ibm-information-center/dist/eclipse/plugins/i5OS.ic.rzahq_5.4.0.1/rzahqstormgtconcept.htm

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<h2 id="rzahqstormgtconcept">i5/OS storage management</h2>
<p>This brief overview of i5/OS&trade; storage management concepts is intended
for administrators who are more familiar with how Windows servers manage storage.
Because i5/OS handles storage management differently than a PC server, some techniques
that you need in the PC server world are unnecessary in the Windows environment
on iSeries&trade;.</p>
<p><span class="bold">i5/OS and disk drives</span></p>
<p>i5/OS, the operating system that runs on an iSeries, does not need to deal directly with
disk drives. Beneath the operating system a level of software (called System
Licensed Internal Code (SLIC)) "hides" the disk drives and manages the storage
of objects on those disk drives. A virtual address space is mapped over the
existing disk space and used for addressing objects rather than disk drive
IDs, cylinders, and sectors. Needed objects are copied ("paged in") from this
address space on disk into the address space of main memory.</p>
<p>Because of the way i5/OS manages disk data, you do not generally need to worry
about partitioning high-growth databases, defragmenting disks, or disk striping
on your integrated server. The integrated server uses device drivers to share
the i5/OS disk drives. These device drivers send and receive disk data to
the i5/OS storage management subsystem. i5/OS storage management handles the hard disks,
including spreading the Windows disk drive images across multiple hard disk
drives and applying RAID and file mirroring (if configured). Disk defragmentation
software manages logical file fragmentation of the hard disk images. Because i5/OS storage management handles these tasks, running a defragmentation program
on the integrated server helps primarily in cases where in cases where "critical
file system structures" can be defragmented.</p>
<p><span class="bold">Disk pools (ASPs)</span></p>
<p>In i5/OS physical hard disk drives are pooled together into one storage
space called a disk pool, also called an auxiliary storage pool (ASP). If
your file system runs out of space, you can add a new hard disk drive to the
disk pool, and the new storage space will be available immediately. Every
system has at least one disk pool, the system disk pool. The system disk pool
is always ASP 1. You can configure additional <span class="italic">user</span> disk
pools, numbered 2 - 255. You can use disk pools to distribute your i5/OS data over different
groups of disks. You can also use this concept to move less important applications
or data to your older, slower disk drives. Support for independent ASPs (33-255)
is provided through iSeries Navigator. Both the Information Center and iSeries Navigator refer to ASPs as Disk Pools.</p>
<p><span class="bold">Disk protection:</span></p>
<p>i5/OS disks can be protected in two ways:</p>
<ul>
<li><img src="delta.gif" alt="Start of change" /><span class="bold">Cross-site mirroring</span>
<br />Cross-site
mirroring, using the operating system geographic mirroring function for IASPs,
mirrors data on disks at sites that can be separated by a significant distance.<img src="deltaend.gif" alt="End of change" /></li>
<li><span class="bold">RAID-5</span>
<br />The RAID-5 technique
groups several disks together to form an array. Each disk holds checksum information
of the other disks in the same array. If a disk fails, the RAID-5 disk controller
can re-create the data of the failing disk with the help of the checksum information
about the other disks. When you replace a failing disk with a new one, i5/OS can rebuild the information from the failed disk on the new (and therefore
empty) disk.</li>
<li><span class="bold">Mirroring</span>
<br />Mirroring keeps
two copies of data on two different disks. i5/OS performs write operations on both disks
at the same time, and can simultaneously perform two different read operations
on the two disks of a mirrored pair. If one disk fails, i5/OS uses information
from the second disk. When you replace the failing disk, i5/OS copies the
data from the intact disk to the new disk.</li></ul>
<p>To further increase the level of protection, you can attach the mirrored
disks to two different disk controllers. Then if one controller fails, and
with it one set of disks, the other controller can keep the system up. On
larger models of iSeries, you can attach controllers to more than one bus.
Attaching the two disk controllers that form a mirrored pair to two different
buses increases availability even more.</p>
<p>You can define disk pools on i5/OS to have different levels of protection
or no protection at all. Then you can put applications and data into a disk
pool with the right amount of protection, depending on how important their
availability is. For more information about i5/OS disk protection and availability options,
read <a href="../books/sc415304.pdf" target="_blank">Backup and Recovery</a>.</p>
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