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FlashSystem 900 Product Guide

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Performance menu overview

Enter the FlashSystem 900 performance monitor by clicking Monitoring -> Performance. The first time 

after the browser window is opened, system latency is displayed as shown in Figure 9. 

Figure 9. Improved GUI - Performance monitoring window

The horizontal part of the graph displays the timeline. You can slide the timeline to view the past. You can 

also adjust the granularity of the timeline by selecting one hour, one day, one week, one month, or all. 
"All" displays the year to date.

 Five performance charts can be reviewed from the graphs menu:

System IO:

z

The System I/O graph displays the average number of read, write, and total I/O operations per 

second (IOPS) over the sample period. Each request type (read, write, and total) is represented by a 
different color line. 

System Latency:

z

The System Latency graph displays the average amount of time in milliseconds (ms) read and write 

I/O requests take over the given sampling period. Each request type (read and write) is represented 
by a different color line. 

System Bandwidth: 

z

The System Bandwidth graph displays the average number of megabytes per second (MBps) of read, 

write, total, and rebuild bandwidth over the sample period. Each bandwidth type (read, write, total, 
and rebuild) is represented by a different color line. There is one line graph for each system that is 
selected.

Summary of Contents for FlashSystem 900

Page 1: ...and increases efficiency of IT infrastructure by using much z less power and space than traditional hard disk drive HDD and solid state disk SSD solutions Enterprise reliability protects critical ass...

Page 2: ...em 900 is configurable with 2 4 57 TB of usable capacity for scalability and flexibility z FlashSystem 900 provides flexible interface types including Fibre Channel Fibre Channel over z Ethernet FCoE...

Page 3: ...ppable IBM MicroLatency modules by way of tool less front panel access If a MicroLatency z module failure occurs critical customer applications can remain online while the defective module is replaced...

Page 4: ...ller two interface cards and a management controller with an associated 1 Gbps Ethernet port Each canister also has a USB port and two hot swappable fan modules In addition to the canisters IBM FlashS...

Page 5: ...mponents are concurrently maintainable except for the passive midplane enclosure LED board and power interposer board All external connections are from the rear of the system Figure 4 Rear view of Fla...

Page 6: ...8 3 TiB 11 6 TB 10 5 TiB 12 TB 10 9 TiB 17 4 TB 15 8 TiB 22 8 TB 20 72 TiB 23 2 TB 21 1 TiB 29 TB 26 3 TiB 34 2 TB 31 1 TiB 45 6 TB 41 4 TiB and 57 TB 51 8 TiB Maximum capacity For RAID 5 the maximum...

Page 7: ...re and can be accessed by using the FlashSystem 900 GUI Hot Encryption Activation Adding an encryption license to a o previously initialized system Encryption Re key Changing the encryption key on a p...

Page 8: ...tion z Printed quick start guide z Selected power cables z Selected interface cables if any z License CD z Interface cards IBM FlashSystem 900 supports only one interface type per system For example i...

Page 9: ...apter are used The other two ports are disabled If you use 16 Gbps Fibre Channel all four of the Fibre Channel modules are configured for 16 Gbps z This configuration supports a total of eight Fibre C...

Page 10: ...Up to eight ports of 16 Gbps Fibre Channel with AF19 Up to 16 ports of 10 Gbps Fibre Channel over Ethernet with AF1A 8 Gb FC 8 Port Host Optics AF18 Up to 16 ports of 8 Gbps Fibre Channel 16 Gb FC 4 P...

Page 11: ...rrectly as it is not possible to dynamically add additional storage FlashSystem 900 can be populated with up to 12 x 1 2 TB IBM MicroLatency modules in increments of 4 6 8 10 or 12 or up to 12 x 2 9 T...

Page 12: ...it becomes an 8 1 stripe No system level rebuild process is necessary to maintain data protection or usable capacity after a failure caught by Variable Stripe RAID The entire Variable Stripe RAID reco...

Page 13: ...ions with latest FlashSystem 900 capacity points Capacity Selection in TB FlashSystem 900 IBM MicroLatency Modules 2 4 4 X 1 2 TB 4 8 6 X 1 2 TB 7 2 8 X 1 2 TB 9 6 10 X 1 2 TB 12 12 X 1 2 TB 11 6 6 X...

Page 14: ...ryption Enablement Pack feature AF14 is ordered In addition the FlashSystem 900 has the following functions Hot Encryption Activation Adding an encryption license to a previously initialized system z...

Page 15: ...he Event Log shortly after upgrading Note During the battery reconditioning cycle no concurrent code upgrades can be performed See the FlashSystem 900 Knowledge Center for more information at https ib...

Page 16: ...gh the management tool Function icons left side z Status bars bottom z Actions menu upper left or right click the home page z To the right of the upper middle of the GUI is the function key for managi...

Page 17: ...ions from the front of the machine At the bottom of the window are three status indicators These indicators provide information about these characteristics Capacity usage lower left z Throughput in me...

Page 18: ...unit ID 1 Figure 8 IBM FlashSystem 900 Management GUI rear view of the machine Additional FlashSystem 900 management software improvements make system management and performance health monitoring even...

Page 19: ...aphs menu System IO z The System I O graph displays the average number of read write and total I O operations per second IOPS over the sample period Each request type read write and total is represent...

Page 20: ...t color and all four ports on an adapter have the same color Command line interface The CLI provides support for the following tasks Managing users z Configuring event notifications z Configuring Call...

Page 21: ...z 1300 watts PSU 900 watts maximum 625 watts RAID5 typical operation per 2U o Heat dissipation 2133 BTU per hour assuming 625W z Warranty information and upgrades IBM FlashSystem 900 is shipped with...

Page 22: ...ge extension or withdrawal without notice Financing solutions from IBM Global Financing can help you stretch your budget and affordably acquire the new product But beyond the initial acquisition the I...

Page 23: ...e materials for this IBM product and use of those Web sites is at your own risk IBM may use or distribute any of the information you supply in any way it believes appropriate without incurring any obl...

Page 24: ...nce in this information with the appropriate symbol or indicating US registered or common law trademarks owned by IBM at the time this information was published Such trademarks may also be registered...

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