Veritas Access Appliance Administrator's Guide
- Section I. Introducing Access Appliance
- Section II. Configuring Access Appliance
- Managing users
- Configuring the network
- Configuring authentication services
- Configuring user authentication using digital certificates or smart cards
- Section III. Managing Access Appliance storage
- Configuring storage
- Managing disks
- Access Appliance as an iSCSI target
- Configuring storage
- Section IV. Managing Access Appliance file access services
- Configuring the NFS server
- Setting up Kerberos authentication for NFS clients
- Using Access Appliance as a CIFS server
- About configuring CIFS for Active Directory (AD) domain mode
- About setting trusted domains
- About managing home directories
- About CIFS clustering modes
- About migrating CIFS shares and home directories
- About managing local users and groups
- Using Access Appliance as an Object Store server
- Configuring the NFS server
- Section V. Managing Access Appliance security
- Section VI. Monitoring and troubleshooting
- Configuring event notifications and audit logs
- About alert management
- Appliance log files
- Configuring event notifications and audit logs
- Section VII. Provisioning and managing Access Appliance file systems
- Creating and maintaining file systems
- Considerations for creating a file system
- About managing application I/O workloads using maximum IOPS settings
- Modifying a file system
- Managing a file system
- Creating and maintaining file systems
- Section VIII. Provisioning and managing Access Appliance shares
- Creating shares for applications
- Creating and maintaining NFS shares
- About the NFS shares
- Creating and maintaining CIFS shares
- About the CIFS shares
- About managing CIFS shares for Enterprise Vault
- Integrating Access Appliance with Data Insight
- Section IX. Managing Access Appliance storage services
- Configuring episodic replication
- Episodic replication job failover and failback
- Configuring continuous replication
- How Access Appliance continuous replication works
- Continuous replication failover and failback
- Using snapshots
- Using instant rollbacks
- Configuring episodic replication
- Section X. Reference
About Access Appliance as an iSCSI target
You can create an iSCSI target and provisions LUNs for storage.Access Appliance as an iSCSI target feature enables a Access Appliance cluster to serve block storage. Through the use of multiple portal IPs, an iSCSI target can be served in active-active fashion.
This feature enables the block storage to be capable of supporting multipathing at the initiator end. Access Appliance eases provisioning of block storage, with the functionality to resize, clone, and snapshot the LUNs, ACL controls such as initiator mapping and user management.
Note:
Access Appliance as an iSCSI target supports VMware version 5.5.0 as an initiator.
You can perform the following functions on an iSCSI target:
Start, stop, and check status of the iSCSI target service.
Create, destroy, check status, and list iSCSI targets and add and delete multiple portal addresses.
Add or delete, resize, manage, grow or shrink LUNs, and clone LUNs snapshots.
Map or remove mapping of iSCSI initiators.
Add or delete users to set up CHAP authentication.
Support for multiple portal IPs per target makes the targets active-active.