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By using multiple space-savings techniques, PowerStore attempts to use the least amount of disk space to store user data. For reporting purposes, space-savings information is available at the cluster, appliance, and resource level, and includes multiple space-saving metrics. Depending on the object being viewed, these metrics may include an overall efficiency value, and thin, snapshot, and data reduction savings values. At the cluster level, space savings information is aggregated from each of the appliances within the cluster. Likewise, at the appliance level, savings information is aggregated for any resources on the appliance.
The overall efficiency value is a computed ratio of the total provisioned space to the physical used space. The total provisioned space not only includes the provisioned size for each of the resources within the system or cluster, such as the size of the volumes, file systems, and all thin clones, but also any snapshots. The physical used space is the total used space on the drives to store the data after thin, deduplication, and compression savings are achieved. The used space is not the total amount of space that is consumed from a host or client perspective before space savings is applied. The overall efficiency value is available for the entire cluster and each appliance within the cluster.
All resources within PowerStore are thinly provisioned, which means the system does not reserve the total provisioned size of a resource from the storage, but rather allocates space as needed. The thin savings achieved for a cluster, appliance, or resource is the ratio of the total provisioned size to the logical space used. The logical space that is used in this instance is the total space that is consumed from a host or client perspective without the effects of deduplication or compression. As shown in the following figure, if a 100 GB volume has 25 GB of written data, the savings due to the resource being thin is 4:1.
Snapshot savings, which are displayed as snap savings within PowerStore Manager, is the ratio of logical used space for the snapshots to data that is uniquely owned by the snapshots. The logical used space is the amount of space consumed by data which is in common between the snapshot and the parent resource when the snapshot was created. For example, a volume has 5 GB of data consumed and a snapshot is then taken. The logical used space by the snapshot in this instance is 5 GB, which is shared with the parent resource. If 1 GB of data is overwritten in the volume, the amount of data that is uniquely owned by the snapshot is now 1 GB. In this example, also shown in Figure 8, the snap savings is 5 GB/1 GB or 5:1.
The last space efficiency metric is the data reduction ratio. This ratio is a comparison between the amount of space a dataset would have consumed if no space savings were achieved (logical used), compared to the amount of physical space occupied after passing the data through deduplication and compression (physical used). If 100 GB of data only needs 25 GB of physical storage after deduplication and compression, then the data reduction savings is 4:1. This example is shown in the following figure. The data reduction ratio is only displayed for the cluster and appliance levels, since deduplication and compression savings span resources in PowerStore.
You can view the Physical Capacity, Historical Usage, and Data Savings metrics for the cluster, and the cluster top resource consumers from the Dashboard > Capacity tab. The cluster metrics are aggregated from the metrics of its appliances and resources, such as volume groups, volumes, file systems, and virtual machines. An example of the Capacity tab for the cluster is shown in the following figure. Under the Data Savings title, the Overall Efficiency, Snap Savings, and Thin Savings for the cluster can be viewed. A graphic exists showing the relationship between the Logical Used and Physical Used space, along with the Data Reduction savings that were achieved.
When hovering over the Physical Capacity chart, the user is provided with more information about the Used and Free capacity within the system. For each metric, User and System space is also reported. For Used, the User and System space metrics state how much capacity is currently in use for User data and by the System. The System value includes the amount of space used by system metadata. For Free, the User and System values report how much free space exists.
When a resource is deleted, capacity that was used by user data is freed back to user space and any metadata space is freed to system space. When additional capacity is required for new user data or metadata, the system utilizes the free capacity within the system. If there is no free system space to create additional metadata, user space will be reduced to satisfy the need. This information is available within the Physical Capacity chart for the cluster and each individual appliance. An example is shown in the following figure.
You can view the capacity metrics for an appliance from the Hardware > Appliances > [appliance] > Capacity tab. On this screen, as shown in the following figure, you can view the Physical Capacity, Historical Usage, and Data Savings information for the appliance. Within the Data Savings block, you can view the Overall Efficiency, Snap Savings, and Thin Savings for the appliance. As mentioned previously, this information is aggregated, along with information for other appliances within the same cluster, to create the cluster metrics. Lastly, the Data Reduction savings ratio is presented within the graphic displaying the comparison between Logical Used and Physical Used space for the appliance.
Thin Savings and Snap Savings can be viewed for volumes within a PowerStore system. This information can be found on the Capacity tab within the properties of the resource. Within the Usage box, the volume Used and Free space are displayed, along with the Thin Savings and Snap Savings. The amount of Snapshot/Thin Clone Space being consumed, and the amount of Volume Family Unique Data can be viewed on this page. The Historical Usage of the volume is also displayed on the Capacity tab, which shows the Provisioned size and Used space for the resource. An example of this page for a volume is found in the following figure. In PowerStoreOS 3.0, more usage information for file systems was added to the Capacity tab. The information includes Thin Savings, Snap Savings, Snapshot/Thin Clone space, and Filesystem Family Unique Data. The Historical Usage chart was also added for file systems.