InfoScale™ 9.0 Virtualization Guide - Linux
- Section I. Overview of InfoScale solutions used in Linux virtualization
- Overview of supported products and technologies
- About InfoScale support for Linux virtualization environments
- About KVM technology
- Overview of supported products and technologies
- Section II. Implementing a basic KVM environment
- Getting started with basic KVM
- InfoScale solutions configuration options for the kernel-based virtual machines environment
- Installing and configuring VCS in a kernel-based virtual machine (KVM) environment
- Configuring KVM resources
- Getting started with basic KVM
- Section III. Implementing InfoScale an OpenStack environment
- Section IV. Implementing Linux virtualization use cases
- Application visibility and device discovery
- Server consolidation
- Physical to virtual migration
- Simplified management
- Application availability using Cluster Server
- Virtual machine availability
- Virtual machine availability for live migration
- Virtual to virtual clustering in a Hyper-V environment
- Virtual to virtual clustering in an OVM environment
- Multi-tier business service support
- Managing Docker containers with InfoScale Enterprise
- About the Cluster Server agents for Docker, Docker Daemon, and Docker Container
- Managing storage capacity for Docker containers
- Offline migration of Docker containers
- Disaster recovery of volumes and file systems in Docker environments
- Section V. Reference
- Appendix A. Troubleshooting
- Appendix B. Sample configurations
- Appendix C. Where to find more information
- Appendix A. Troubleshooting
About Flexible Storage Sharing
Flexible Storage Sharing (FSS) enables network sharing of local storage, cluster wide. The local storage can be in the form of Direct Attached Storage (DAS) or internal disk drives. Network shared storage is enabled by using a network interconnect between the nodes of a cluster.
FSS allows network shared storage to co-exist with physically shared storage, and logical volumes can be created using both types of storage creating a common storage namespace. Logical volumes using network shared storage provide data redundancy, high availability, and disaster recovery capabilities, without requiring physically shared storage, transparently to file systems and applications.
FSS allows growing the existing storage by growing the LUN, which is termed as Dynamic LUN Expansion (DLE). To use the DLE feature, you invoke the vxdisk resize command with the length option from the master node in an FSS configuration. Alternatively, you can use the Management Server console of InfoScale Operations Manager to resize a disk, which internally invokes this command. The command intelligently detects the remote disks and gets the required protocol executed to complete the LUN expansion; you don't need to specify any additional options. No explicit master switching is required.
Note:
Do not resize an LVM disk or any other disk on which the OS is installed.
You can leverage DLE to grow the storage in cloud environments.
For details on growing the existing storage by growing the LUN, refer to the platform-specific Storage Foundation Arctera InfoScale Solutions 9.0 Administrator's Guide.
FSS can be used with SmartIO technology for remote caching to service nodes that may not have local SSDs.
FSS is supported on clusters containing up to 64 nodes with CVM protocol versions 140 and above.
The following figure depicts a FSS environment.