Volumes
You can use Storage Manager to create, edit, and delete volumes.
You can access all the volumes in the cluster by using the Volumes tab or you can access the volumes specific to an SVM by using SVMs > Volumes .
Volumes
The tab is displayed only if you have enabled the CIFS and NFS licenses.
- Editing volume properties
You can modify volume properties such as the volume name, security style, fractional reserve, and space guarantee by using Storage Manager . You can modify storage efficiency settings (deduplication schedule, deduplication policy, and compression) and space reclamation settings. You can also edit the export policy and incremental tape backup settings of Infinite Volumes. - Editing data protection volumes
You can use Storage Manager to modify the volume name for a data protection (DP) volume. If the source volume does not have storage efficiency enabled, you might want to enable storage efficiency only on the destination volume. - Deleting volumes
You can use Storage Manager to delete a FlexVol volume or an Infinite Volume when you no longer require the data that a volume contains, or if you have copied the data that a volume contains to another location. When you delete a volume, all the data in the volume is destroyed, and you cannot recover this data. - Creating FlexClone volumes
You can use Storage Manager to create a FlexClone volume when you require a writable, point-in-time copy of an existing FlexVol volume. You might want to create a copy of a volume for testing or to provide access to the volume for additional users without giving them access to the production data. - Creating FlexClone files
You can use Storage Manager to create a FlexClone file, which is a writable copy of a parent file. You can use these copies to test applications. - Splitting a FlexClone volume from its parent volume
If you want a FlexClone volume to have its own disk space instead of using the disk space of its parent volume, you can split the volume from its parent by using Storage Manager . After the split, the FlexClone volume becomes a normal FlexVol volume. - Viewing the FlexClone volume hierarchy
You can use Storage Manager to view the hierarchy of FlexClone volumes and their parent volumes. - Changing the status of a volume
You can use Storage Manager to change the status of a FlexVol volume or an Infinite Volume when you want to take a volume offline, bring a volume back online, or restrict access to a volume. - Viewing the list of saved Snapshot copies
You can use Storage Manager to view the list of all of the saved Snapshot copies for a selected volume from the Snapshot Copies tab in the lower pane of the Volumes window or the Infinite Volume window. You can use the list of saved Snapshot copies to rename, restore, or delete a Snapshot copy. - Creating Snapshot copies outside a defined schedule
You can use Storage Manager to create a Snapshot copy of a volume outside a defined schedule to capture the state of the file system at a specific point in time. - Setting the Snapshot copy reserve
You can use Storage Manager to reserve space (in percentage) for the Snapshot copies in a volume. By setting the Snapshot copy reserve, you can allocate enough disk space for the Snapshot copies so that they do not consume the active file system space. - Hiding the Snapshot copy directory
You can use Storage Manager to hide the Snapshot copy directory ( .snapshot ) so that the Snapshot copy directory is not visible when you view your volume directories. By default, the .snapshot directory is visible. - Scheduling automatic creation of Snapshot copies
You can use Storage Manager to set up a schedule for the automatic creating automatic Snapshot copies of a volume. You can specify the time and frequency of creating the copies. You can also specify the number of Snapshot copies that are saved. - Restoring a volume from a Snapshot copy
You can use Storage Manager to restore a volume to a state that is recorded in a previously created Snapshot copy to retrieve lost information. When you restore a volume from a Snapshot copy, the restore operation overwrites the existing volume configuration. Any changes that were made to the data in the volume after the Snapshot copy was created are lost. - Extending the expiry date of Snapshot copies
You can use Storage Manager to extend the expiry date of the Snapshot copies in a volume. - Renaming Snapshot copies
You can use Storage Manager to rename a Snapshot copy to help you organize and manage your Snapshot copies. - Deleting Snapshot copies
You can delete a Snapshot copy to conserve disk space or to free disk space by using Storage Manager . You can also delete a Snapshot copy if the Snapshot copy is no longer required. - Resizing volumes
When your volume reaches nearly full capacity, you can increase the size of the volume, delete some Snapshot copies, or adjust the Snapshot reserve. You can use the Volume Resize wizard in Storage Manager to provide more free space. - Enabling storage efficiency on a volume
You can use Storage Manager to enable storage efficiency and to configure both deduplication and data compression or only deduplication on a volume to save storage space. If you have not enabled storage efficiency when you created the volume, you can do so later by editing the volume. - Changing the deduplication schedule
You can use Storage Manager to change the deduplication schedule by choosing to run deduplication manually, automatically, or on a schedule that you specify. - Running deduplication operations
You can use Storage Manager to run deduplication immediately after creating a FlexVol volume or an Infinite Volume, or to schedule deduplication to run at a specified time. - Moving FlexVol volumes between aggregates or nodes
You can nondisruptively move a FlexVol volume to a different aggregate or a different node for capacity utilization and improved performance by using Storage Manager . - Assigning volumes to Storage QoS
You can limit the throughput of FlexVol volumes and FlexGroup volumes by assigning them to storage Quality of Service (QoS) policy groups. You can assign storage QoS for new volumes, or you can modify the storage QoS details of the volumes that are already assigned to a policy group by using Storage Manager . - Creating a mirror relationship from a source SVM
You can use Storage Manager to create a mirror relationship from the source storage virtual machine (SVM), and to assign a mirror policy and schedule to the mirror relationship. The mirror copy enables quick availability of data if the data on the source volume is corrupted or lost. - Creating a vault relationship from a source SVM
You can use Storage Manager to create a vault relationship from the source storage virtual machine (SVM), and to assign a vault policy to the vault relationship to create a backup vault. In the event of data loss or corruption on a system, backed-up data can be restored from the backup vault destination. - Creating a mirror and vault relationship from a source SVM
You can use Storage Manager to create a mirror and vault relationship from the source storage virtual machine (SVM) . Creating this relationship enables you to better protect your data by periodically transferring data from the source volume to the destination volume. It also enables you to retain data for long periods by creating backups of the source volume. - Creating an NFS datastore for VMware
You can use the Create NFS Datastore for VMware wizard in Storage Manager to create an NFS datastore for VMware. You can create a volume for the NFS datastore and specify the ESX servers that can access the NFS datastore. - Changing the tiering policy of a volume
You can use Storage Manager to change the default tiering policy of a volume to control whether the data of the volume is moved to the capacity tier when the data becomes inactive. - Creating FlexGroup volumes
You can use Storage Manager to create a FlexGroup volume by selecting specific aggregates or by selecting system-recommended aggregates. - Editing FlexGroup volumes
You can use Storage Manager to edit the properties of an existing FlexGroup volume. - Resizing FlexGroup volumes
You can use Storage Manager to resize a FlexGroup volume by resizing existing resources or by adding new resources. - Changing the status of a FlexGroup volume
You can use Storage Manager to change the status of a FlexGroup volume when you want to take a FlexGroup volume offline, bring a FlexGroup volume back online, or restrict access to a FlexGroup volume. - Deleting FlexGroup volumes
You can use Storage Manager to delete a FlexGroup volume when you no longer require the FlexGroup volume. - Viewing FlexGroup volume information
You can use Storage Manager to view information about a FlexGroup volume. You can view a graphical representation of the space allocated, the protection status, and the performance of a FlexGroup volume. - What Lenovo Volume Encryption is
Lenovo Volume Encryption is the process of protecting the user data, including the metadata, by encrypting the data before storing it on the disk. The data is decrypted and provided to the user only after proper authentication is provided. - Snapshot configuration
You can configure Snapshot copies by setting a schedule for an existing Snapshot policy. Starting with ONTAP 9.4, you can have less than 1024 Snapshot copies of a FlexVol volume. - How volume guarantees work for FlexVol volumes
Volume guarantees (sometimes called space guarantees ) determine how space for a volume is allocated from its containing aggregate—whether or not the space is preallocated for the volume. - What SnapDiff is
SnapDiff is an internal ONTAP engine that quickly identifies the file and directory differences between two Snapshot copies. - FlexClone volumes and space guarantees
A FlexClone volume inherits its initial space guarantee from its parent volume. For example, if you create a FlexClone volume from a parent volume with a space guarantee of volume , then the FlexClone volume's initial space guarantee will be volume also. You can change the FlexClone volume's space guarantee. - Thin provisioning for greater efficiencies using FlexVol volumes
With thin provisioning, when you create volumes and LUNs in a given aggregate, you do not actually allocate any space for those in advance. The space is allocated as data is written to the volumes or LUNs. - Using space reservations with FlexVol volumes
Using space reservation, you can provision FlexVol volumes. Thin provisioning appears to provide more storage than is actually available from a given aggregate, as long as not all of that storage is currently being used. - Benefits of storage efficiency
Storage efficiency enables you to store the maximum amount of data for the lowest cost and accommodate rapid data growth while consuming less space. You can use technologies such as RAID-DP, FlexVol, Snapshot copies, deduplication, data compression, SnapMirror, and FlexClone to increase storage utilization and decrease storage costs. When used together, these technologies help to achieve increased performance. - Data compression and deduplication
Beginning with Data ONTAP 8.0.1, data compression is supported with deduplication. - Guidelines for using deduplication
You must remember certain guidelines about system resources and free space when using deduplication. - Options for resizing volumes
You can use the Volume Resize wizard to change your volume size, adjust the Snapshot reserve, delete Snapshot copies, and dynamically view the results of your changes. - Considerations when moving volumes
Moving a volume has many considerations and recommendations that are influenced by the volume you are moving or by the system configuration. You should understand the considerations associated with moving volumes. - Volumes window
You can use the Volumes window to manage your FlexVol volumes, FlexGroup volumes, and Infinite Volumes, and to display information about these volumes.
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