InfoScale™ 9.0 Replication Administrator's Guide - AIX
- Section I. Getting started with Volume Replicator
- Introducing Volume Replicator
- Understanding how Volume Replicator works
- How VVR uses kernel buffers for replication
- Replication in a shared disk group environment
- Using SmartTier with VVR
- Understanding the VVR snapshot feature
- About VVR compression
- Planning and configuring replication
- Before you begin configuring
- Choosing the mode of volume replication
- Planning the network
- Sizing the SRL
- Understanding replication settings for a Secondary
- Configuring VVR in a VCS environment
- Using the primary-elect feature to choose the primary site after a site disaster or network disruption
- Requirements for configuring VVR in a VCS environment
- Example setting up VVR in a VCS environment
- Configuring the agents for a bunker replication configuration
- Section II. Setting up and administering VVR
- Setting up replication
- Creating a Replicated Data Set
- Creating a Primary RVG of an RDS
- Adding a Secondary to an RDS
- Changing the replication settings for a Secondary
- Synchronizing the Secondary and starting replication
- Starting replication when the data volumes are zero initialized
- Displaying configuration information
- Displaying RVG and RDS information
- Displaying information about data volumes and volume sets
- Displaying information about Secondaries
- Displaying statistics with the vrstat display commands
- Collecting consolidated statistics of the VVR components
- Displaying network performance data
- Administering Volume Replicator
- Administering data volumes
- Associating a volume to a Replicated Data Set
- Associating a volume set to an RDS
- Associating a Data Change Map to a data volume as a log plex
- Resizing a data volume in a Replicated Data Set
- Administering the SRL
- Incrementally synchronizing the Secondary after SRL overflow
- Administering replication
- Administering the Replicated Data Set
- Administering Storage Checkpoints
- Creating RVG snapshots
- Using the instant snapshot feature
- About instant full snapshots
- Preparing the volumes prior to using the instant snapshot feature
- Creating instant full snapshots
- About instant space-optimized snapshots
- Creating instant space-optimized snapshots
- About instant plex-breakoff snapshots
- Administering snapshots
- Using the traditional snapshot feature
- Using Veritas Volume Manager FastResync
- Verifying the DR readiness of a VVR setup
- Backing up the Secondary
- Administering data volumes
- Using VVR for off-host processing
- Transferring the Primary role
- Migrating the Primary
- About taking over from an original Primary
- Failing back to the original Primary
- Choosing the Primary site after a site disaster or network disruption
- Troubleshooting the primary-elect feature
- Replication using a bunker site
- Introduction to replication using a bunker site
- Setting up replication using a bunker site
- Using a bunker for disaster recovery
- Replication using a bunker site in a VCS environment
- Configuring and administering VVR using System Management Interface Tool
- Accessing Volume Replicator interface in SMIT
- Setting up a simple Volume Replicator configuration using SMIT
- Displaying configuration information using SMIT
- Administering Volume Replicator using SMIT
- Taking instant snapshot of data volumes of an RVG using SMIT
- Associating a volume to a Replicated Data Set using SMIT
- Transferring the Primary role using SMIT
- Troubleshooting VVR
- 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
- Tuning replication performance
- SRL layout
- Tuning Volume Replicator
- VVR buffer space
- Tuning VVR compression
- VVR buffer space
- Setting up replication
- Section III. Analyzing your environment with Volume Replicator Advisor
- Introducing Volume Replicator Advisor (VRAdvisor)
- Collecting the sample of data
- About collecting the sample of data
- Collecting the sample of data on UNIX
- Collecting the sample of data on Windows
- Analyzing the sample of data
- About analyzing the sample of data
- Analyzing the collected data
- Understanding the results of the analysis
- Viewing the analysis results
- Recalculating the analysis results
- Installing Volume Replicator Advisor (VRAdvisor)
- Section IV. VVR reference
- Appendix A. VVR command reference
- Appendix B. Using the In-band Control Messaging utility vxibc and the IBC programming API
- Using the IBC messaging command-line utility
- Examples - Off-host processing
- In-band Control Messaging API
- Appendix C. Volume Replicator object states
- Appendix D. Alternate methods for synchronizing the Secondary
- Using the full synchronization feature
- Using block-level backup and Storage Checkpoint
- Using difference-based synchronization
- Examples for setting up a simple Volume Replicator configuration
- Appendix E. Migrating VVR from IPv4 to IPv6
- Migrating VVR to support IPv6 or dual stack
- About migrating to IPv6 when VCS global clustering and VVR agents are not configured
- About migrating to IPv6 when VCS global clustering and VVR agents are configured
- About migrating to IPv6 when VCS global clustering and VVR agents are configured in the presence of a bunker
- Migrating to IPv6 when VCS global clustering and VVR agents are configured in the presence of a bunker
- Appendix F. Sample main.cf files
Collecting consolidated statistics of the VVR components
You can configure VVR to collect statistics of the VVR components. The collected statistics can be used to monitor the system and diagnose problems with the VVR setup. VVR collects the statistics generated by the VVR commands vxrlink stats, vxrlink status and vxrvg stats for all the imported disk groups, and the system level commands netstat, vmstat, and vxmemstat. The output of these commands are stored in separate files.
By default, VVR collects the statistics automatically when the vradmind daemon starts. The vradmind daemon is a multi-threaded process where one thread is reserved specifically for collecting periodic statistics. Configuring VVR to collect statistics according to your requirements involves modifying the values of the environment variables in the vras_env file, located in the /etc/vx/vras directory.
Note:
If the vradmind daemon is not running, VVR stops collecting the statistics.
To configure VVR to collect statistics automatically
- Modify the default values for the environment variables specified in the vras_env located in the /etc/vx/vras directory file to suit your requirements. The following table provides information about the variables:
Environment Variable
Description
VRAS_ENABLE_STATS
Specifies whether you want the statistics collection to start automatically.
Set VRAS_ENABLE_STATS=on to enable statistics collection. This is the default.
Set VRAS_ENABLE_STATS=off to disable statistics collection.
VRAS_STATS_FREQUENCY
Specifies the frequency in seconds at which the statistics should be collected for the VVR commands, vxrlink stats, vxrlink status and vxrvg stats. By default, VRAS_STATS_FREQUENCY is set to 10 seconds.
VRAS_NETSTAT_FREQUENCY
Specifies the time interval in seconds over which the statistics for the different network protocols should be collected. By default, VRAS_NETSTAT_FREQUENCY is set to 300 seconds.
VRAS_VMSTAT_FREQUENCY
Specifies the time interval in seconds over which the memory and CPU utilization statistics should be collected. By default, VRAS_VMSTAT_FREQUENCY is set to 300 seconds.
VRAS_STATS_DAYS_LOG
Specifies the number of days for which the collected statistics should be preserved. After this time the earlier statistics are automatically deleted. By default, VRAS_STATS_DAYS_LOG is set to three days.
- Restart the vradmind daemon as follows:
# /etc/init.d/vras-vradmind.sh stop # /etc/init.d/vras-vradmind.sh start
You can restart vradmind even while the application is active and replication is in progress.
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