Refer to the exhibit.
After an abrupt power outage, an administrator receives a number of alerts indicating disks are failed. Prism Element shows a large number of disks offline as seen in the diagram. This single block, four node cluster is configured FT1 with an RF2 container holding all user data.
What number of drive failures on different domains (node, block, or rack) could this configuration have tolerated prior to seeing data unavailability?
Explanation:
This single-block, four-node cluster is configured with Fault Tolerance 1 (FT1) and a Replication Factor of 2 (RF2). This means that the data is replicated across two domains (node, block, or rack). Thus, the cluster can tolerate up to two drive failures on different domains before seeing data unavailability.Reference: https://portal.nutanix.com/page/documents/details?targetId=Prism-Admin-Guidev5_6:pr-data-protection-replication-factor-c.htmlThis single block, four node cluster is configured with Fault Tolerance (FT1) and a Replication Factor(RF2) container holding all user data. FT1 means that there are two copies of data stored across the cluster, and RF2 means that there are two copies of data stored in the container. This configuration can tolerate 2 drive failures on different domains (node, block, or rack) prior to seeing data unavailability.With FT1, if a drive fails, the second copy of the data is still available and can be used to reconstruct the data. With RF2, if a drive fails, the second copy of the data is still available and can be used to reconstruct the data. However, if a drive failure occurs on a different domain (node, block, or rack) from the one containing the other copy of data, the second copy of the data is still available, but the data availability may be affected.It's important to note that this is the maximum drive failures that the configuration can tolerate, and it's recommended to have a disaster recovery plan in place in case of a drive failure, to ensure the data availability and integrity.You can find more information on this topic in the Nutanix Administrator Guide, which is available on the Nutanix support website https://portal.nutanix.com/#/page/docs/details?targetId=Admin- Guide-Prism-v5_24:Admin-Guide-Prism-v5_24
This single-block, four-node cluster is configured with Fault Tolerance 1 (FT1) and a Replication Factor of 2 (RF2). This means that the data is replicated across two domains (node, block, or rack). Thus, the cluster can tolerate up to two drive failures on different domains before seeing data unavailability.
Reference: https://portal.nutanix.com/page/documents/details?targetId=Prism-Admin-Guidev5_6:pr-data-protection-replication-factor-c.html
This single block, four node cluster is configured with Fault Tolerance (FT1) and a Replication Factor(RF2) container holding all user data. FT1 means that there are two copies of data stored across the cluster, and RF2 means that there are two copies of data stored in the container. This configuration can tolerate 2 drive failures on different domains (node, block, or rack) prior to seeing data unavailability.
With FT1, if a drive fails, the second copy of the data is still available and can be used to reconstruct the data. With RF2, if a drive fails, the second copy of the data is still available and can be used to reconstruct the data. However, if a drive failure occurs on a different domain (node, block, or rack) from the one containing the other copy of data, the second copy of the data is still available, but the data availability may be affected.
It's important to note that this is the maximum drive failures that the configuration can tolerate, and it's recommended to have a disaster recovery plan in place in case of a drive failure, to ensure the data availability and integrity.
You can find more information on this topic in the Nutanix Administrator Guide, which is available on the Nutanix support website https://portal.nutanix.com/#/page/docs/details?targetId=Admin- Guide-Prism-v5_24:Admin-Guide-Prism-v5_24