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Identifies the type of the Storage Profile.
Identifies the name of the Storage Profile. The name includes, in some instances, the name of the application that is associated with the profile.
Identifies the storage mechanism that is used to enhance the ability of the system to recover data from the loss of one or more drives.
Indicates that, in addition to the actual data, one set of parity bits exists for the logical volume. This parity level protects against the loss of one drive. Single parity is implemented as a variant of the RAID 5 storage technology.
Indicates that, in addition to the actual data, two sets of parity bits exist for the logical volume. This parity level protects against the loss of one or two drives with a slight cost to write performance. Double parity is implemented as a variant of the RAID 6 storage technology.
Indicates that no parity bits exist for the volume. Instead, the system writes the data in two different locations. This RAID level protects against the loss of at least one drive and possibly more drives with an improvement of the performance of random write operations. Mirrored RAID is implemented as a variant of the RAID 10 storage technology.
Identifies the read‑ahead policy that the system uses for sequential read operations. The policy determines the amount of additional data, if any, that the system places into the Controller cache. Valid policies:
Indicates that the input requests and the output requests are accessing the data mostly in a random manner or in a mixed sequential and random manner.
Indicates that the input requests and the output requests are accessing the data mostly in a sequential manner and that the workload is biased toward read operations.
Indicates that the input requests and the output requests are mostly sequential and that the workload is biased toward write operations.
Indicates the highest priority for responding to requests in the processing queue
Indicates the next highest priority for responding to requests in the processing queue
Indicates an intermediate priority for responding to requests in the processing queue
Indicates the next to lowest priority for responding to requests in the processing queue
Indicates the lowest priority for responding to requests in the processing queue
Identifies the number of drive groups over which the data is written.
Indicates the specified stripe width.
Indicates that the logical volume is striped across all of the available drive groups.
Indicates that the Oracle FS System determines the stripe width based on the Priority option that you selected.
Identifies the write‑caching rules to use for the profile.
Writes data to the Controller cache and to the storage arrays before the write request completes. This rule ensures that the data is safely written to the storage before the write request returns to the application. Write-through caching performs more slowly than does write-back caching because the data is being written to the storage arrays as well as to the cache.
During the shutdown process, the system writes all cached data to the storage arrays.
Indicates that the Oracle FS System selects the appropriate write‑caching rule based on the selected QoS settings.
Indicates the preferred order in which the Oracle FS System uses the available Storage Classes.