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Storage Foundation for Oracle® RAC 7.3.1 Administrator's Guide - Linux
Last Published:
2018-01-16
Product(s):
InfoScale & Storage Foundation (7.3.1)
- Section I. SF Oracle RAC concepts and administration
- Overview of Storage Foundation for Oracle RAC
- About Storage Foundation for Oracle RAC
- Component products and processes of SF Oracle RAC
- About Virtual Business Services
- Administering SF Oracle RAC and its components
- Administering SF Oracle RAC
- Starting or stopping SF Oracle RAC on each node
- Administering VCS
- Administering I/O fencing
- About the vxfentsthdw utility
- Testing the coordinator disk group using the -c option of vxfentsthdw
- About the vxfenadm utility
- About the vxfenclearpre utility
- About the vxfenswap utility
- Administering the CP server
- Administering CFS
- Administering CVM
- Changing the CVM master manually
- Administering Flexible Storage Sharing
- Backing up and restoring disk group configuration data
- Administering SF Oracle RAC global clusters
- Administering SF Oracle RAC
- Overview of Storage Foundation for Oracle RAC
- Section II. Performance and troubleshooting
- Troubleshooting SF Oracle RAC
- About troubleshooting SF Oracle RAC
- Troubleshooting I/O fencing
- Fencing startup reports preexisting split-brain
- Troubleshooting CP server
- Troubleshooting server-based fencing on the SF Oracle RAC cluster nodes
- Issues during online migration of coordination points
- Troubleshooting Cluster Volume Manager in SF Oracle RAC clusters
- Troubleshooting CFS
- Troubleshooting interconnects
- Troubleshooting Oracle
- Troubleshooting ODM in SF Oracle RAC clusters
- Prevention and recovery strategies
- Tunable parameters
- Troubleshooting SF Oracle RAC
- Section III. Reference
Establishing CVM cluster membership manually
In most cases you do not have to start Cluster Volume Manager (CVM) manually; it normally starts when Cluster Server (VCS) is started.
Run the following command to start CVM manually:
# vxclustadm -m vcs -t gab startnode
Note that vxclustadm reads the main.cf
configuration file for cluster configuration information and is therefore not dependent upon VCS to be running. You do not need to run the vxclustadm startnode command as normally the hastart (VCS start) command starts CVM automatically.
To verify whether CVM is started properly, run the following command:
# vxclustadm nidmap Name CVM Nid CM Nid State sys1 0 0 Joined: Master sys2 1 1 Joined: Slave