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
Overview of how VCS works with zones
You can use VCS to perform the following:
Start, stop, monitor, and fail over a non-global zone.
Start, stop, monitor, and fail over an application that runs in a zone.
Topic | Description |
---|---|
How VCS models containers |
VCS provides zone aware resource types to monitor applications inside the zone. For the zone aware resources, C based entry points run from global zone and fetch information from non-global zone when ever required. The script based entry points run with in non-global zone. If any resource faults, based on the configuration, VCS fails over either the service group with the zone or the service group with the application running in the zone to another node. You can configure VCS to use Veritas Product Authentication Service to run in a secure environment. Communication from non-global zones to global zones is secure in this environment. |
Installing and configuring zones in VCS environments | Install and configure the zone. Create the service group with the standard application resource types (application, storage, networking) and the Zone resource. VCS manages the zone as a resource. You then configure the service group's ContainerInfo attribute. You can use the |
Configuring the ContainerInfo attribute | The service group attribute ContainerInfo specifies information about the zone. When you have configured and enabled the ContainerInfo attribute, you have enabled the zone-aware resources in that service group to work in the zone environment. VCS defines the zone information at the level of the service group so that you do not have to define it for each resource. You may specify a per-system value for the ContainerInfo attribute. VCS has zone aware resource types which can be configured to monitor resources inside the non-global zone or on the global zone. For example, if a network interface is shared with the zone, the associated NIC resource should run in the global zone. If a resource is to be monitored inside non-global zone, you can define service group attribute ContainerInfo. |
ResContainerInfo | If you want to configure more than one zone resource in a service group, you can set ResContainerInfo attribute at resource level for all the zone aware agents. In this case you must not set ContainerInfo attribute at service group level. |