Dell MD3460 Outdoor Storage User Manual


 
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Load Balancing
Load Balance Policy
Multi-path drivers select the I/O path to a virtual disk through a specific RAID controller module. When
the multi-path driver receives a new I/O to process, the driver tries to find a path to the current RAID
controller module that owns the virtual disk. If the path to the current RAID controller module that owns
the virtual disk cannot be found, the multi-path driver migrates the virtual disk ownership to the
secondary RAID controller module. When multiple paths to the RAID controller module that owns the
virtual disk exist, you can choose a load balance policy to determine which path is used to process I/O.
Multiple options for setting the load balance policies let you optimize I/O performance when mixed host
interfaces are configured.
NOTE: For more information on Load Balance Policy, see your operating system’s manual and
updates.
You can choose one of the following load balance policies to optimize I/O performance:
Round robin
Least queue depth
Least path weight (Microsoft Windows operating systems only)
Round Robin With Subset
The round robin with subset I/O load balance policy routes I/O requests, in rotation, to each available
data path to the RAID controller module that owns the virtual disks. This policy treats all paths to the RAID
controller module that owns the virtual disk equally for I/O activity. Paths to the secondary RAID
controller module are ignored until ownership changes. The basic assumption for the round-robin policy
is that the data paths are equal. With mixed host support, the data paths might have different bandwidths
or different data transfer speeds.
Least Queue Depth
The least queue depth policy is also known as the least I/Os or least requests policy. This policy routes
the next I/O request to a data path that has the least outstanding I/O requests queued. For this policy, an
I/O request is simply a command in the queue. The type of command or the number of blocks that are
associated with the command are not considered.
The least queue depth policy treats large block requests and small block requests equally. The data path
selected is one of the paths in the path group of the RAID controller module that owns the virtual disk.
Least Path Weight
The least path weight policy assigns a weight factor to each data path to a virtual disk. An I/O request is
routed to the path with the lowest weight value to the RAID controller module that owns the virtual disk.
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