Sun Microsystems 3 manual

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The replication mode can be synchronous or asynchronous based as a user-selectable parameter for each Sun SNDR volume set. (Use the sndradm enable command and select the sync or async parameter Use the sndradm -R m command to change the replication mode thereafter.) The volumes can be updated synchronously in real time or asynchronously using a store-and-forward technique.

Typically, a primary volume is first explicitly copied to a designated secondary volume to establish matching contents. As applications write to the primary volume, the Sun SDNR software replicates changes to the secondary volume, keeping the two volumes consistent.

In synchronous mode, a write operation is not confirmed as complete until the remote volume has been updated. Synchronous mirroring forces the Sun SNDR software to wait until an acknowledgement of the receipt of the data is received from the secondary by the primary before returning to the application.

In asynchronous mode, a write operation is confirmed as complete before the remote volume has been updated. Asynchronous mirroring allows the Sun SNDR software to return to the host as soon as the write has been completed on the primary volume and been placed on a per volume queue for the secondary site. Subsequently, the secondary site receives the queued requests in the order that they were queued. Once the I/O has been completed at the secondary site, notification is sent to the primary.

In the event of planned or unplanned outages, the Sun SNDR software maintains per-device scoreboard bitmap volumes that are marked to indicate changed blocks with a granularity of 32 Kbytes per segment. This technique allows for optimized resynchronization by allowing the Sun SNDR software to resynchronize only the blocks that have changed.

Other features included as part of the Sun SNDR software are:

Grouping volume sets — The Sun SNDR software enables you to group volume sets. Grouping volume sets guarantees write ordering. For example, in a synchronization from the primary host to the secondary host, write operations to the secondary volumes in the group occur in the same order as the write operations to the primary volumes in the group.

You can also assign specific volume sets to a group to perform sndradm commands on these volume sets and not on others you have configured. See “Order-Dependent Writes and Volume Set Grouping” on page 13.

Note – You can also group volume sets according to their cluster or resource tag to perform replication in a Sun Cluster 2.2 or 3.0 Update 1 clustered environment only.

2 Sun StorEdge Network Data Replicator 3.0 Configuration Guide • June 2001

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Contents Sun StorEdge Network Data Replicator Configuration Guide Please Recycle Contents Page Preface Before You Read This BookUsing Unix Commands Documentation ConventionsShell Prompts Related DocumentationApplication Title Part Number Accessing Sun Documentation Online Ordering Sun DocumentationSun Welcomes Your Comments Page Overview Sun Sndr Software DescriptionPage Supported Hardware and Software TCP/IP Connection Hardware ComponentsNetwork Multipathing Applications ArchitectureSdbc Configuration Considerations Volumes Eligible for ReplicationBitmap Volumes for Scoreboard Logs Choosing Volume Level ProtectionChoosing a Connection Medium to Link My Sites ATM Link AdvantagesConfiguring Redundant Links Between Sites Link SecurityChoosing Between Synchronous and Asynchronous Replication When To Suspend Replication to the Secondary Site Configuring The Sun Sndr Software for Mutual ReplicationOrder-Dependent Writes and Volume Set Grouping SyncRecovery Considerations Recovering the Primary or Secondary SiteFailing Over to the Secondary Site Choosing the Resynchronization Type Update or Full Using The Sun Sndr and Sun StorEdge Instant Image Software Sun Sndr Software and Sun StorEdge Fast Write Cache Software One-to-Many and Multihop Volume Sets Dev/rdsk/c0t0d0s9Using The Sun Sndr Software in a Firewall Environment
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