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Understanding raid – MicroNet Technology Network Device RAIDBank4 User Manual

Page 16

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RAIDBank4 Owner’s Manual

16

Volume Set

A Volume Set is seen by the host system as a single logical device. It is organized in a RAID
level with one or more physical disks. RAID level refers to the level of data performance
and protection of a Volume Set. A Volume Set capacity can consume all or a portion of
the disk capacity available in a RAID
Set. Multiple Volume Sets can exist
on a group of disks in a RAID Set.
Additional Volume Sets created in a
specified RAID Set will reside on all
the physical disks in the RAID Set.
Thus each Volume Set on the RAID Set
will have its data spread evenly across
all the disks in the RAID Set.

• Volume Sets of different RAID

levels may coexist on the same
RAID Set.

• The maximum addressable size of a single volume set is 2 Terabytes.
• Up to eight volume sets can be created in a RAID set

Online Capacity Expansion
Online Capacity Expansion makes it possible to add one or more physical drives to a volume set,
while the server is in operation, eliminating the need to store and restore after re-configuring
the RAID set. When disks are added to a RAID set, unused capacity is added to the end of the
RAID set. Data on the existing volume sets residing on that RAID set is redistributed evenly
across all the disks. A contiguous block of unused capacity is made available on the RAID set.
The unused capacity can create additional volume set. The expansion process is illustrated
as following figure:

Disk 1

200GB

Disk 2

200GB

Disk 3

200GB

Disk 1

200GB

Disk 2

200GB

Disk 3

200GB

Disk 4

200GB

Free Space

200GB

Vol 1 (200GB)

Vol 2 (200GB)

Free Space

400GB

Vol 1 (200GB)

Vol 2 (200GB)

Before Expansion: Disk Array A, 600GB

After Disk Expansion: Disk Array A, 800GB

The RAIDBank4 controller redistributes the original volume set over the original and newly added disks, using the same fault-

tolerance configuration. The unused capacity on the expanded RAID set can then be used to create additional volume sets,

with a different fault tolerance setting if required.

Array Roaming
The RAIDbank4 stores configuration information both in NVRAM and on the disk drives,
and can protect the configuration settings in the case of a disk drive or controller failure.
Array roaming allows the administrator the ability to move a complete RAID set to another
system without losing RAID configuration and data on that RAID set. Should the RAIDBank4
enclosure cease to function, the RAID set disk drives can be moved to another RAIDBank4,
inserted in any order, and become instantly available.

A 4 Disk RAIDset may contain two volumes. Volume 1 can be

assigned a RAID 5 level of operation while Volume 2 might be

assigned a RAID 0+1 level of operation.

Free Space

Volume 1

Volume 2

Disk 1

Disk 2

Disk 3

Disk 4

2-Understanding RAID

Data

Data

Data

Data

Data

Parity

Parity

Parity