InfoScale™ 9.0 SmartIO for Solid-State Drives Solutions Guide - Solaris
- Introducing SFHA Solutions SmartIO
- Using the SmartIO feature: use cases
- About SmartIO read caching for applications running on VxVM volumes
- About SmartIO read caching for applications running on VxFS file systems
- About SmartIO caching on SSD devices exported by FSS
- About SmartIO write-back caching for applications running on VxFS file systems
- About multiple SmartIO cache areas for read and write-back caching on VxFS file systems
- About SmartIO caching for Oracle databases on VxFS file systems
- About SmartIO caching for databases on VxVM volumes
- Administering SmartIO
- Enabling or disabling caching for a data object
- Viewing the SmartIO cache statistics
- Troubleshooting and error handling
- Appendix A. Command reference
Required configuration for SmartIO write-back caching for a VxFS file system
You must have an Enterprise license to use SmartIO with write-back caching for Storage Foundation or Storage Foundation High Availability.
You can set up SmartIO for write-back caching for a VxFS file system with the following configurations:
A Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability (SFCFSHA) cluster with exactly 2 nodes. Write-back caching is not enabled if the cluster has more than 2 nodes. If another node is added while writeback mode caching is configured, write-back caching is disabled. Caching continues in read mode.
If the cluster file system is unmounted on one of the two nodes while writeback mode caching is configured, then write-back caching is disabled. Caching continues in read mode. If the cluster file system on the second node is remounted, then write-back caching is enabled automatically.
Local mount configuration.
In the case of CFS, write-back caching uses LLT transport to mirror the write-back data. Application writes that are cached are also written to the remote cache before the write is returned.
Veritas recommends that you configure LLT over a high bandwidth network such as a 10GigE network to avoid impact to the throughput.
For information on configuring LLT, see the Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability Configuration and Upgrade Guide.
The file system must be mounted on a VxVM volume.