InfoScale™ 9.0 Dynamic Multi-Pathing Administrator's Guide - AIX
- Understanding DMP
- Setting up DMP to manage native devices
- Using Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) devices with Oracle Automatic Storage Management (ASM)
- Dynamic Multi-Pathing for the Virtual I/O Server
- Configuring Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) on Virtual I/O server
- Configuring Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) pseudo devices as virtual SCSI devices
- Extended attributes in VIO client for a virtual SCSI disk
- Administering DMP
- Configuring DMP for SAN booting
- Administering the root volume group (rootvg) under DMP control
- Extending an LVM rootvg that is enabled for DMP
- Using Storage Foundation in the logical partition (LPAR) with virtual SCSI devices
- How DMP handles I/O for vSCSI devices
- Administering DMP using the vxdmpadm utility
- Gathering and displaying I/O statistics
- Specifying the I/O policy
- Administering disks
- Discovering and configuring newly added disk devices
- About discovering disks and dynamically adding disk arrays
- How to administer the Device Discovery Layer
- Changing the disk device naming scheme
- Dynamic Reconfiguration of devices
- Reconfiguring a LUN online that is under DMP control using the Dynamic Reconfiguration tool
- Manually reconfiguring a LUN online that is under DMP control
- Event monitoring
- Performance monitoring and tuning
- Appendix A. DMP troubleshooting
- Appendix B. Reference
Displaying extended attributes after upgrading to DMP 9.0
You may see the following changes in functionality when you upgrade to DMP 9.0 from the Storage Foundation 5.1 release:
The device names that are listed in the vxdisk list output do not display the Array Volume IDs (AVIDs).
The vxdisk -e list output does not display extended attributes.
An Active/Passive (A/P) or ALUA array is claimed as Active/Active (A/A).
This behavior may be because the LUNs are controlled by the native multi-pathing driver, MPIO. When a LUN is controlled by TPD drivers like MPIO, then in DMP those enclosures are claimed as A/A (irrespective of what array mode LUN has at array). This is because multi-pathing is done from the TPD driver and DMP only sees oruses the TPD metanode to route commands. For TPD, DMP also suppresses the value-add extended attributes like AVID, media_type, and so on. If you migrate LUN multi-pathing to DMP, those extended attributes start showing with the actual LUN array mode as per the Array Support Library (ASL).
To check whether LUNs are controlled by native multi-pathing driver
- Check the output of the following command to see if the LUN is an MPIO device:
# lsdev -Cc disk
You can migrate the LUNs from the control of the native multi-pathing driver to DMP control.
To migrate to DMP with Volume Manager (VxVM), refer to the section on disabling MPIO in the Storage Foundation Administrator's Guide.
To migrate to DMP with OS native volume support, refer to the section on migrating to DMP from MPIO in the Dynamic Multi-Pathing Adminstrator's Guide.