Re: How to recover volume
On Apr 17, 9:18 am, "Bad Beagle" <maxwe...@nospam.postalias> wrote:
> I have a Windows 2003 standard server connected to a SAN that has one
> volume. The OS is on a mirrored drive of the server and the data is on the
> volume of a SAN.
>
> If for some reason that server fails and I build a replacement server - how
> to I reattach to the volume on the SAN that is still valid (all data is in
> tact)?
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Storage Area Network (SAN) is a high-speed subnetwork of shared
storage devices. A storage device is a machine that contains nothing
but a disk or disks for storing data.
A SAN's architecture works in a way that makes all storage devices
available to all servers on a LAN or WAN. As more storage devices are
added to a SAN, they too will be accessible from any server in the
larger network. In this case, the server merely acts as a pathway
between the end user and the stored data.
Because stored data does not reside directly on any of a network's
servers, server power is utilized for business applications, and
network capacity is released to the end user.