What is a characteristic of FAST Cache when it is in a faulted state?
A. It transitions to the read-only state.
B. It no longer accepts I/O.
C. I/O continues to any surviving RAID 1/0 mirror set.
D. Its data is copied to the vault drives.
One Comment on “What is a characteristic of FAST Cache when it is in a faulted state?”
Alexeysays:
Correct.
The FAST Cache has two failure states: Enabled (Degraded) and Disabled (Faulted). The cache
is in the Enabled (Degraded) state when it is enabled and accepting I/O, but one of its disks
has failed or been removed, and the cache is transitioning into a read-only mode. The cache
is in the Disabled (Faulted) state when it is disabled and no longer accepting I/O because
multiple disks in the cache have failed or been removed.
Correct.
The FAST Cache has two failure states: Enabled (Degraded) and Disabled (Faulted). The cache
is in the Enabled (Degraded) state when it is enabled and accepting I/O, but one of its disks
has failed or been removed, and the cache is transitioning into a read-only mode. The cache
is in the Disabled (Faulted) state when it is disabled and no longer accepting I/O because
multiple disks in the cache have failed or been removed.
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