Veritas InfoScale™ 7.3.1 Troubleshooting Guide - Solaris
- Introduction
- Section I. Troubleshooting Veritas File System
- Section II. Troubleshooting Veritas Volume Manager
- Recovering from hardware failure
- Failures on RAID-5 volumes
- Recovery from failure of a DCO volume
- Recovering from instant snapshot failure
- Recovering from failed vxresize operation
- Recovering from boot disk failure
- Hot-relocation and boot disk failure
- Recovery from boot failure
- Repair of root or /usr file systems on mirrored volumes
- Replacement of boot disks
- Recovery by reinstallation
- Managing commands, tasks, and transactions
- Backing up and restoring disk group configurations
- Troubleshooting issues with importing disk groups
- Recovering from CDS errors
- Logging and error messages
- Troubleshooting Veritas Volume Replicator
- Recovery from configuration errors
- Errors during an RLINK attach
- Errors during modification of an RVG
- Recovery on the Primary or Secondary
- Recovering from Primary data volume error
- Primary SRL volume error cleanup and restart
- Primary SRL header error cleanup and recovery
- Secondary data volume error cleanup and recovery
- Troubleshooting issues in cloud deployments
- Recovering from hardware failure
- Section III. Troubleshooting Dynamic Multi-Pathing
- Section IV. Troubleshooting Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability
- Troubleshooting Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability
- Troubleshooting CFS
- Troubleshooting fenced configurations
- Troubleshooting Cluster Volume Manager in Veritas InfoScale products clusters
- Troubleshooting Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability
- Section V. Troubleshooting Cluster Server
- Troubleshooting and recovery for VCS
- VCS message logging
- Gathering VCS information for support analysis
- Troubleshooting the VCS engine
- Troubleshooting Low Latency Transport (LLT)
- Troubleshooting Group Membership Services/Atomic Broadcast (GAB)
- Troubleshooting VCS startup
- Troubleshooting service groups
- Troubleshooting resources
- Troubleshooting I/O fencing
- System panics to prevent potential data corruption
- Fencing startup reports preexisting split-brain
- Troubleshooting CP server
- Troubleshooting server-based fencing on the Veritas InfoScale products cluster nodes
- Issues during online migration of coordination points
- Troubleshooting notification
- Troubleshooting and recovery for global clusters
- Troubleshooting licensing
- Licensing error messages
- VCS message logging
- Troubleshooting and recovery for VCS
- Section VI. Troubleshooting SFDB
Example of a preexisting network partition (split-brain)
Figure: Preexisting network partition (split-brain) shows a two-node cluster in which the severed cluster interconnect poses a potential split-brain condition.
Because the fencing module operates identically on each system, both nodes assume the other is failed, and carry out fencing operations to insure the other node is ejected. The VCS GAB module on each node determines the peer has failed due to loss of heartbeats and passes the membership change to the fencing module.
Each side "races" to gain control of the coordinator disks. Only a registered node can eject the registration of another node, so only one side successfully completes the command on each disk.
The side that successfully ejects the peer from a majority of the coordinator disks wins. The fencing module on the winning side then passes the membership change up to VCS and other higher-level packages registered with the fencing module, allowing VCS to invoke recovery actions. The losing side forces a kernel panic and reboots.