Logical units and target ports on IBM XIV Storage System models

On IBM® XIV® Storage System, logical units (LUs) are enumerated devices that have the same characteristics as LUNs.

LUNs

An IBM XIV Storage System Logical Unit is referred to as a volume. IBM XIV Storage System and volumes are enumerated devices that all share identical characteristics.

A single IBM XIV Storage System volume can potentially consume the entire capacity that is allocated for Lenovo Storage V7000 storage pools, and it can also exceed the Lenovo Storage V70001 PB LUN size limit. Any LUN that is 1 PB or larger is truncated to 1 PB, and a warning message is generated for each path to the LUN.

IBM XIV Storage System volumes consume chunks of 17,179,869,184 bytes (17 GB), although you can create volumes with an arbitrary block count.

LUN IDs

LUNs that are exported by IBM XIV Storage System models report Identification Descriptors 0, 1, and 2 in VPD page 0x83. Lenovo Storage V7000 uses the EUI-64 compliant type 2 descriptor CCCCCCMMMMMMLLLL, where CCCCCC is the IEEE company ID, MMMMMM is the System Serial Number transcribed to hexadecimal (10142->0x010142, for example) and LLLL is 0000-0xFFFF, which increments each time a LUN is created. You can identify the LLLL value by using the IBM XIV Storage System GUI or CLI to display the volume serial number.

LUN creation and deletion

IBM XIV Storage System LUNs are created and deleted using the IBM XIV Storage System GUI or CLI. LUNs are formatted to all zeros upon creation, but to avoid a significant formatting delay, zeros are not written.

Special LUNs

IBM XIV Storage System systems do not use a special LUN; storage can be presented using any valid LUN, including 0.

LU access model

IBM XIV Storage System systems have no specific ownership of any LUN by any module. Because data is striped over all disks in the system, performance is generally unaffected by the choice of a target port.

LU grouping

IBM XIV Storage System models do not use LU grouping; all LUNs are independent entities. To protect a single IBM XIV Storage System volume from accidental deletion, you can create a consistency group containing all LUNs that are mapped to a single Lenovo Storage V7000clustered system.

LU preferred access port

There are no preferred access ports for IBM XIV Storage System models.

Detecting ownership

Ownership is not relevant to IBM XIV Storage System models.

LUN presentation on XIVNextra systems

XIV® Nextra™ LUNs are presented to the Lenovo Storage V7000 interface using the following rules:
  • LUNs can be presented to one or more selected hosts.
  • XIV Nextra maps consist of sets of LUN pairs and linked hosts.
  • A volume can only appear once in a map.
  • A LUN can only appear once in a map.
  • A host can only be linked to one map.
To present XIV Nextra LUNs to the Lenovo Storage V7000, perform the following steps:
  1. Create a map with all of the volumes that you intend to manage with the Lenovo Storage V7000 system.
  2. Link the WWPN for all node ports in the Lenovo Storage V7000 system into the map. Each Lenovo Storage V7000 node port WWPN is recognized as a separate host by XIV Nextra systems.

LUN presentation on IBMXIV Type Number 2810 systems

IBM XIV Storage System Type Number 2810 LUNs are presented to the Lenovo Storage V7000 interface using the following rules:
  • LUNs can be presented to one or more selected hosts or clusters.
  • Clusters are collections of hosts.
To present IBM XIV Storage System Type Number 2810 LUNs to the Lenovo Storage V7000, perform the following steps:
  1. Use the IBM XIV Storage System GUI to create an IBM XIV Storage System cluster for the Lenovo Storage V7000 system.
  2. Create a host for each node in the Lenovo Storage V7000.
  3. Add a port to each host that you created in step 2. You must add a port for each port on the corresponding node.
  4. Map volumes to the cluster that you created in step 1.

Target ports on XIVNextra systems

XIV Nextra systems are single-rack systems. All XIV Nextra WWNNs include zeros as the last two hexadecimal digits. In the following example, WWNN 2000001738279E00 is IEEE extended; the WWNNs that start with the number 1 are IEEE 48 bit:
WWNN 2000001738279E00 
WWPN 1000001738279E13 
WWPN 1000001738279E10 
WWPN 1000001738279E11 
WWPN 1000001738279E12

Target ports on IBMXIV Type Number 2810 systems

IBM XIV Storage System Type Number 2810 systems are multi-rack systems, but only single racks are supported. All IBM XIV Storage System Type Number 2810 WWNNs include zeros as the last four hexadecimal digits. For example:
WWNN 5001738000030000
WWPN 5001738000030153
WWPN 5001738000030121