SANtricity 11.8 Commands ( CA08871-194 ~ 196 )
Create snapshot group
The create snapGroup
command creates a new snapshot group and the associated repository volume.
Supported Series
This command applies to any individual storage system, including the HB2100/HB2200/HB2300, HB5100/HB5200, AB6100 and AB3100 series, as long as all SMcli packages are installed.
Roles
To execute this command on an HB2100/HB2200/HB2300, HB5100/HB5200, AB6100, or AB3100 storage system, you must have the Storage Admin role.
Context
A snapshot group contains a sequence of snapshot images of an associated base volume. A snapshot group has a repository volume that is used to save data for all of the snapshot images that are part of the snapshot group.
Before you create a snapshot group, make sure a volume group with free capacity is available. |
Syntax
create snapGroup userLabel="snapGroupName" sourceVolume="volumeName" [(repositoryVolume="repos_xxxx" | repositoryVolume=(volumeGroupName [capacity=capacityValue]) | repositoryVolume=(diskPoolName [capacity=capacityValue]))] [repositoryFullPolicy=(failBaseWrites | purgeSnapImages)] [rollbackPriority=(highest | high | medium | low | lowest)] [repositoryFullLimit=percentValue] [autoDeleteLimit=numberOfSnapImages]| [enableSchedule=(TRUE | FALSE)] [schedule (immediate | snapshotSchedule)]
Parameters
Parameter | Description |
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The name that you want to give the new snapshot group. Enclose the snapshot group identifier in double quotation marks (" "). |
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The name of the volume that you want to use as the source for your snapshot images. Enclose the source volume name in double quotation marks (" "). |
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The name of the repository volume that will contain the changed data of the snapshot group. You have two options for defining the name of a repository volume:
The name of an existing repository volume is comprised of two parts:
Enclose the name of the existing repository volume in double quotation marks (" "). If you want to create a new repository volume when you run this command you must enter the name of either a volume group or a disk pool in which you want the repository volume. Optionally, you also can define the capacity of the repository volume. If you want to define the capacity you can use these values:
If you do not use the capacity option, the storage management software sets the capacity to 20 percent of the base volume capacity. When you run this command the storage management software creates the repository volume for the snapshot volume. |
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Defines how snapshot image processing continues if the snapshot group repository volume is full. You can choose to fail I/O writes to the base volume ( |
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Determines whether system resources should be allocated to the rollback operation at the expense of system performance. A value of |
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The percentage of repository capacity at which you receive a warning that the snapshot group repository volume is nearing full. Use integer values. For example, a value of 70 means 70 percent. The default value is 75. |
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Each snapshot group can be configured to perform automatic deletion of its snapshot images to keep the total number of snapshot images in the snapshot group at or below a designated level. When this option is enabled, then any time a new snapshot image is created in the snapshot group, the system automatically deletes the oldest snapshot image in the group to comply with the limit value. This action frees repository capacity so it can be used to satisfy ongoing copy-on-write requirements for the remaining snapshot images. |
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Use this parameter to turn on or to turn off the ability to schedule a snapshot operation. To turn on snapshot scheduling, set this parameter to |
Notes
Each snapshot group name must be unique. You can use any combination of alphanumeric characters, underscore (_), hyphen (-), and pound (#) for the user label. User labels can have a maximum of 30 characters.
To create a snapshot group, you must have an associated repository volume in which you store the snapshot images. You can either use an existing repository volume or create a new repository volume. You can create the repository volume when you create the snapshot group. A snapshot group repository volume is an expandable volume that is structured as a concatenated collection of up to 16 standard volume entities. Initially, an expandable repository volume has only a single element. The capacity of the expandable repository volume is exactly that of the single element. You can increase the capacity of an expandable repository volume by attaching additional standard volumes to it. The composite expandable repository volume capacity then becomes the sum of the capacities of all of the concatenated standard volumes.
A snapshot group has a strict ordering of snapshot images based on the time that each snapshot image is created. A snapshot image that is created after another snapshot image is a successor relative to that other snapshot image. A snapshot image that is created before another snapshot image is a predecessor relative to that other one.
A snapshot group repository volume must satisfy a minimum capacity requirement that is the sum of the following:
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32 MB to support fixed overhead for the snapshot group and for copy-on-write processing.
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Capacity for rollback processing, which is 1/5000th of the capacity of the base volume.
The minimum capacity is enforcement by the controller firmware and the storage management software.
When you first create a snapshot group, it does not contains any snapshot images. When you create snapshot images, you add the snapshot images to a snapshot group. Use the create snapImage
command to create snapshot images and add the snapshot images to a snapshot group.
A snapshot group can have one of these states:
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Optimal — The snapshot group is operating normally.
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Full — The snapshot group repository is full. Additional copy-on-write operations cannot be performed. This state is possible only for snapshot groups that have the Repository Full policy set to Fail Base Writes. Any snapshot group in a Full state causes a Needs-Attention condition to be posted for the storage system.
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Over Threshold — The snapshot group repository volume usage is at or beyond its alert threshold. Any snapshot group in this state causes a Needs-Attention condition to be posted for the storage system.
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Failed — The snapshot group has encountered a problem that has made all snapshot images in the snapshot group unusable. For example, certain types of repository volume failures can cause a Failed state. To recover from a Failed state use the
revive snapGroup
command.
You can configure each snapshot group to automatically delete the snapshot images by using the autoDeleteLimit
parameter. Automatically deleting the snapshot images enables you to avoid having to routinely, manually delete the images that you do not want and that might prevent the creation of future snapshot images because the repository volume is full. When you use the autoDeleteLimit
parameter it causes the storage management software to automatically delete snapshot images, starting with the oldest. The storage management software deletes snapshot images until it reaches a number of snapshot images that is equal to the number that you enter with autoDeleteLimit
parameter. When new snapshot images are added to the repository volume, the storage management software deletes the oldest snapshot images until the autoDeleteLimit
parameter number is reached.
The enableSchedule
parameter and the schedule
parameter provide a way for you to schedule creating snapshot images for a snapshot group. Using these parameters, you can schedule snapshots daily, weekly, or monthly (by day or by date). The enableSchedule
parameter turns on or turns off the ability to schedule snapshots. When you enable scheduling, you use the schedule
parameter to define when you want the snapshots to occur.
This table explains how to use the options for the schedule
parameter:
Parameter | Description | ||||
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Required for specifying schedule parameters. |
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Start the operation immediately. This item is mutually exclusive with any other scheduling parameters. |
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When set to
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A specific date on which to start the operation. The format for entering the date is MM:DD:YY. The default is the current date. An example of this option is |
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A day of the week on which to start the operation. Can either be all or one or more of the following values:
More than one day can be specified by enclosing the days in a single set of parentheses and separating each day with a space. For example,
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The time of a day on which to start the operation. The format for entering the time is HH:MM, where HH is the hour and MM is the minute past the hour. Uses a 24-hour clock. For example, 2:00 in the afternoon is 14:00. An example of this option is |
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An amount of time, in minutes, to have as a minimum between operations.Schedule interval should not be more than 1440 (24 hours) and it should be a multiple of 30. An example of this option is |
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A specific date on which to stop the operation. The format for entering the date is MM:DD:YY. If no end date is desired, you can specify |
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The number of times to perform the operation in a day. An example of this option is |
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Specifies the time zone to be used for the schedule. Can be specified in two ways:
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A day of the month on which to perform the operation. The values for the days are numerical and in the range of 1-31.
An example of the |
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A specific month on which to perform the operation. The values for the months are:
More than one month can be specified by enclosing the months in a single set of parentheses and separating each month with a space. For example, Use this parameter with the
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This table explains how to use the timeZone
parameter:
Timezone Name | GMT offset |
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The code string for defining a schedule is similar to these examples:
enableSchedule=true schedule startTime=14:27
enableSchedule=true schedule scheduleInterval=180
enableSchedule=true schedule timeZone=GMT-06:00
enableSchedule=true schedule timeZone="America/Chicago"
If you also use the scheduleInterval
option, the firmware chooses between the timesPerDay
option and the scheduleInterval
option by selecting the lowest value of the two options. The firmware calculates an integer value for the scheduleInterval
option by dividing 1440 by the scheduleInterval
option value that you set. For example, 1440/180 = 8. The firmware then compares the timesPerDay
integer value with the calculated scheduleInterval
integer value and uses the smaller value.
To remove a schedule, use the delete volume
command with the schedule
parameter. The delete volume
command with the schedule
parameter deletes only the schedule, not the snapshot volume.