HP Surestore Disk Array FC60 HP SureStore E Disk Array 12H User's and Service - Page 264
Enclosure, EPROM, FC Device, Fast/Wide, Fibre Channel-Arbitrated Loop, Format, Hot Pluggable
View all HP Surestore Disk Array FC60 manuals
Add to My Manuals
Save this manual to your list of manuals |
Page 264 highlights
Glossary Glossary Enclosure In either RAID 0/1 or RAID 5 mode, the data is stored with Data Redundancy, so that at any time, a single disk failure will cause no loss of user data and no interruption of data transfer. While Logical Drive space is defined and thus fixed, the available amount of free space can vary, because Dynamic Data Migration is able to switch user data from RAID 0/1 to RAID 5 mode as the Disk Modules become full. Similarly, installation of additional Disk Modules allows more data to be stored in RAID 0/1 mode, thus increasing the disk array performance. The box, or set of boxes containing one or more SCSI devices. It may provide the power, cooling, mechanical support, and external electronic interfaces for those devices. EPROM Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory. FC Device A device that uses Fibre Channel technology. Fast/Wide Fast/Wide SCSI is a 68-pin bus implementation that utilizes some of the data lines of the bus for address lines. Fibre Channel-Arbitrated Loop One of three existing Fibre Channel (FC) topologies, in which two to 126 devices are interconnected serially in a single loop circuit. The arbitrated loop topology supports all classes of service and guarantees in order of delivery of frames when the source and destination are on the same loop. Format The process of reinitializing the disk media. A format destroys all data on the portion of the disk media being formatted. Two types of formats are available: a hard format that overwrites all data on the disk media, and a soft format that simply rewrites the headers. HBA The HBA, or Host Bus Adapter, is an internal card that is located in the host computer. Each HBA can connect to several SCSI devices. Hot Pluggable Devices are Hot Pluggable if they can be removed while the host computer system is running. When the disk array is configured with redundant controllers and power supplies, all devices are Hot Pluggable. 264