Difference between revisions of "Physical Disk UnMark Hot Spare"
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[[File:UnMark Hot Spare.jpg|512px|thumb|Clears the hot-spare flag to un-mark the device as a usable spare in the event that a ZFS storage pool becomes degraded.]] | [[File:UnMark Hot Spare.jpg|512px|thumb|Clears the hot-spare flag to un-mark the device as a usable spare in the event that a ZFS storage pool becomes degraded.]] | ||
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+ | The purpose of "Unmark Universal Storage Pool Hot-Spare" in QuantaStor is to remove the designation of a drive as a hot spare within a Universal Storage Pool (USP). | ||
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+ | A hot spare is a standby drive that automatically replaces a failed drive in a storage system, ensuring continued operation and data protection. When a drive fails within a storage pool, the hot spare is automatically used to rebuild the failed drive, minimizing downtime and maintaining data redundancy. | ||
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+ | However, there may be situations where administrators need to remove a drive from its hot spare role. This could be because the drive is needed for other purposes, such as expanding the storage pool or replacing a failed drive in another pool. | ||
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+ | By unmarking a drive as a hot spare, administrators can reclaim the drive for other tasks without it being automatically used as a replacement drive in case of a failure. This gives administrators more flexibility and control over the allocation of resources within the storage system. | ||
Latest revision as of 11:11, 25 April 2024
The purpose of "Unmark Universal Storage Pool Hot-Spare" in QuantaStor is to remove the designation of a drive as a hot spare within a Universal Storage Pool (USP).
A hot spare is a standby drive that automatically replaces a failed drive in a storage system, ensuring continued operation and data protection. When a drive fails within a storage pool, the hot spare is automatically used to rebuild the failed drive, minimizing downtime and maintaining data redundancy.
However, there may be situations where administrators need to remove a drive from its hot spare role. This could be because the drive is needed for other purposes, such as expanding the storage pool or replacing a failed drive in another pool.
By unmarking a drive as a hot spare, administrators can reclaim the drive for other tasks without it being automatically used as a replacement drive in case of a failure. This gives administrators more flexibility and control over the allocation of resources within the storage system.
Navigation: Storage Management --> Physical Disks --> [target disk] --> Unmark as Hot Spare (rightclick)