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Planning process, Data transfer speed required for journal volumes, Raid group and journal group configurations – HP XP Continuous Access Software User Manual

Page 61: Data transfer speed of journal volumes

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The following factors affect the speed of writing to and reading from journal volumes, particularly when a

temporary communications path failure occurs between the primary and the secondary arrays or when

the amount of data transferred from hosts to the primary array increases:

RAID configuration of the RAID groups that will contain journal volumes

Types of physical volumes in the RAID groups that will contain journal volumes

Frequency of access to non-journal volumes in the RAID groups that will contain journal volumes

Data transfer speed required for the non-journal volumes

Disk usage rate for RAID groups

The journal volumes' capacity affects the time during which data transfer with hosts can continue without

being influenced by a temporary communications path failure between the primary and secondary arrays

or an increase in the data to be transferred from hosts to the primary array.

Planning process

Data transfer speed required for journal volumes

Figure 13

illustrates how the data transfer speed (that is, the amount of data to be transferred per unit of

time) changes as time elapses, showing different types of data transfer speeds with Continuous Access

XP Journal. Data transfer speed between hosts and the primary array goes through two phases. In

one phase, the data transfer speed remains almost unchanged. In the other phase, the data transfer

speed temporarily increases.

Figure 13 Data transfer speed of journal volumes

As illustrated in

Figure 13

, the data transfer speed (that is, the speed for reading and writing) of journal

volumes in the master journal group must exceed the amount of temporary increase in data to be

transferred. If the journal volumes' data transfer speed is below the amount of temporary increase in

data to be transferred, journal data for the temporary increase in data to be transferred is not stored in

journal volumes in a timely manner.
In

Figure 13

, the data transfer speed between the primary and the secondary arrays indicates the

transfer speed of journal data between the primary and secondary arrays. For more information, see

Journal volumes in restore journal groups

.

RAID group and journal group configurations

A RAID group can consist of physical volumes with a different number of revolutions, physical volumes with

different capacities, and physical volumes with different RAID configurations (for example, RAID-1 and

RAID-5). A RAID group's data transfer speed is affected by the physical volumes and RAID configurations.

Continuous Access XP Journal user guide

61

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