InfoScale™ 9.0 Storage and Availability Management for DB2 Databases - AIX, Linux
- Section I. Storage Foundation High Availability (SFHA) management solutions for DB2 databases
- Overview of Storage Foundation for Databases
- About Veritas File System
- Overview of Storage Foundation for Databases
- Section II. Deploying DB2 with InfoScale products
- Deployment options for DB2 in a Storage Foundation environment
- Deploying DB2 with Storage Foundation
- Deploying DB2 in an off-host configuration with Storage Foundation
- Deploying DB2 with High Availability
- Deployment options for DB2 in a Storage Foundation environment
- Section III. Configuring Storage Foundation for Database (SFDB) tools
- Configuring and managing the Storage Foundation for Databases repository database
- Configuring the Storage Foundation for Databases (SFDB) tools repository
- Configuring authentication for Storage Foundation for Databases (SFDB) tools
- Configuring and managing the Storage Foundation for Databases repository database
- Section IV. Improving DB2 database performance
- About database accelerators
- Improving database performance with Quick I/O
- About Quick I/O
- Improving DB2 database performance with Veritas Concurrent I/O
- Section V. Using point-in-time copies
- Understanding point-in-time copy methods
- Volume-level snapshots
- Storage Checkpoints
- Considerations for DB2 point-in-time copies
- Administering third-mirror break-off snapshots
- Administering Storage Checkpoints
- Database Storage Checkpoints for recovery
- Backing up and restoring with Netbackup in an SFHA environment
- Understanding point-in-time copy methods
- Section VI. Optimizing storage costs for DB2
- Section VII. Storage Foundation for Databases administrative reference
- Storage Foundation for Databases command reference
- Tuning for Storage Foundation for Databases
- Troubleshooting SFDB tools
Creating VxFS file system for deploying DB2
To create a Veritas File System (VxFS) file system, use the mkfs or the mkfs_vxfs commands.
Review the file system creation guidelines before creating VxFS file systems.
See File system creation guidelines for deploying DB2.
To create a VxFS file system on an existing volume
Use the mkfs command as follows:
AIX
# /usr/sbin/mkfs -V vxfs generic_options\ -o specific_options special size
Linux
# /usr/sbin/mkfs -t vxfs generic_options\ -o specific_options special size
Where:
vxfs is the file system type
generic_options are the options common to most file systems
specific_options are options specific to the VxFS file system
special is the full path name of the raw character device or the VxVM volume on which to create the file system
(optional) size is the size of the new file system
If you do not specify size, the file system will be as large as the underlying volume.
For example, to create a VxFS file system that has an 8 KB block size and supports files larger than 2 GB on the newly created db01 volume:
# /usr/sbin/mkfs -V vxfs -o largefiles,bsize=8192,logsize=2000 \ /dev/vx/rdsk/PRODdg/db01
The -o largefiles option allows you to create files larger than 2GB.
Note:
Because size is not specified in this example, the size of the file system will be calculated automatically to be the same size as the volume on which the file system is created.