Create asynchronous mirrored volume
You mirror a volume asynchronously to maintain data at the remote storage array to be a point-in-time consistent copy of data at the local storage array. You do this by creating a mirror consistency group to establish the mirroring relationship between the two storage arrays, and then selecting the primary volume and secondary volume that you want to use in the mirror.
Before you begin
- You must have two storage arrays.
- Each storage array must have two controllers.
- You must know the password for the local and remote storage arrays.
- Your local and remote storage arrays must be connected through a Fibre Channel fabric or iSCSI interface.
The following conditions must be set up:
The Web Services Proxy service is running.
- ThinkSystem SAN Manager is running on your local host through an HTTPS connection.
- Each controller in both the primary array and secondary array must have an Ethernet management port configured and must be connected to your network.
- ThinkSystem SAN Manager is showing valid SSL certificates for the storage array. You can accept a self-signed certificate or install your own security certificate using SAN Manager and navigating to Certificate > Certificate Management .
- ThinkSystem System Manager is launched from a SAN Manager .
You must have discovered the two storage arrays you want to mirror data between. Then, from
SAN Manager , you select the primary volume's storage array and click Launch to open the browser-based ThinkSystem System Manager .
About this task
The process to mirror a volume asynchronously is a multi-step procedure:
- Step 1: Create a mirror consistency group or select an existing one
- Step 2: Select the primary volume
- Step 3: Select the secondary volume
A volume can participate in only one mirror relationship.
Step 1: Create a mirror consistency group or select an existing one
You create a mirror consistency group or select an existing one to establish the mirroring relationship between the local storage array and the remote storage array.
About this task
The number of mirror consistency group relationships and mirrored pair relationships that you can create depends on the hardware in your storage array.
Step 2: Select the primary volume
You must select the primary volume that you want to use in the mirror relationship and allocate its reserved capacity. Any volumes added to the mirror consistency group on the local storage array will hold the primary role in the mirror relationship.
Step 3: Select the secondary volume
You must select the secondary volume that you want to use in the mirror relationship and allocate its reserved capacity. Any volumes added to the mirror consistency group on the remote storage array will hold the secondary role in the mirror relationship.
About this task
When you select a secondary volume on the remote storage array, the system displays a list of all the eligible volumes for that mirrored pair. Any volumes that are not eligible to be used do not display in that list.
What happens next?
System Manager performs the following actions:
Begins initial synchronization between the local storage array and the remote storage array.
If the volume being mirrored is a thin volume, only the provisioned blocks (allocated capacity rather than reported capacity) are transferred to the secondary volume during the initial synchronization. This reduces the amount of data that must be transferred to complete the initial synchronization.
Creates the reserved capacity for the mirrored pair on the local storage array and on the remote storage array.