Veritas Volume Manager 5.0.1 Migration Guide, HP-UX 11i v3, First Edition, November 2009

Task Monitor, which tracks the progress of system recovery by monitoring
task creation, maintenance, and completion. The Task Monitor lets you pause,
resume, and stop as desired to adjust the impact on system performance.
Multiple mirroring with up to 32 mirror copies of a volumes address space.
Mirrored stripes (RAID-0 + RAID-1) and striped mirrors (RAID-1 + RAID-0)
combine the benefits of striping and mirroring. These layouts improve
performance by spreading data across multiple disks, and provide redundancy
of data by mirroring. Striped mirror volumes are more tolerant of disk failure
and have a shorter recovery time than mirrored stripe volumes. More detailed
information is available on these layouts.
See Veritas Volume Manager Administrators Guide.
Hot-relocation, which allows a system to react automatically to I/O failures
on redundant (mirrored or RAID-5) VxVM objects. This feature restores
redundancy and access to those objects without administrative intervention.
VxVM detects I/O failures on objects and relocates the affected subdisks. The
vxunreloc utility can be used to restore the system to the same configuration
that existed before the disk failure.
RAID-5, which provides data redundancy by using parity, at a lower storage
cost than mirroring. RAID-5 provides data redundancy by using parity. Parity
is a calculated value used to reconstruct data after a failure. While data is being
written to a RAID-5 volume, parity is calculated by doing an exclusive OR (XOR)
procedure on the data. The resulting parity is then written in an interleaved
fashion to the RAID-5 array that is established by the volume. If a portion of
a RAID-5 volume fails, the data that was on that portion of the failed volume
can be recreated from the remaining data and parity information.
Online Data Migration, which allows for regions of storage on physical media
to be dynamically moved to other physical devices.
Online Relayout or Dynamic Restriping, the ability to change logical data
configuration while online. For example, use this feature to change RAID-5 to
a mirrored layout or to change a stripe unit size. The volume data remains
available during the relayout.
Improved RAID-5 subdisk moves, using layered volume technology where the
RAID-5 subdisk move operation leaves the old subdisk in place while the new
one is being synchronized, thus maintaining redundancy and resiliency to
failures during the move.
11VxVM and LVM
Introducing Veritas Volume Manager