In a Dynamic Disk Pool (DDP), the system is designed to handle drive failures efficiently without impacting data availability. When a drive fails within a DDP and there is no free capacity, the data from the failed drive is rebuilt using preservation capacity within the DDP.
Dynamic Disk Pools use distributed sparing, which allows the spare capacity to be spread across all the drives in the pool rather than relying on dedicated hot spare drives. This distribution ensures that the rebuild process starts immediately and can be completed faster than traditional RAID systems because the workload is shared across more drives.
The preservation capacity is essentially reserved space within the DDP that can be utilized in the event of a drive failure to rebuild the data. This approach helps in maintaining redundancy and protecting data integrity even when a drive fails.
References:
NetApp E-Series Storage System Documentation
SANtricity System Manager User Guide
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