Administrator Guide

3. In the Timeout field, type the amount of time in seconds after which the Storage Center should stop attempting to reconnect to the
key management server after a failure.
4. To add alternate key management servers, type the host name or IP address of another key management server in the Alternate
Hostnames area, and then click Add.
5. If the key management server requires a user name to validate the Storage Center certificate, enter the name in the Username field.
6. If the key management server requires a password to validate the Storage Center certificate, enter the password in the Password
field.
7. Click Browse next to the Root CA Certificate. Navigate to the location of the root CA certificate on your computer and select it.
8. Click Browse next to the certificate fields for the controllers. Navigate to the location of the controller certificates on your computer
and select them.
9. Click Next.
Create a Storage Type
Select the datapage size and redundancy level for the Storage Center.
Steps
1. Select a datapage size.
Standard (2 MB Datapage Size): Default datapage size, this selection is appropriate for most applications.
High Performance (512 KB Datapage Size): Appropriate for applications with high performance needs, or in environments in
which snapshots are taken frequently under heavy I/O. Selecting this size increases overhead and reduces the maximum available
space in the Storage Type. All-flash storage systems use 512 KB by default.
High Density (4 MB Datapage Size): Appropriate for systems that use a large amount of disk space and take snapshots
infrequently.
2. Select a redundancy type.
Redundant: Protects against the loss of any one drive (if single redundant) or any two drives (if dual redundant).
Non-Redundant: Uses RAID 0 in all classes, in all tiers. Data is striped but provides no redundancy. If one drive fails, all data is lost.
NOTE:
Non-Redundant is not recommended because data is not protected against a drive failure. Do not use non-
redundant storage for a volume unless the data has been backed up elsewhere.
3. For Redundant Storage Types, you must select a redundancy level for each tier unless the drive type or size requires a specific
redundancy level
Single Redundant: Single-redundant tiers can contain any of the following types of RAID storage:
RAID 10 (each drive is mirrored)
RAID 5-5 (striped across 5 drives)
RAID 5-9 (striped across 9 drives)
Dual redundant: Dual redundant is the recommended redundancy level for all tiers. It is enforced for 3 TB HDDs and higher and
for 18 TB SSDs and higher. Dual-redundant tiers can contain any of the following types of RAID storage:
RAID 10 Dual-Mirror (data is written simultaneously to three separate drives)
RAID 6-6 (4 data segments, 2 parity segments for each stripe)
RAID 6-10 (8 data segments, 2 parity segments for each stripe.)
4. Drive Addition is selected by default. Leave this option selected.
5. Click Next.
Fault Tolerance
Set up Fibre Channel, iSCSI and SAS ports with redundant paths for fault tolerance.
Steps
1. Select the checkbox of each type of port you want to configure. You must select at least one type to continue.
NOTE: If a port type is grayed out, no ports of that type have been detected.
2. Click Next.
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Storage Center Deployment