Setting Hot Spare Protection Policy
The Hot Spare Protection Policy is supported only on Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) controllers.
The Hot Spare Protection Policy provides you with a higher protection level for the virtual disks by enabling you to specify the
number of dedicated/global hot spares to be assigned to the virtual disks/controller. You can also specify the severity levels for the
protection policy. Storage Management sends alerts when the hot spare protection policy is violated.
Storage Management does not provide a default policy; however, you can determine the hot spare protection policy best suited for
your environment.
Related links
Assigning And Unassigning Dedicated Hot Spare
Assigning And Unassigning Global Hot Spare
Dedicated Hot Spare Protection Policy
Table 35. Hot Spare Properties
Property Denition
RAID Level Indicates the RAID level(s) for which you want to congure the
hot spare protection policy.
Minimum Number of Disks Indicates the minimum number of physical disks to be assigned
as dedicated hot spares for the selected RAID level(s).
Severity Level Displays the severity level you want to assign to the generated
alert, if this policy is violated.
NOTE: The status of the virtual disk is determined by
the severity level you specify for this policy.
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