Announcing the General Availability of Purity//FA 6.7.4 LLR
We are happy to announce the general availability of 6.7.4, the fifth release in the 6.7 Long-Life Release (LLR) line! This release line is based on the feature set introduced in 6.6, providing long-term consistency in capabilities, user experience, and interoperability, with the latest fixes and security updates. When the 6.7 LLR line demonstrates sufficient accumulated runtime data to be recommended for critical customer workloads, it will be declared Enterprise Ready (ER). Until then, Purity//FA 6.5 is the latest ER-designated LLR line. For more detailed information about bug fixes and security updates included in each release, see the release notes. UPGRADE RECOMMENDATIONS AND EOL SCHEDULE We recommend customers with compatible hardware who are looking for the latest feature set offered for long-term maintenance upgrade to this long-life release. When possible, customers should make use of Self-Service Upgrades (SSU) to ease the process of planning and executing non-disruptive Purity upgrades for their fleet. The 6.7 LLR line is planned for development through October 2027. HARDWARE SUPPORT This release is supported on the following FlashArray Platforms: Cloud Block Store for Azure and AWS, FA//X (R2, R3, R4), FA//C, FA//XL, and FA//E. Note, DFS software version 2.2.3 is recommended with this release. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We would like to thank everyone within the engineering, support, technical program management, product management, product marketing, finance and technical product specialist teams who contributed to this release. LINKS AND REFERENCES Purity//FA 6.7 Release Notes Purity//FA 6.6/6.7 Feature Content Self-Service Upgrades Purity//FA Release and End-of-Life Schedule FlashArray Hardware and End-of-Support DirectFlash Shelf Software Compatibility Matrix FlashArray Capacity and Feature Limits FlashArray Feature Interoperability Matrix14Views2likes0CommentsBackup and Restore FA Configuration
Hi All, Purestorage has how to save or backup and restore configuration when an issue occurs? For example, the software crashed and could not be used anymore. Once the problem was fixed, we restored the existing configuration file from backup.Solved125Views2likes6CommentsSnapshots and growth
I have a question about snapshot growth and retention. Last week we had 14 days worth of snapshots and due to some storage growth, we changed this to 7 days worth of snapshots. Before the change was made snapshots were taking up about 21 TB of space, after the change that number is around 10 TB. This reduction of space was more than expected. We expected around a 5 TB reduction. We just added up days 8-14 to get the 5 number. The other 6 TB reduction came from the most recent snapshot which at the time was 11 TB in size and now its down to around 5 TB in size. Does anybody know why the most current snapshot also had a large reduction after making this change? We are trying to figure out future growth including snapshot growth.150Views0likes4CommentsActiveCluster Asynchronous
Hello Having question about ActiveCluster Asynchronous is it possible to configure between 2 existing clusters Poland to Germany . Idea is to have ability to perform DR tests in Datacenters located in different country The customer is currently running a configuration based on X20R2/R4. They have two systems in the Poland and two in the Germany. Local replication between arrays is configured using ActiveCluster Synchronous. ################## Reviewed documentation is ActiveCluster over Fibre Channel and ActiveDR or Async is supported on the same system starting with Purity 6.1.3+. ActiveDR must be configured with separate volumes (and pods) from ActiveCluster volumes. ActiveCluster asynchronous works in such way that that both arrays Metro Arrays replicate data to 3d array protection group snapshot only Leveraging asynchronous replication is easy to do, it's a simple matter of defining a Target array in a Protection Group after connecting the array. Once defined in a Protection Group, the Protection Group itself can be moved into an ActiveCluster (our synchronous replication, RPO0 replication service) Pod, where the Protection Group is owned by two arrays. The defined Target can replicate regularly scheduled snapshots to a third array. This Active-Active Asynchronous Replication is shared by the ActiveCluster arrays and in the event that either array is offline, the alternate array will assume ownership of continual snapshot replication to the third array. In summary, you can replicate snapshots as desired between any number of arrays to any other number of arrays, requiring a defined array connection and Protection Group Target. These Protection Groups can also be moved into a pod for sharing between ActiveCluster arrays for disaster recovery purposes as well. The sequence of steps for enabling asynchronous replication: Connect arrays so the source and target arrays are aware of each other Create a Protection Group with desired snapshot policies Add any array to replicate snapshots to the Target field If using in an ActiveCluster pair, move the Protection Group into the ActiveCluster podSolved116Views1like3CommentsPurity FA 6.6.10* Introduces Better Data Security
Purity FA 6.6.10 introduces better data security by auditing file access. This means for all SMB and NFS shares, all access events can be captured and recorded to a local file or sent to a remote CIS log server. Check out the Pure Storage //Launch Round-Up for August! Have more questions? We’re all ears!31Views1like0CommentsAre you planning to implement vSphere 8 U1 on FlashArray?
Are you planning to implement vSphere 8 U1 on FlashArray? Why or why not? Have you heard? NVMe over Fabrics with VMware Virtual Volumes - “with VMware vSphere 8 U1, FlashArray is now validated with support for Virtual Volumes (vVols) when using NVMe over Fabrics (NVMe-oF) FC/TCP. Check it out here!16Views0likes0CommentsSelf-Service Upgrades = Full Control!
For those of you who have already tried Self-Service Upgrades (SSU) for FlashArray™, what were (are) the biggest challenges you encounter in managing your fleet’s upgrades? Whether you’re running multiple upgrades in parallel or just handling one at a time, it’s all in your hands! Check it out.18Views0likes0CommentsWhat’s the worst storage-related horror story you’ve encountered?
Pure Storage is redefining storage with capacity-optimized all-flash solutions. Say goodbye to compromising on speed or scalability! We’ve all had moments where slow storage caused an ‘uh-oh’ situation. What’s the worst storage-related horror story you’ve encountered? Check out this blog for all the details on how this innovation can power up your data infrastructure and more.18Views0likes0Comments