| Agents Administration - Tests |
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Configuration of EMCPvMeVolumeTest A volume is a logical subdivision of a vdisk, and can be mapped to controller host ports for access by hosts. A mapped volume provides the storage for a file system partition you create with your operating system or third-party tools. The storage system presents only volumes, not vdisks, to hosts. This is why, if a single volume in the EMC PowerVault ME storage system is unable to process I/O requests from hosts quickly, it can rupture the user experience with the entire storage system. Therefore, to improve fault tolerance and I/O performance of a volume, you can set cache options for individual volumes. A well-tuned cache can go a long way in reducing direct volume accesses and related I/O processing overheads. In the absence of such a cache, processing slowdowns become inevitable! In times of heavy load, weak load-balancing algorithms can aggravate the slowdown, thereby adversely impacting the user experience with the storage system. To avoid this, administrators need to continuously monitor the I/O load, the processing ability, and the cache usage of every volume in the storage system, proactively detect an I/O processing latency, rapidly determine the exact cause of the poor I/O performance - is it an improperly configured cache? Or an ineffective load-balancing engine? Or both? - and promptly initiate measures to rectify the root-cause, so that normalcy of operations can be restored. This is where the EMCPvMeVolumeTest helps. This test auto-discovers the volumes in the storage system and reports how well each volume handles the I/O requests it receives. In addition, the test also focuses on the cache usage of every volume from time to time, and reveals whether/not any cache has been grossly under-utilized. This way, the test turns the spotlight on volumes that are experiencing a slowdown and also reveals what is causing the slowdown - load-balancing irregularities across volumes or badly configured caches? The default parameters associated with this test are:
When changing the configuration for specific servers, a “*” beside the text box corresponding to the parameter signifies that these values have to be manually configured by the user. The parameter values that require to be configured will typically be prefixed with a “$” or contain a series of “*”. A value of “none” in the parameter value indicates that the corresponding parameter value can be changed if required. |