Data Transfer Speed Considerations; Raid Group Configuration; Fibre Channel Port Configuration; Planning Journal Volumes - HP XP P9500 User Manual

Storageworks p9000 continuous access journal for mainframe systems
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To plan journals, see the following:
Review journal specifications in
Review journal configuration in

Data transfer speed considerations

The previous sections and the sections later in this chapter on Bandwidth discuss the amount of
data that must be stored temporarily in journals and transferred over the data path network. This
section discusses the speed that data must be transferred in order to maintain the Continuous Access
Journal Z system your are designing.
The ability of your Continuous Access Journal Z system to transfer data in a timely manner depends
directly on the following two factors:

RAID group configuration

Fibre Channel port configuration

Both of these elements must be planned to be able to handle the amount of data and number of
transactions your system will process under extreme conditions.
RAID group configuration
A RAID group can consist of physical volumes with a different number of revolutions, physical
volumes of different capacities, and physical volumes of different RAID configurations (for example,
RAID1 and RAID5). The data transfer speed of RAID groups is affected by physical volumes and
RAID configurations.
The data transfer speed of a journal volume depends on the data transfer speed of the RAID
group to which it belongs. A RAID group can consist of one or more volumes, including journal
volumes.
Journal volumes must be configured in RAID groups according to the group's throughput
specification and your system's peak write-workload. If write-workload exceeds the RAID
group's throughput rating, then the number of RAID groups must be increased.
Frequent read/write activity to non-journal volumes in a RAID group results in fewer read/writes
by journal volumes in the same RAID group. This can cause a drop in the data transfer speed
of journal volumes. To avoid this effect, place journal volumes and frequently accessed
non-journal volumes in different RAID groups.
Fibre Channel port configuration
The Fibre Channel ports on your P9500 system have an IOPS threshold. Use the performance
monitoring information for the number of IOPS your production system generates to calculate the
number of Fibre Channel ports the Continuous Access Journal Z system requires.
See
"Planning ports for data transfer " (page 43)
Fibre Channel ports required for your system.

Planning journal volumes

The following information is provided to help you prepare journal volumes:
Identify the journal volumes for your Continuous Access Journal Z system on primary and
secondary arrays. Journal volumes should be sized according to RPO and write-workload.
See
"Sizing journal volumes" (page 24)
Journal volumes in the same journal can be of different capacity. A master journal volume
and the corresponding restore journal volume can be of different capacity.
Journal volumes consist of two areas: one area is used for storing journal data, and the other
area is used for storing metadata.
26
Planning volumes, systems
"System requirements" (page
"Register journal volumes in a journal" (page
for a full discussion on the type and number of
for more information.
17).
62).

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