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Apple Xsan 1.0 User Manual

Page 24

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Chapter 2

Setting Up a Storage Area Network

Xserve RAID supports all popular RAID levels. Each RAID scheme offers a different
balance of performance, data protection, and storage efficiency, as summarized in the
following table.

RAID 10, 30, and 50 schemes assume the use of AppleRAID software striping and aren’t
appropriate for use with Xsan, which performs its own striping. For more help choosing
RAID schemes for your arrays, see the Xserve RAID User’s Guide or the Xserve RAID
Technology Overview
(at www.apple.com).

Deciding on the Number of Volumes

A volume is the largest unit of shared storage in the SAN. If your users need shared
access to files, you should store those files on the same volume. This makes it
unnecessary for them to pass copies of the files among themselves.

On the other hand, if security is critical, one way to control client access is to create
separate volumes and mount only the authorized volume on each client.

For a more typical balance of security and shared access, a flexible compromise is to
create a single volume and use folder access privileges to control access.

Note: The maximum size of any volume is 16 TB. If you need more than 16 TB of
storage, you need to create more than one volume.

Deciding How to Organize a Volume

You can help users organize data on a volume or restrict users to specific areas of the
volume by creating predefined folders. You can control access to these folders by
assigning access permissions using Xsan Admin.

You can assign folders to specific storage pools using affinities. You can, for example,
create a folder for data that requires fast access and assign that folder to your fastest
storage pool.

Assigning LUNs to Storage Pools

You should set up a storage pool using LUNs that have similar capacity and
performance characteristics.

RAID level

Storage efficiency

Read performance

Write performance

Data redundancy

RAID 0

Highest

Very High

Highest

No

RAID 1

Low

High

Medium

Yes

RAID 3

High to very high

Medium

Medium

Yes

RAID 5

High to very high

High

High

Yes

RAID 0+1

Low

High

High

Yes

LL0192.book Page 24 Thursday, July 29, 2004 5:20 PM