Single server high availability (SSHA) storage systems have multiple controllers present in a topology, typically employing Redundant Array of Independent Disk methodologies. In some persistent reservation implementations, one storage controller has exclusive access to a particular set of logical volumes configured from a plurality of disk drives or other storage devices. Another storage controller in this implementation may have exclusive access to another particular set of logical volumes and be able to “see” logical volumes of its counterpart storage controller without being able to access those logical volumes, and vice versa. Because of this, a host driver of the server processing input/output (I/O) requests to the logical volumes may misdirect a request to a storage controller. Serial Attached Small Computer System Interface (SAS) storage controllers overcome this problem by rerouting or “shipping”, the I/O request and its associated data over a SAS connection between the storage controllers. But, this implementation requires much computational processing and time to perform the transfer. Cache mirroring (e.g., in a multipath I/O system with storage controller redundancy) is another computationally intensive and lengthy implementation where data is pulled by one storage controller responding to the I/O request and transferred to the other storage controller through the SAS connection between controllers.