Learn About Storage Arrays

A storage array is a storage entity managed by the storage management software. A storage array consists of a collection of both physical components and logical components. (The term "storage array" replaces the term "RAID module," which was used in previous versions of the storage management software.)

Physical Components

The physical components of a storage array are described in the following table.

Component

Description

RAID Controller Module

A RAID controller module consists of a board and  that controls the physical disks and implements the storage management software functions.

RAID Controller Module enclosure

A RAID controller module enclosure contains one or more RAID controller modules, power supply modules, fan modules and other supporting components in a single enclosure.

Physical Disk

A physical disk is an electromagnetic mechanical device that provides the physical storage media for data.

Expansion enclosure

A expansion enclosure contains a set of physical disks, power supply modules, fan modules,  and other supporting components in a single enclosure.

Note: If your storage array contains mixed , a expansion enclosure for each physical disk type is displayed.

RAID Controller Module/expansion enclosure

Some storage array models combine both RAID controller module and physical disk components in the same enclosure.

Note: If your storage array contains mixed physical disk types, a expansion enclosure for each physical disk type is displayed.

Logical Components

The physical disks in the storage array provide the physical storage capacity for data. Use the storage management software to configure the physical capacity into logical components ( , , and storage array partitions). These components are the tools that you use to configure, store, maintain, and preserve data on the storage array. The logical components of a storage array are described below:

Component

Description

Disk group

A disk group is a set of physical disks that are logically grouped together by the RAID controller modules in a storage array for the purposes of creating one or more virtual disks for data storage.

Virtual Disk (or standard virtual disk)

A standard virtual disk is the basic structure you create on the storage array to store data. A virtual disk is configured across a disk group with a specific  level to meet application needs for data availability and I/O performance. A virtual disk is seen by the operating system as one physical disk.

Note: A standard virtual disk that is participating in a  relationship is represented by the following icons in the Logical View:

Primary virtual disk

Snapshot virtual disk

A snapshot virtual disk is a logical point-in-time image of a standard virtual disk in the storage array.

Free capacity

Free capacity is a contiguous region of unused capacity on a designated disk group. You can use the space to create one or more virtual disks.

Note: In the Logical View of the , free capacity is shown as . Multiple Free Capacity nodes can exist on a disk group.

Unconfigured capacity

Unconfigured capacity is capacity that is present in the storage array from physical disks that have not been assigned to a disk group. You can use the space to create new disk groups and virtual disks.

Note: Multiple Unconfigured Capacity nodes might be displayed if your storage array contains mixed . Each physical disk type has an associated Unconfigured Capacity node displayed under the Total Unconfigured Capacity node if  are available in the expansion enclosure: 

Storage array partition

A storage partition is a logical grouping of one or more storage array virtual disks. Storage Partitioning allows you configure a single storage array as multiple virtual storage arrays up to the maximum value enabled. Access to a storage partition can be restricted to particular  or groups of hosts by defining a set of . A virtual disk-to-LUN mapping defines which host or  will have access to a particular virtual disk in the storage array.

Related Topics

Learn About Using the Logical/Physical View

Learn About Creating Virtual Disks

Learn About Creating Snapshot Virtual Disks

Learn About Storage Partitioning