Quantum DXi6900 User Manual page 270

With dxi 3.2.5 software
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Chapter 9: Configuration
Replication Configuration
Encryption
Original Data Size
Actual Data Sent
Average Send Rate
You can customize the appearance of the DXis  list in the following ways:
Click the top banner row of the list to collapse or expand the list.
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Click the arrow to the right of a column heading and select Sort Ascending or Sort Descending to sort
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the rows in the table by that column.
To show or hide a column, click the arrow to the right of a column heading, and then click Columns.
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Select the check box to show a column, or clear the check box to hide a column.
Note: The statistics in the Target DXis  list are for each target DXi rather than a cumulative total for all
targets as is displayed on the Home page.
Adding a Replication Target
Add a replication target to configure the DXi6900 to send replicated data to that target. You can add up to
two targets. After you add a target, you can enable replication to that target for a NAS share or VTL partition.
When replication is enabled for a share or partition, replicated data is sent to the target system during
scheduled or manual replication.
Additional Information
Before you can add a replication target, you must add the DXi to the list of allowed replication sources
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on the target DXi (see
To add a new target when two targets are already configured, first delete one target (see
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Replication Target on page
For more information about enabling and scheduling replication for a share or partition, see
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Replication Send on page
To add a replication target:
Quantum DXi6900 User's Guide
The type of encryption used when sending replicated data to the target system
(None, 128-bit, or 256-bit).
The original, native size of data sent during replication or failback. This value does
not represent the amount of data actually sent over the network during replication
or failback because data is deduplicated and compressed before being sent.
The amount of data actually sent over the network during replication or failback.
This value is usually much less than the Original Data Size due to the benefits of
data deduplication and compression.
The average send rate (in B/s) of data sent over the network during replication or
failback (Actual Data Sent divided by the amount of time required to complete
replication or failback).
Adding a Replication Source on page
273). Then add the new target.
137.
275).
Deleting a
270

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