Business continuance volume
In disk arrays, a business continuance volume, or BCV, is EMC Corporation's term for an independently addressable copy of a data volume, that uses advanced mirroring technique for business continuity purposes.[1]
Use
BCVs can be detached from the active data storage at a point in time and mounted on non-critical servers to facilitate offline backup or parallel processing. Once offline processes are completed, these BCVs can be either:
- discarded
- re-attached (re-synchronized) to the production data again
- used as a source to recover the production data
Types
There are two types of BCVs:
- A clone BCV is a traditional method, and uses one-to-one separate physical storage (splitable disk mirror)
- least impact on production performance
- high cost of the additional storage
- persistent usage
- A snapshot BCV, that uses copy on write algorithm on the production volume
- uses only a small additional storage, that only holds the changes made to the production volume
- lower cost of the additional storage
- reads and writes impact performance of production storage
- once snapshot storage fills up, the snapshot becomes invalid and unusable
- short-term usage
- uses only a small additional storage, that only holds the changes made to the production volume
References
- ↑ "Disaster Recovery Journal". Retrieved 2012-03-01.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, March 29, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.