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Veritas InfoScale™ 7.3.1 Virtualization Guide - Linux on ESXi
Last Published:
2017-11-06
Product(s):
InfoScale & Storage Foundation (7.3.1)
- Section I. Overview
- Overview of Veritas InfoScale solutions in a VMware environment
- Introduction to using Veritas InfoScale solutions in the VMware virtualization environment
- Introduction to using Dynamic Multi-Pathing for VMware
- About Veritas InfoScale solutions support for the VMware ESXi environment
- Overview of Veritas InfoScale solutions in a VMware environment
- Section II. Deploying Veritas InfoScale products in a VMware environment
- Getting started
- Getting started
- Section III. Use cases for Veritas InfoScale product components in a VMware environment
- Storage to application visibility using Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager
- About storage to application visibility using Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager
- About discovering the VMware Infrastructure using Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager
- About the multi-pathing discovery in the VMware environment
- About near real-time (NRT) update of virtual machine states
- Application availability using Cluster Server
- Multi-tier business service support
- Improving storage visibility, availability, and I/O performance using Dynamic Multi-Pathing
- How DMP works
- Improving I/O performance using SmartPool
- Improving data protection, storage optimization, data migration, and database performance
- Protecting data with Veritas InfoScale product components in the VMware guest
- Optimizing storage with Veritas InfoScale product components in the VMware guest
- Migrating data with Veritas InfoScale product components in the VMware guest
- Improving database performance with Veritas InfoScale product components in the VMware guest
- Setting up virtual machines for fast failover using Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability on VMware disks
- About setting up Storage Foundation Cluster File High System High Availability on VMware ESXi
- Configuring coordination point (CP) servers
- Configuring storage
- Storage to application visibility using Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager
- Section IV. Reference
Excluding the boot disk from the Volume Manager configuration
It is a best practice to exclude the boot disk from Volume Manager. This allows the shared VMDK files to be configured to use the same name. In order to exclude the disk, run the command vxdmpadm with the name of the boot disk. In the example installation:
[root@cfs01 RHEL6]# vxdmpadm exclude dmpnodename=vmdk0_0
Verify that the boot disk is no longer reported under the VxVM configuration:
[root@cfs01 RHEL6]# vxdisk list DEVICE TYPE DISK GROUP STATUS [root@cfs01 RHEL6]#