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
Resource dependency diagrams: zone root on local disks
The following resource dependency diagrams show zone configurations on local disks configured for loopback and direct mounted file systems.
If the zone root is on a cluster file system, ensure that service group containing zone resource is a fail-over type service group.
Figure: Zone root on local disks with loopback file system depicts the dependency diagram when the zone root is set up on local storage with the loopback file system for the application. You can replace the Mount resource with the CFSMount resource and the DiskGroup resource with the CVMVolDg resource in the following diagram. In this configuration, decide if you want the service group to be a parallel service group. If so, you may need to localize certain attributes for resources in the service group. For example, you have to change the IP resource's Address attribute for each node.
Figure: Zone root on local disks with direct mount file system depicts the dependency diagram when the zone root is set up on local storage with a direct mount file system for the application. You can replace the Mount resource with the CFSMount resource and the DiskGroup resource with the CVMVolDg resource in the following diagram. In this configuration, decide if you want the service group to be a parallel service group. If so, you may need to localize certain attributes for resources in the service group. For example, you have to change the IP resource's Address attribute for each node.
In a typical use case where application runs in parallel inside zones, you can have following configuration on Solaris. You can configure parallel service group containing zone resource whose zone roots are on a VxVM volume or Zpool and not shared between the nodes. The storage for the application is set up on shared storage between the nodes and managed using CFSMount and CVMVolDG resources. You may need to localize certain attributes for resources in the service group. For example you may have to change the IP resource's Address attribute, the DiskGroup resource's DiskGroup attribute or the Zpool resource's PoolName attribute.