HP XP P9000 Business Copy User Guide (AV400-96573, July 2013)
Table Of Contents
- HP XP P9000 Business Copy User Guide
- Contents
- 1 Business Copy overview
- 2 Requirements and planning
- 3 Sharing Business Copy volumes
- Cache Residency
- Fast Snap and Snapshot
- Data Retention
- Thin Provisioning and Smart Tiers
- External Storage Access Manager
- LUN Manager
- Open Volume Management
- Resource Partition
- Continuous Access Synchronous
- Continuous Access Journal
- External Storage
- Auto LUN
- 4 Performing configuration operations
- 5 Performing pair operations
- 6 Monitoring and maintaining the system
- 7 Troubleshooting
- 8 Support and other resources
- A Interface support for BC operations and options
- B Business Copy GUI reference
- Replications window
- Local Replications window
- View Pair Properties window
- View Pair Synchronous Rate window
- View Histories window
- Consistency Group Properties window
- Create Pairs wizard
- Split Pairs wizard
- Resync Pairs wizard
- Suspend Pairs window
- Delete Pairs window
- Edit Mirror Units dialog box
- Change Options dialog box
- Add Reserve Volumes Wizard
- Remove Reserve Volumes window
- Edit Local Replica Option wizard
- C Configuration operations (secondary window)
- D Pair operations (secondary window)
- E Monitoring and maintaining the system (secondary window)
- F Business Copy GUI reference (secondary window)
- Glossary
- Index
MU Mirror unit.
OPEN-
x
A general term describing any of the supported OPEN emulation modes (for example, OPEN-E).
There are two types of OPEN-x devices: legacy OPEN-x devices with a fixed size (such as OPEN-3,
OPEN-8, OPEN-9, and OPEN-E), and OPEN-V, which has a variable size and is a CVS-based
volume.
P-VOL Primary volume.
parity group A set of hard disk drives that have the same capacity and that are treated as one group. A parity
group contains both user data and parity information, which enables user data to be accessed
if one or more drives in the group is not available.
path A path is created by associating a port, a target, and a LUN ID with one or more LDEVs. Also
known as a LUN.
port A physical connection that allows data to pass between a host and the disk array. The number
of ports on a disk array depends on the number of supported I/O slots and the number of ports
available per I/O adapter. The P9000 and XP family of disk arrays supports Fibre Channel (FC)
ports and other port types. Ports are named by port group and port letter, such as CL1-A. CL1 is
the group; A is the port letter.
PSUE Pair suspended-error.
PSUS Pair suspended-split.
RAID level A configuration of disk drives that uses striping, mirroring, and parity to improve performance
and data availability and reliability.
RAID Manager The CLI configuration and replication tool for the P9000 or XP disk array that system administrators
can use to enter RAID Manager commands from open-system hosts to perform Continuous Access,
Business Copy, Database Validator, and Data Retention operations, as well as provisioning
commands on logical devices.
RAID1-level data
storage
A RAID that consists of at least two drives that use mirroring (100 percent duplication of the
storage of data). There is no striping. Read performance is improved since either disk can be
read at the same time. Write performance is the same as for single disk storage.
RAID1/5 Specific RAID architectures.
RAID5-level data
storage
A RAID that provides data striping at the byte level and also stripe error correction information.
RAID5 configurations can tolerate one drive failure. Even with a failed drive, the data in a RAID5
volume can still be accessed normally.
RAID6-level data
storage
A RAID that provides data striping at the byte level and also stripe error correction information.
RAID6 configurations can tolerate two drive failures. Even with two failed drives, the data in a
RAID6 volume can still be accessed normally. RAID6 read performance is similar to RAID5, since
all drives can service read operations, but the write performance is lower than that of RAID5
because the parity data must be updated on multiple drives.
Remote Web
Console
A browser-based program installed on the SVP that allows you to configure and manage the disk
array.
S-VOL Secondary or remote volume. The copy volume that receives the data from the primary volume.
SMPL Simplex.
SSB Sense byte.
SVP Service processor. A computer built into a disk array. The SVP, used only by an HP service
representative, provides a direct interface to the disk array.
synchronous Describes computing models that perform tasks in chronological order without interruption. In
synchronous replication, the source waits for data to be copied at the destination before
acknowledging that it has been written at the source.
T-VOL Target volume.
V-VOL Virtual Volume.
VOL, vol Volume.
volume Volume on disk. An accessible storage area on disk, either physical or virtual.
WWN World Wide Name. A unique identifier assigned to a Fibre Channel device.
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