HP P6000 Replication Solutions Manager User Guide (T3680-96089, October 2012)

I/O throttling
I/O throttling refers to suspending some DR groups during a log merge or full copy event. By
suspending noncritical DR groups, the critical DR groups complete the merge or full copy sooner.
Throttling of I/O after logging
When logging, and not in the failsafe mode, remote replication automatically resumes when the
links are restored. If there are several DR groups with large logs, they can compete for remote
replication bandwidth, thus slowing the overall merge or full copy between the two sites.
By suspending the merge or full copy of the noncritical DR groups, the critical data is available
sooner at the destination. After the critical DR groups finish merging or copying, the remote
replication of the noncritical DR groups can be resumed.
Job command processing
When a job is run, some job commands may specify features that are not available on the target
array. See Controller software versions - remote replication. Rather than fail the job, the replication
manager ignores the unsupported feature. The following job commands are processed in this
manner.
RemarksJob commands
These arguments are ignored if the feature is not available.
AutoSuspend On Link Down
Destination RAID level
CreateDrGroup
CreateDrGroupFromHostVolume
Source Log Disk Group
Destination Log Disk Group
Maximum Log Disk Size
This job command is ignored if the feature is not available.ForceFullCopyDrGroup
This job command is ignored if the feature is not available.SetDrGroupAutoSuspend
This job command is ignored if the feature is not available.SetDrGroupFailsafeOnLinkdownPowerup
When a virtual disk is a remote copy, the Access Type = None (No read)
argument is ignored if the feature is not available.
PresentStorageVolume
Logs
Log overview and states
A DR group log is a designated virtual disk that stores the host data that is written to the virtual
disks in a source DR group. The contents of the log are replicated to the destination virtual disks
to synchronize them with their sources.
The process of storing host data, in the exact order received in the DR group, is called logging.
The process of replicating the logged data to the destination DR group, in the same order as
received, and synchronizing with the sources is called merging or DR group normalization. See
Logging, Merging, and DR group normalization.
When a DR group log becomes full, a full copy is automatically initiated. See full copy mode and
log size.
DR group concepts 85