Storage Foundation 8.0 Administrator's Guide - Windows
- Overview
- Setup and configuration
- Function overview
- About the client console for Storage Foundation
- Recommendations for caching-enabled disks
- Configure basic disks (Optional)
- About creating dynamic disk groups
- About creating dynamic volumes
- Set desired preferences
- Using the GUI to manage your storage
- Working with disks, partitions, and volumes
- Adding storage
- Disk tasks
- Remove a disk from the computer
- Veritas Disk ID (VDID)
- General Partition/Volume tasks
- Mount a volume at an empty folder (Drive path)
- Expand a dynamic volume
- Shrink a dynamic volume
- Basic disk and volume tasks
- Automatic discovery of SSD devices and manual classification as SSD
- Volume Manager space allocation is SSD aware
- Dealing with disk groups
- Disk groups overview
- Delete a dynamic disk group
- Detaching and attaching dynamic disks
- Importing and deporting dynamic disk groups
- Partitioned shared storage with private dynamic disk group protection
- Fast failover in clustered environments
- iSCSI SAN support
- Settings for monitoring objects
- Event monitoring and notification
- Event notification
- Configuring Automatic volume growth
- Standard features for adding fault tolerance
- Performance tuning
- FlashSnap
- FlashSnap components
- FastResync
- Snapshot commands
- Dynamic Disk Group Split and Join
- Dynamic disk group join
- Using Dynamic Disk Group Split and Join with a cluster on shared storage
- Dynamic Disk Group Split and Join troubleshooting tips
- Fast File Resync
- Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS)
- Using the VSS snapshot wizards with Microsoft Exchange
- Using the VSS snapshot wizards with Enterprise Vault
- Using the VSS snapshot wizards with Microsoft SQL
- Copy on Write (COW)
- Using the VSS COW snapshot wizards with Microsoft Exchange
- Using the VSS COW snapshot wizards with Microsoft SQL
- Configuring data caching with SmartIO
- Typical deployment scenarios
- About cache area
- Configuring SmartIO
- Frequently asked questions about SmartIO
- Dynamic Multi-Pathing
- Configuring Cluster Volume Manager (CVM)
- Configuring a CVM cluster
- Administering CVM
- Access modes for cluster-shared volumes
- Storage disconnectivity and CVM disk detach policy
- Unconfiguring a CVM cluster
- Command shipping
- About I/O Fencing
- Administering site-aware allocation for campus clusters
- SFW for Hyper-V virtual machines
- Introduction to Storage Foundation solutions for Hyper-V environments
- Live migration support for SFW dynamic disk group
- Preparing the host machines
- Configuring the SFW storage
- Administering storage migration for SFW and Hyper-V virtual machine volumes
- Optional Storage Foundation features for Hyper-V environments
- Microsoft Failover Clustering support
- Configuring a quorum in a Microsoft Failover Cluster
- Implementing disaster recovery with Volume Replicator
- Troubleshooting and recovery
- Using disk and volume status information
- Resolving common problem situations
- Commands or procedures used in troubleshooting and recovery
- Rescan command
- Repair volume command for dynamic mirrored volumes
- Additional troubleshooting issues
- Disk issues
- Volume issues
- Disk group issues
- Connection issues
- Issues related to boot or restart
- Cluster issues
- Dynamic Multi-Pathing issues
- vxsnap issues
- Other issues
- CVM issues
- Appendix A. Command line interface
- Overview of the command line interface
- vxclustadm
- vxvol
- vxdg
- vxclus
- vxdisk
- vxassist
- vxassist (Windows-specific)
- vxsd
- vxedit
- vxdmpadm
- vxcbr
- vxsnap
- vxscrub
- sfcache
- Tuning SFW
- Appendix B. VDID details for arrays
Manually creating a Volume Manager Shared Volume resource
When you create a cluster-shared volume, it is automatically configured in the Microsoft failover cluster as a Volume Manager Shared Volume resource.
When a Volume Manager Shared Volume resource is created, it comes online immediately on the node that owns the Microsoft Failover Clustering Available Storage group. You can verify the created resource using the GUI-based Microsoft Failover Cluster Manager snap-in. The Volume Manager Shared Volume resource gets created under Storage in Failover Cluster Manager. Once the resource is created and online in the Available Storage group, you can create virtual machines with it or move it to other virtual machines or service groups.
However, the Volume Manager Shared Volume resource is not created automatically in the following cases:
After upgrading the disk group to the latest version and importing a disk group as a cluster-shared disk group (CSDG).
If you create a cluster-shared volume using the VEA GUI and choose not to format the volume (by clearing the
check box).If you create a cluster-shared volume using the SFW CLI, then the resource is not created automatically because, by default, the command creates a RAW, unformatted volume.
In these cases, you need to manually create a Volume Manager Shared Volume resource for all volumes in a CSDG using Failover Cluster Manager. The following procedure gives information about manually creating the resource for a cluster-shared volume using Failover Cluster Manager.
Note:
Before manually creating the resource, you must format the cluster-shared volume with NTFS and ReFS using the VEA GUI and mount it on the node where you want to create the resource.
Manually creating Volume Manager Shared Volume resource in Failover Cluster Manager
- From the Start screen, click Administrative Tools.
Launch the Failover Cluster Manager snap-in by clicking Failover Cluster Manager.
- Right-click Roles. Select More Actions > Create Empty Role. This creates a new role.
- Right-click the new role and select Add a Resource > More Resources > Add Volume Manager Shared Volume from the context menu.
A new Volume Manager Shared Volume resource is created with a default name.
- Right-click the Volume Manager Shared Volume resource and select Properties. Complete the following on the Properties window:
Under the General tab, change the default name of the Volume Manager Shared Volume resource to a name of your choice. For example, CSDG1.
Under the Properties tab, for the MountPoint property, provide the mount point of the cluster-shared volume.
Click Apply to close the window.
- Right-click the Volume Manager Shared Volume resource and select Bring this resource online to bring the resource online on the node with the ownership of the Available Storage group. This also brings the cluster-shared volume online in the VEA GUI.