Veritas InfoScale™ Operations Manager 7.4.2 User's Guide
- Section I. Getting started
- Introducing Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager
- Using the Management Server console
- About selecting the objects
- About searching for objects
- Examples for using Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager
- Example: Cluster Server troubleshooting using Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager
- Example: Ensuring the correct level of protection for volumes controlled by Storage Foundation
- Example: Improving the availability and the disaster recovery readiness of a service group through fire drills
- Examples: Identifying and reducing storage waste using Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager
- Section II. Managing Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager
- Managing user access
- Creating an Organization
- Modifying the name of an Organization
- Setting up fault monitoring
- Creating rules in a perspective
- Editing rules in a perspective
- Deleting rules in a perspective
- Enabling rules in a perspective
- Disabling rules in a perspective
- Suppressing faults in a perspective
- Using reports
- Running a report
- Subscribing for a report
- Sending a report through email
- Managing user access
- Section III. Managing hosts
- Overview
- Working with the unmanaged hosts and clusters
- Working with the uncategorized hosts
- Managing File Replicator (VFR) operations
- Managing disk groups and disks
- Creating disk groups
- Importing disk groups
- Adding disks to disk groups
- Resizing disks in disk groups
- Renaming disks in disk groups
- Splitting disk groups
- Moving disk groups
- Joining disk groups
- Initializing disks
- Replacing disks
- Recovering disks
- Bringing disks online
- Setting disk usage
- Evacuating disks
- Running or scheduling Trim
- Managing volumes
- Creating Storage Foundation volumes
- Deleting volumes
- Moving volumes
- Renaming volumes
- Adding mirrors to volumes
- Removing the mirrors of volumes
- Creating instant volume snapshots
- Creating space optimized snapshots for volumes
- Creating mirror break-off snapshots for volumes
- Dissociating snapshots
- Reattaching snapshots
- Resizing volumes
- Restoring data from the snapshots of volumes
- Refreshing the snapshot of volumes
- Configuring a schedule for volume snapshot refresh
- Adding snapshot volumes to a refresh schedule
- Removing the schedule for volume snapshot refresh
- Setting volume usage
- Enabling FastResync on volumes
- Managing file systems
- Creating file systems
- Defragmenting file systems
- Unmounting non clustered file systems from hosts
- Mounting non clustered file systems on hosts
- Unmounting clustered file systems
- Mounting clustered file systems on hosts
- Remounting file systems
- Checking file systems
- Creating file system snapshots
- Remounting file system snapshot
- Mounting file system snapshot
- Unmounting file system snapshot
- Removing file system snapshot
- Monitoring capacity of file systems
- Managing SmartIO
- About managing SmartIO
- Creating a cache
- Modifying a cache
- Creating an I/O trace log
- Analyzing an I/O trace log
- Managing application IO thresholds
- Managing replications
- Configuring Storage Foundation replications
- Pausing the replication to a Secondary
- Resuming the replication of a Secondary
- Starting replication to a Secondary
- Stopping the replication to a Secondary
- Switching a Primary
- Taking over from an original Primary
- Associating a volume
- Removing a Secondary
- Monitoring replications
- Optimizing storage utilization
- Section IV. Managing high availability and disaster recovery configurations
- Overview
- Managing clusters
- Managing service groups
- Creating service groups
- Linking service groups in a cluster
- Bringing service groups online
- Taking service groups offline
- Switching service groups
- Managing systems
- Managing VSystems
- Managing resources
- Invoking a resource action
- Managing global cluster configurations
- Running fire drills
- Running the disaster recovery fire drill
- Editing a fire drill schedule
- Using recovery plans
- Managing ApplicationHA
- Managing application configuration
- Multi Site Management
- Appendix A. List of high availability operations
- Section V. Monitoring Storage Foundation HA licenses in the data center
- Managing licenses
- About Veritas licensing and pricing
- Assigning a price tier to a host manually
- Creating a license deployment policy
- Modifying a license deployment policy
- Viewing deployment information
- Managing licenses
- Monitoring performance
- About Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager performance graphs
- Managing Business Applications
- About the makeBE script
- Managing extended attributes
- Managing policy checks
- About using custom signatures for policy checks
- Managing Dynamic Multipathing paths
- Disabling the DMP paths on the initiators of a host
- Re-enabling the DMP paths
- Managing CVM clusters
- Managing Flexible Storage Sharing
- Monitoring the virtualization environment
- About discovering the VMware Infrastructure using Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager
- About the multi-pathing discovery in the VMware environment
- About discovering Solaris zones
- About discovering logical domains in Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager
- About discovering LPARs and VIOs in Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager
- About Microsoft Hyper-V virtualization discovery
- Using Web services API
- Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager command line interface
- Appendix B. Command file reference
- Appendix C. Application setup requirements
- Application setup requirements for Oracle database discovery
- Application setup requirements for Oracle Automatic Storage Management (ASM) discovery
- Application setup requirements for IBM DB2 discovery
- Application setup requirements for Sybase Adaptive Server Enterprise (ASE) discovery
- Application setup requirements for Microsoft SQL Server discovery
About monitoring and managing CVM clusters in Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager
Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability (SFCFSHA) includes the Cluster Volume Manager (CVM) as a component. CVM expands the functionality of the Storage Foundation volume manager (VxVM) to add support for a clustered environment. CVM enables the cluster nodes to simultaneously access and manage a set of disks or LUNs under Storage Foundation control.
The Server perspective of the Management Server console lets you monitor information about CVM clusters and supports Storage Foundation (SF) operations on cluster objects such as disk groups, volumes, and disks.
Note:
Operations on SF disk groups of the cluster-shared type and operations on volumes on such disk groups are not available on a Windows CVM cluster.
Similar views are provided in the Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager Web services API.
Table: Monitoring and managing CVM clusters in the Server perspective
Operation or view | Support in the Server perspective |
---|---|
View all CVM clusters | From the storage clusters node in the tree you can display a list of all CVM clusters. The table columns provide top-level information such as whether the cluster supports Flexible Storage Sharing (FSS). |
Search for CVM clusters | The global search feature includes clusters as an object. You can create and save search queries based on cluster attributes. |
View detailed information about objects in each cluster | You can view detailed information about objects in the cluster including:
|
Use local or partially shared storage across all hosts in the cluster | In FSS-capable clusters and hosts, you can export or un-export disks from the disks view of the cluster. This operation is also available from the disks view of a host. |
View the correlation of shared and exported storage across hosts in a cluster. | In the disks view of the cluster, you can group the information by disk to show which disks on different hosts are the same. For example, the view shows the exported disks and corresponding remote disks that are shared using the FSS export feature. The disks view of a host shows similar information on a sub-tab. |
Create shared disk groups or perform disk group operations in a cluster. | You can create shared disk groups from either the storage clusters node in the tree, a selected cluster, or a selected cluster host. If the cluster supports FSS, you can enable FSS for the shared disk group and add exported disks. All disk group operations that are supported from a host view are also available from the cluster view. |
Perform volume and file system operations in a cluster. | All volume and file system operations that are supported from a host view are also available from the cluster view. |