If there is a copy workload in a Microsoft Windows environment, you can use Microsoft offloaded data transfer (ODX) to offload the copy workload to the storage controller to speed job completion. When you decide on an ODX implementation, review the planning considerations to help you determine whether ODX is appropriate for your environment.
If you have a Hyper-V environment, the benefit is immense through copy offload ODX technology. With ODX enabled, all Windows jobs like file copy, VM migration, cloning, and VHD creation would be offloaded to the storage controller. It is advisable to check the impact of copy offload on other types of workloads in such an environment.
If you decide to implement ODX, it is advisable that you review existing workloads and make sure that capacity planning is completed to meet the demand. If you are not interested in the benefits of copy offload but instead want existing workloads to not experience extra latency due to copy offload, then you have an option of disabling system-wide ODX by using the CLI.