The Remote Storage snap-in presents a hierarchical view of the Remote Storage system. Each node in the hierarchy represents a different component of the Remote Storage system. This allows the system administrator to configure the components of the Remote Storage by invoking their corresponding configuration screens or property sheets.
The top level component of the Remote Storage hierarchy is the Windows 2000 Server hosting remote storage. All other components in the Remote Storage snap-in are descendants of the Windows 2000 Server hosting remote storage.
The Remote Storage user interface (UI) is comprised of four parts: the Remote Storage Administrative user interface; the Recall Notification user interface; Windows Explorer integration; and Disk Management integration. The Remote Storage snap-in runs on Windows 2000 Server and Windows 2000 Professional. The nonadministrative UIs (Recall Notification, Windows Explorer integration, and Disk Management integration) run on the same platforms.
The Remote Storage snap-in provides the following components:
The characteristics of the Remote Storage snap-in include the following:
On Windows 2000 recall notification can monitor currently active client initiated recalls. The name of the file is shown to the user when a recall is in progress.
This application allows the administrator to cancel the recall. This has the effect of freeing the application (the read, write, or memory map request fails) but, if data transfer has started, the file is still recalled.
Placeholders in Windows Explorer are visually different from normal (untruncated) files, but premigrated files appear the same as normal files. Remote Storage integration with Windows Explorer requires adding a new property page to both the file and directory property sheets (accessible through Windows Explorer) to represent storage management properties. The new storage management pages provide information on migration status, premigrated file data location in remote storage, premigrated date and time, and possibly other relevant information. Users have read-only access to the new Remote Storage property pages, though they can force immediate premigration of individual files or entire directories by setting a Premigrate Now option on the Remote Storage page.
Specific integration areas include (in order of priority):
Remote Storage introduces a new property page into the property sheet for managed volumes, which shows statistics and graphics indicating the amount of free space, used space, space taken up by placeholders, and a representation of how much virtual disk space the placeholders represent.
Windows 2000 Disk Management allows the user to bring up a property sheet for each volume on a computer. This property sheet is the same property sheet accessible through My Computer. The Remote Storage property sheet shows total used space, free space, premigrated file space, truncated files (placeholders), untruncated file disk usage, premigration space savings, truncated file compression ratio, percent of files that are placeholders, and other volume report information. The property sheet used by Windows 2000 Disk Management (and by My Computer) is Remote Storage–aware, but the Remote Storage snap-in is not required to use Disk Management.
In addition to integration with Windows Explorer and the Windows 2000 Disk Management snap-in, the Remote Storage snap-in also integrates with the Windows 2000 shell in the following ways:
Remote Storage supports the configuration and management of volumes for local storage. Volumes can be managed individually or in groups.
Disk Management, a subfolder of Remote Storage Computer in the snap-in, deals with the administration and configuration of all managed volumes.
Individual managed volumes are controlled at the Disk Management level.
Inside each managed volume are directories and files. Placeholders are shown differently from normal, untruncated files. If you are viewing the file in Windows Explorer, it appears with an overlay icon. From the command prompt, the Dir command displays the file size in parentheses.
The administrator has configuration control over volumes that have Remote Storage installed, but which are not currently managed by Remote Storage. Although a volume might not be currently managed, it can still have placeholders on it that can be recalled.
Remote Storage supports the monitoring of local storage system activity by means of the Remote Storage snap-in. This monitoring occurs at the Disk Management level, the single managed volume level, for directories and files on a single managed volume, and for single unmanaged volumes.
Remote storage administration involves managing and configuring the storage devices and media that make up remote storage. The ability to configure and manage remote storage requires administrator privileges.
Remote Storage supports monitoring remote storage system activity by means of the Remote Storage snap-in. This monitoring occurs at the overall remote storage level and the volume level or libraries level.
The Remote Storage snap-in provides wizards to create and define jobs.
The Remote Storage snap-in provides monitoring of jobs currently running in the system. This provides visual feedback of current system activity. All currently running jobs can be viewed in one monitor screen.
System installation and setup are integrated with Microsoft® BackOffice® setup and license management. Remote Storage provides Systems Management Server extensions to improve distributed administration. The installation procedure provides an acceptable default configuration of the Remote Storage system that can be run in batch or interactive mode. The installation addresses the following areas:
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