InfoScale™ 9.0 Storage Foundation Administrator's Guide - Windows
- Overview
- Setup and configuration
- Function overview
- About the client console for Storage Foundation
- Recommendations for caching-enabled disks
- Configure basic disks (Optional)
- About creating dynamic disk groups
- About creating dynamic volumes
- Set desired preferences
- Using the GUI to manage your storage
- Working with disks, partitions, and volumes
- Adding storage
- Disk tasks
- Remove a disk from the computer
- Veritas Disk ID (VDID)
- General Partition/Volume tasks
- Mount a volume at an empty folder (Drive path)
- Expand a dynamic volume
- Shrink a dynamic volume
- Basic disk and volume tasks
- Automatic discovery of SSD devices and manual classification as SSD
- Volume Manager space allocation is SSD aware
- Dealing with disk groups
- Disk groups overview
- Delete a dynamic disk group
- Detaching and attaching dynamic disks
- Importing and deporting dynamic disk groups
- Partitioned shared storage with private dynamic disk group protection
- Fast failover in clustered environments
- iSCSI SAN support
- Settings for monitoring objects
- Event monitoring and notification
- Event notification
- Configuring Automatic volume growth
- Standard features for adding fault tolerance
- Performance tuning
- FlashSnap
- FlashSnap components
- FastResync
- Snapshot commands
- Dynamic Disk Group Split and Join
- Dynamic disk group join
- Using Dynamic Disk Group Split and Join with a cluster on shared storage
- Dynamic Disk Group Split and Join troubleshooting tips
- Fast File Resync
- Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS)
- Using the VSS snapshot wizards with Enterprise Vault
- Using the VSS snapshot wizards with Microsoft SQL
- Copy on Write (COW)
- Using the VSS COW snapshot wizards with Microsoft SQL
- Configuring data caching with SmartIO
- Typical deployment scenarios
- About cache area
- Configuring SmartIO
- Frequently asked questions about SmartIO
- Dynamic Multi-Pathing
- Configuring Cluster Volume Manager (CVM)
- Configuring a CVM cluster
- Administering CVM
- Access modes for cluster-shared volumes
- Storage disconnectivity and CVM disk detach policy
- Unconfiguring a CVM cluster
- Command shipping
- About I/O Fencing
- Administering site-aware allocation for campus clusters
- SFW for Hyper-V virtual machines
- Introduction to Storage Foundation solutions for Hyper-V environments
- Live migration support for SFW dynamic disk group
- Preparing the host machines
- Configuring the SFW storage
- Administering storage migration for SFW and Hyper-V virtual machine volumes
- Optional Storage Foundation features for Hyper-V environments
- Microsoft Failover Clustering support
- Configuring a quorum in a Microsoft Failover Cluster
- Implementing disaster recovery with Volume Replicator
- Volume encryption
- Secure file system (SecureFS) for protection against ransomware
- Troubleshooting and recovery
- Using disk and volume status information
- Resolving common problem situations
- Commands or procedures used in troubleshooting and recovery
- Rescan command
- Repair volume command for dynamic mirrored volumes
- Additional troubleshooting issues
- Disk issues
- Volume issues
- Disk group issues
- Connection issues
- Issues related to boot or restart
- Cluster issues
- Dynamic Multi-Pathing issues
- vxsnap issues
- Other issues
- CVM issues
- Appendix A. Command line interface
- Overview of the command line interface
- vxclustadm
- vxvol
- vxdg
- vxclus
- vxdisk
- vxassist
- vxassist (Windows-specific)
- vxsd
- vxedit
- vxdmpadm
- vxcbr
- vxsnap
- vxscrub
- vxschadm
- sfcache
- Tuning SFW
- Appendix B. VDID details for arrays
- Appendix C. Executive Order logging
Summary of the steps for setting up a disaster recovery solution with Volume Replicator
This section provides a high-level summary of the steps for setting up a Volume Replicator disaster recovery solution with SFW. For more detailed information, refer to the Volume Replicator Administrator's Guide.
These instructions do not give all the steps for setting up a cluster with Volume Replicator. For full details on clustering steps with SFW HA, see the Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions Solutions Guide. You can refer to application-specific Solutions guide for more details on how they work with SFW HA. For example, if you use SQL Server with SFW HA, refer to the Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions HA and Disaster Recovery Solutions Guide for Microsoft SQL.
All the guides are included on the product disc.
To set up a cluster with Volume Replicator:
- Set up and configure the hardware at each site.
For Volume Replicator, installation requires at least two servers running SFW with a network connection between them: one as the primary at the main site and the other as the secondary at a second site. Optionally, you can have additional secondary sites.
If you plan to use clustering with SFW HA or SFW and Microsoft Failover Clustering, you have several configuration choices. Probably the most common one is to have four servers, two each clustered together at each site. You can also have a cluster with two servers, one node at the primary site and the other at the secondary. Another variation is for the primary site to have a two-node cluster while the secondary site has a standalone server for replication.
- Install the operating system and configure the network.
- Install InfoScale Storage or InfoScale Enterprise.
InfoScale Enterprise includes Global Cluster Option (GCO), that facilitates replication support after a site failure.
- After the installation completes, the Volume Replicator Security Service Configuration Wizard (VxSAS) is launched.
Follow the instructions in the Volume Replicator documentation to configure this service, which is required for Volume Replicator commands to work properly.
- Create one or more disk groups in SFW or SFW HA on your primary system. Then create the volumes within each disk group.
You are creating the volumes to be replicated. You can create the volume for the Volume Replicator Replicator Log now or wait until you run the Volume Replicator wizard for setting up RDS on the system.
The wizard lets you either identify an existing volume for the log volume or to have the wizard bring up the screen for creating the volume so you can create the volume at that time.
- If you plan to use an application on your system, you need to install and configure the application at this point.
- The secondary disk groups and volumes should have the same names as the primary disk groups and volumes. The data volumes on the secondary site should be the same size as the corresponding data volumes on the primary site. The log volume on the secondary can be a different size, but Arctera recommends that the sizes be the same.
On your secondary system, create a duplicate of the disk groups and volumes that are on the primary system. You can do this step in one of the two following ways:
Repeat the same manual procedures to set up the disk groups and volumes that you used previously on the primary system.
Wait until you run the Volume Replicator RDS Wizard and allow Volume Replicator to make a duplicate of the disk groups and volumes for you.
If you have installed an application on the primary site, it also needs to be installed on the secondary site.
- If you have VCS or Microsoft Failover Clustering clusters, create virtual IP resources for replication.
You need to create a virtual IP resource that is used for replication for each replicated disk group. In addition, if you are using VCS, you need to specify a NIC resource. This NIC resource is not needed for a Microsoft failover cluster. Create the IP resource on both the primary and secondary sites. Each site needs its own IP address. This virtual IP should be linked to the NIC that is used for the server at each site.
- Set up the Replicated data sets for Volume Replicator.
Refer to the Volume Replicator Administrator's Guide or the Storage Foundation Solutions guides for detailed instructions.