Hitachi Storage Command Suite Logical Groups and Ldev Labels
Hitachi Storage Command Suite Logical Groups and Ldev Labels
Hitachi Storage Command Suite Logical Groups and Ldev Labels
John Harker Senior Product Marketing Manager Malcolm Muir Senior Competitive Analyst
Agenda
Introduction
Logical Groups and Storage Groups Logical Device Labels
General Considerations for Logical Group Names LDEV Labels Logical Group Best Practices
Device Manager Logical Group Layout
Summary
Logical Groups and LDEV Labels provide the ability to group and name storage resources with meaningful logical path constructs and names.
A good analogy of the value of Logical Groups and LDEV Labels is to think about your file folders on your PC. If you were limited to only using numbers to name your file folders and files, it would be very difficult to organize and manage your files. Logical Groups are analogous to file folders and LDEV labels are analogous to file names.
Organizing your storage assets using a meaningful naming convention dramatically improves the efficiency and accuracy of your storage administration operations.
Los Angeles
New York
Finance
HR
Exchange Archive
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Exchange Production
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array1
array2
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LDEV
LDEV
Logical Groups and LDEV Labels are shared among many of the products in the Hitachi Storage Command Suite and are one of the key integration points of the suite When the Device Manager metadata attributes of Logical Groups and LDEV Labels are leveraged by other Hitachi Storage Command Suite components, these attributes allow the suite components improved efficiency of their features and functions.
Also keep in mind the full set of use mean that you might be spanning more than one Hitachi Storage Command Suite component.
Think about sorting, filtering and selecting for provisioning and reporting from a cross component perspective.
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LDEV Labeling
An LDEV Label can be up to 64 characters long and there are no restrictions on which characters can be used. It is important that they are meaningful to an administrator. Hitachi best practice for LDEV Labels is to make the label application purpose or function descriptive as it relates to the logical group. Keep the name close to what the application administrator uses the storage for.
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LDEV Labeling
Design the name to be logical in nature and not physically related, as the LDEV label metadata follows the LDEV during a volume migration. Over time or as requirements and systems change, a volume might be migrated to a different HDD type or tier of storage it is for this reason that you might not want to have the label reflecting a physical characteristic because it may require extra effort to reflect changes in its status. On the other hand, if you dont migrate or dont mind re-labeling, then putting the tier in the label is fine. What about uniqueness? Should each LDEV label have a unique ID? Recommendation is to not have unique LDEV label names for every LDEV, due to the number of potential LDEVs that require management
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This is a simple way to find an appropriate set of exchange archive files for migration
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Hitachi Tuning Manager search using LDEV Labels You can use LDEV Labels as filters in Tuning Manager as well. In this example you are responding to a complaint about a slow database and want to examine the performance of your database log files. The LDEV Label naming scheme makes this easy. Note, Tuning Manager does not yet support Logical Groups, but that is a planned future enhancement.
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Summary
Use of Logical Groups and LDEV Labels provide an enhanced organizational aspect to managing LDEVs by meaningful names and it makes provisioning and reporting easier.
For example, by defining Logical Groups according to how a company runs its business (by department and application) it simplifies application mobility as it relates to in-system and remote replication (Hitachi Replication Manager) and data migration between tiers (Hitachi Tiered Storage Manager). This is because the same Hitachi Device Manager logical group and LDEV label filters can be used as selection criterion by Hitachi Tiered Storage Manager to build migration groups or by Hitachi Replication Manager to build an application set of PVOLs in order to form a copy group Applying LDEV Labels can further identify the individual volumes that belong to each Logical Group. The combination of using Logical Groups and LDEV labels enables administrative scalability to manage more storage with the same amount of resources and reduce the risk of manual error
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Related Resources
White Papers and Manuals Hitachi Device Manager Web Client Users Guide (product manual) Logical Groups and LDEV Labels whitepaper (est. avail: Sept-Oct) Hitachi Data Systems Global Solution (GSS) Services Implementation Service for Hitachi Device Manager Software. The service provides assistance with initial project planning, software installation and configuration tasks, and knowledge transfer so customers can roll out the softwares capabilities and use Device Manager software more effectively to manage their enterprise storage environments. Note: This service is delivered remotely. An onsite version is available at additional cost. Please contact your local GSS representative to determine which option is best for your specific requirements.
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Related Resources
Academy
TSC1465 - Introduction to Storage Management with Hitachi Device Manager Software This two hour web-based training course provides Storage Administrators an overview of basic storage management benefits of Hitachi Device Manager software. In addition, it describes how Device Manager integrates with other storage management solutions. TSI1360 - Managing Hitachi Storage Systems with Device Manager Software This three day instructor-led training course provides the fundamentals of Hitachi Device Manager. The course trains participants in standard workflow techniques for successfully managing storage with Device Manager and includes extensive lab exercises with hands on training on Hitachi Data Systems enterprise and modular storage systems. In addition to addressing the configuration, administration, operations, and management of storage with Device Manager, a special focus is placed on best practices. Pair Volume Operations, Command Line Interface (CLI), and external storage. Maintenance and troubleshooting functions are discussed. GCI0975 - Hitachi Device Manager Quickstart Training This one day workshop explains the four phases of the Device Manager Software Quick Start Service methodology and allows the student to apply new skills in a simulated customer engagement. This workshop is designed for Hitachi Data Systems Global Solution Services (GSS) consultants and Certified Solution Provider (CSP) partners to successfully deliver the Device Manager Quick Start Service in the customers environment. TSE0507 - Hitachi Device Manager Software Differences This five hour virtual instructor-led course provides an overview of the enhanced usability and new features of Hitachi Device Manager software versions 5.8, 5.9 and 6.0. Hitachi Services Oriented Storage Solution(s) and Tiered Storage strategies will also be described. In addition, Hitachi Dynamic Provisioning, Storage Navigator, API/CLI and SMI-S enhancements will be discussed.
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Questions/Discussion
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Thank You
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