Veritas InfoScale™ 7.3.1 Virtualization Guide - Solaris
- Section I. Overview of Veritas InfoScale Solutions used in Solaris virtualization
- Section II. Zones and Projects
- Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions support for Solaris Zones
- About VCS support for zones
- About the Mount agent
- Configuring VCS in zones
- Prerequisites for configuring VCS in zones
- Deciding on the zone root location
- Configuring the service group for the application
- Exporting VxVM volumes to a non-global zone
- About SF Oracle RAC support for Oracle RAC in a zone environment
- Known issues with supporting SF Oracle RAC in a zone environment
- Software limitations of Storage Foundation support of non-global zones
- Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions support for Solaris Projects
- Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions support for Solaris Zones
- Section III. Oracle VM Server for SPARC
- Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions support for Oracle VM Server for SPARC
- Oracle VM Server for SPARC deployment models
- Benefits of deploying Storage Foundation High Availability solutions in Oracle VM server for SPARC
- Features
- Split Storage Foundation stack model
- Guest-based Storage Foundation stack model
- Layered Storage Foundation stack model
- System requirements
- Installing Storage Foundation in a Oracle VM Server for SPARC environment
- Provisioning storage for a guest domain
- Software limitations
- Known issues
- Cluster Server support for using CVM with multiple nodes in a Oracle VM Server for SPARC environment
- VCS: Configuring Oracle VM Server for SPARC for high availability
- About VCS in a Oracle VM Server for SPARC environment
- About Cluster Server configuration models in an Oracle VM Server for SPARC environment
- Cluster Server setup to fail over a logical domain on a failure of logical domain
- Cluster Server setup to fail over an Application running inside logical domain on a failure of Application
- Oracle VM Server for SPARC guest domain migration in VCS environment
- Overview of a live migration
- About configuring VCS for Oracle VM Server for SPARC with multiple I/O domains
- Configuring VCS to manage a Logical Domain using services from multiple I/O domains
- Configuring storage services
- Configure a service group to monitor services from multiple I/O domains
- Configure the AlternateIO resource
- Configure the service group for a Logical Domain
- SF Oracle RAC support for Oracle VM Server for SPARC environments
- Support for live migration in FSS environments
- Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions support for Oracle VM Server for SPARC
- Section IV. Reference
How Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions works in the Oracle VM Server for SPARC
Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions supports Oracle VM Server for SPARC logical domains in both single-node, multiple-node, and multiple-node high availability configurations.
Figure: Split Storage Foundation stack model with logical domains illustrates the recommended placement of Storage Foundation stack component products in this model.
Following indicates the recommended placement of Storage Foundation stack component products:
For a single node configuration, Veritas Volume Manager (VxVM) including DMP is placed in the control domain, and Veritas File System (VxFS) is placed in the guest domain.
For clustered nodes, Cluster Volume Manager (CVM) is placed in the control domain, and VxFS is placed in the guest domain.
See Clustering using Cluster Volume Manager.
See Installing Storage Foundation on multiple nodes in a Logical Domain.
See Cluster Volume Manager in the control domain for providing high availability.
For clustered nodes in a highly available environment, install Cluster Server (VCS) in the control domain.
See About VCS in a Oracle VM Server for SPARC environment.
See About Cluster Server configuration models in an Oracle VM Server for SPARC environment.
See Configuring VCS to fail over an application on a failure.
VxFS drivers in the guest domain cannot currently interact with the VxVM drivers in the control domain. This renders some features, which require direct VxVM-VxFS coordination, unusable in such a configuration.
See Storage Foundation features restrictions.
Note:
VxFS can also be placed in the control domain, but there will be no coordination between the two VxFS instances in the guest and the control domain.