Sun System Handbook - ISO 3.4 June 2011 Internal/Partner Edition | |||
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Solution Type Technical Instruction Sure Solution 1002803.1 : NAS Replication - Time required for 'sync' completion
PreviouslyPublishedAs 203827 Description Under normal circumstances, when using the NAS replication functionality, the most network-intensive processing occurs during the initial block replication - this consists of a block-by-block copy of the source volume disk blocks to the target system (allocated) LUN. Sufficient time must be allowed (and file volume write activity possibly restricted) for this process to complete. Steps to Follow As a first step in creating the mirror, the mirror service attempts to allocate space on the volume for the transaction journal - this may also be referred to as the 'mirror buffer' or, more usually, the 'extended journal'. The extended journal is a circular buffer - head and tail pointers are used to track points at which the next transaction will be recorded, and which was the last transaction to be successfully synchronized on the mirror volume between the master (source) and mirror (target) NAS systems. Replication takes place in two distinct phases: Block Replication and Transaction Replication. Block Replication: The initial replication, after creation of a mirror volume, is a low-level block-by-block copy of the source volume disk blocks to the target system (allocated) LUN. This is achieved 'outside' of the file system, but while it is happening, the master file system records all transactions in the extended journal. The master system cannot begin to send these buffered transactions to the mirror system until the block replication is complete. Transaction Replication: Once block replication has completed, the mirror begins the steady state of transaction replication. It is during this phase that the master sends complete file system transactions from the extended journal to the mirror system. The mirror system stores each received transaction in its extended journal and acknowledges the reception of the transaction. The mirror system will then asynchronously replay the stored transaction to store the data into its permanent (home) location. If the (initial) block replication does not complete before the buffer (extended journal) is filled, the only recourse is to restart the block replication. Recommendations: 1) Ensure private network (subnet or VLAN) is used for 'Replication' link. 2) Ensure extended journal is of sufficient size to hold all transactions(Sun 3) Ensure source and target LUN configuration/performance is optimal. 4) (For WANs) Consider adjustment of TCP window size for better throughput. Product Sun StorageTek 5320 NAS Appliance Sun StorageTek 5210 NAS Appliance Sun StorageTek 5310 NAS Appliance Sun StorageTek 5310 NAS Gateway System Sun StorageTek 5310 NAS Gateway/Cluster System Sun StorageTek 5320 NAS Gateway/Cluster System Internal Comments This document contains normalized content and is managed by the the Domain Lead(s) of the respective domains. To notify content owners of a knowledge gap contained in this document, and/or prior to updating this document, please contact the domain engineers that are managing this document via the “Document Feedback” alias(es) listed below: [email protected] The Knowledge Work Queue for this article is KNO-STO-NAS. audited, NAS, Replication, Mirror, 5210, 5310. 5320 Previously Published As 88885 Change History Date: 2007-10-01 User Name: 7058 Action: Approved Comment: OK to publish. Spell ck OK. No tmarks needed. Attachments This solution has no attachment |
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