Product manual

VTrak E-Class Product Manual
134
Managing Logical Drives
Logical drives are made from disk arrays. In the Tree, you can see a graphic
representation of the logical drives that belong to each array. You can see a
summary of all logical drives in the subsystem under Logical Drive Summary.
Logical drive management includes the following functions:
Viewing Information for All Logical Drives (page 134)
Viewing Logical Drive Information (page 135)
Viewing Logical Drive Statistics (page 136)
Making Logical Drive Settings (page 136)
Initializing a Logical Drive (page 137)
Running Redundancy Check (page 137)
Viewing the Logical Drive Check Table (page 138)
Making Logical Drive LUN Settings (page 139)
Viewing Information for All Logical Drives
To view information about all logical drives in a disk array:
1. Click the Subsystem icon in Tree View.
2. Click the Disk Arrays icon.
3. Click the Disk Array icon.
4. Click the Logical Drives icon
Logical Drive Status
OK – This is the normal state of a logical drive. When a logical drive is
Functional, it is ready for immediate use. For RAID Levels other than RAID 0
(Striping), the logical drive has full redundancy.
Synchronizing – This condition is temporary. Synchronizing is a maintenance
function that verifies the integrity of data and redundancy in the logical drive.
When a logical drive is Synchronizing, it will function and your data is
available. However, access will be slower due to the synchronizing
operation.
Rebuilding – This condition is temporary. When a physical drive has been
replaced, the logical drive automatically begins rebuilding in order to restore
redundancy (fault tolerance). When a logical drive is rebuilding, it will
function and your data is available. However, access will be slower due to
the rebuilding operation.
Critical – This condition arises as the result of a physical drive failure. A
degraded logical drive will still function and your data is still available.