To attach a storage system to Lenovo Storage V series,
consider the following two major steps:
- Setting the characteristics of the system to storage connections
- Mapping logical units to these storage connections that allow
the system to access the logical units
You can use the virtualization features of the system
to choose how your storage is divided and presented to hosts. While
virtualization provides you with a great deal of flexibility, it also
offers the potential to set up an overloaded storage system. A storage system is overloaded if the quantity of I/O transactions that are
issued by the host systems exceeds the capability of the storage to
process those transactions. If a storage system is overloaded, it causes delays in the host systems and might
cause I/O transactions to time out in the host. If I/O transactions
time out, the host logs errors and I/Os fail to the applications.
Scenario: You have an overloaded storage system
Under this scenario, you used the Lenovo Storage V series system
to virtualize a single array and to divide the storage across 64 host
systems. If all host systems attempt to access the storage at the
same time, the single array is overloaded.
To configure a balanced storage system that is not overloaded, follow these steps:
If your
storage system is overloaded, you can take several possible actions to resolve
the problem:
- Add more backend storage to the system to increase the quantity
of I/O that can be processed by the storage system. The system provides virtualization and data migration facilities
to redistribute the I/O workload of volumes across
a greater number of MDisks without having to take the storage offline.
- Stop unnecessary FlashCopy mappings to reduce the number of I/O
operations that are submitted to the backend storage. If you process
FlashCopy operations in parallel, consider reducing the amount of
FlashCopy mappings that start in parallel.
- Adjust the queue depth to limit the I/O workload that is generated
by a host. Depending on the type of host and type of host bus adapters
(HBAs), it might be possible to limit the queue depth per volume, limit the queue depth per HBA, or both. The system
also provides I/O governing features that can limit the I/O workload
that is generated by hosts.
Note: Although these actions can be used to avoid I/O timeouts,
performance of your storage system is still limited by the amount of storage that you have.