You can edit the settings for a pool, including its name, capacity alerts settings, modification priorities, and preservation capacity.
About this task
This task describes how to change configuration settings for a pool.
Setting | Description |
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Name | You can change the user-supplied name of the pool. Specifying a name for a pool is required. |
Capacity alerts | You can send alert notifications when the free capacity in a pool reaches or exceeds a specified threshold. When the data stored in the pool exceeds the specified threshold, System Manager sends a message, allowing you time to add more storage space or to delete unnecessary objects. Alerts are shown in the Notifications area on the Dashboard and can be sent from the server to administrators by email and SNMP trap messages. You can define the following capacity alerts:
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Modification priorities | You can specify the priority levels for modification operations in a pool relative to system performance. A higher priority for modification operations in a pool causes an operation to complete faster, but can slow the host I/O performance. A lower priority causes operations to take longer, but host I/O performance is less affected. You can choose from five priority levels: lowest, low, medium, high, and highest. The higher the priority level, the larger is the impact on host I/O and system performance.
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Preservation capacity | Preservation capacity: You can define the number of drives to determine the capacity that is reserved on the pool to support potential drive failures. When a drive failure occurs, the preservation capacity is used to hold the reconstructed data. Pools use preservation capacity during the data reconstruction process instead of hot spare drives, which are used in volume groups. Use the spinner controls to adjust the number of drives. Based on the number of drives, the preservation capacity in the pool appears next to the spinner box. Keep the following information in mind about preservation capacity.
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