From the AMW, select the Storage
& Copy Services tab.
Do one of the following:
Select a base virtual disk, and then select Copy Services > Snapshot Virtual disk > Create. The Select
Existing Snapshot Image or New Snapshot Image window is
displayed.
Select a base virtual disk, and then select Copy Services > Snapshot Image > Create Snapshot Virtual Disk. The Snapshot Virtual Disk Settings window
is displayed. Go to step 4.
If you selected a base virtual disk in step
1, choose the snapshot image for which you want to create a snapshot
virtual disk. Do one of the following:
Select An existing snapshot image and then select a snapshot image from the snapshot image table and
click Next.
Select A new snapshot image (on an
existing snapshot group) and then a snapshot group from
the existing snapshot group table and then click Next.
The Snapshot Virtual Disk Settings window is displayed.
In the Snapshot virtual disk name field, enter a unique name (30 character maximum) that best describes
the virtual disk selected for this snapshot image, for example, AccountingData.
By default, the snapshot virtual disk name is shown
in the name text box as follows:[base-virtual disk-name] - SV + sequence-number
In this example, SV (snapshot virtual disk) is the
appended suffix and sequence-number is the chronological number of
the snapshot virtual disk relative to the base virtual disk.
For example, if you create the first snapshot virtual
disk for a base virtual disk called “Accounting”, the default name
of the snapshot virtual disk is “Accounting_SV_01”. The default name
of the next snapshot virtual disk you create based on “Accounting”
is “Accounting_SV_02”.
There is a 30-character
limit. After you reach this limit, you can no longer type in the text
box. If the base virtual disk is 30 characters, the default name for
the group uses the base virtual disk name truncated enough to add
the suffix “SV” and the sequence string.
In the Map to host drop-down,
specify how you want to map the host to the snapshot virtual disk.
Map Now to Default Group –
The virtual disk is automatically assigned a logical unit number (LUN)
and is accessible by any hosts that are connected to the storage array.
Map Later – The virtual disk
is not assigned a LUN and is not accessible by any hosts until you
go to the Host Mappings tab and assign a specific
host and LUN to this virtual disk.
Select a specific host – You
can select a specific host or host group from the list. This option
is available only if Storage Partitioning is enabled.
NOTE: Make sure
there are enough free LUNs on the host or host group that you selected
to map to a snapshot virtual disk.
Select how to grant host access to the snapshot
virtual disk. Do one of the following:
Select Read Write and
go to step 7.
Select Read Only and click Finish to create the snapshot virtual disk. Go to step
8.
NOTE: Repositories
are not required for Read Only snapshot virtual
disks.
Keep these guidelines in mind when you grant host
access to a snapshot virtual disk:
Each host has its own logical unit number (LUN) address
space and allows the same LUN to be used by different host groups
or hosts to access snapshot virtual disks in a storage array.
You can define one mapping for each snapshot virtual
disk in the storage array.
Mappings are shared between controllers in the storage
array.
The same LUN cannot be used twice by a host group
or a host to access a snapshot virtual disk. You must use a unique
LUN.
An access virtual disk mapping is not required for
out-of-band storage arrays.
Choose how you want to create the repository
for the Read-Write snapshot virtual disk. Do one of the following:
Select Automatic and click Finish to create the snapshot virtual disk repository
with the default capacity settings. This option is the recommended
one.
Select Manual and click Next to define the properties for the snapshot virtual
disk repository. Then click Finish to continue
with the snapshot virtual disk creation procedure.
Use this option if you want to specify all the
customizable settings for the snapshot virtual disk repository. The
Manual method is considered advanced and only those who understand
physical disk consistency and optimal physical disk configurations
should use this method.
Click Finish.
The snapshot virtual disk and its properties
under the individual virtual disk node for the associated base virtual
disk is displayed in the navigation tree. The snapshot virtual disk
is added as a new virtual disk that contains the snapshot image information,
which is the data of the virtual disk at the particular time of snapshot
image creation.
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