Data Backup and Recovery

XCP isync nodata option impact?

Paul3
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What is the impact of using the "-nodata" option when running an "isync"?

 

For example, we had a partial copy of source data on a destination NetApp volume (a previously failed XCP copy due to stability issues on the source non-NetApp storage box. We had to use a different source box so couldn't reuse the previous copy catalog ID). We needed to establish a new catalog of the current state along with resuming the copy operation, so we opted to use isync rather than deleting all destination data and starting a fresh copy. (we're talking 250Tb over a 1Gb network link... ancient hardware with no option to improve the speed)

 

Due to the slow 1Gb link, iSync was taking a long time because XCP was reading in all data over the 1Gb link from the source so it could do a byte-for-byte check. Things drastically improved when we used the -nodata option, but what impact could using this have on the isync process besides being faster? What are we loosing out on?

 

The source data is live so changes can occur during each XCP run. Once the isync finishes I plan to use "sync" with the new catalog ID. Would this be ok? 

 

Why does sync not have a -nodata option compared to isync? How does a sync check if a source file has changed without reading the whole file into the XCP server to do a byte-for-byte comparison? 

 

Thanks in advance,

Paul.

1 REPLY 1

ChLokesh
229 Views

Hello Paul,

 

No data means, it will only check the file modify time, attributes and wont check the actual data.

- You can use sync instead of isync because it will create index and compare data next time you resume sync. 

- Since the xcp sync does not scan the actual data ever and instead it looks into the database (index) that XCP maintains, we dont have a -nodata option with XCP sync.

- It compares the SRC and DST via the database (index) that it maintains.

 

- Matching KB: https://kb.netapp.com/on-prem/ontap/da/XCP/XCP-KBs/What_is_xcp_isync  

 

Hope my answers help.

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