Veritas™ Volume Manager Administrator's Guide
- Understanding Veritas Volume Manager
- VxVM and the operating system
- How VxVM handles storage management
- Volume layouts in VxVM
- Online relayout
- Volume resynchronization
- Dirty region logging
- Volume snapshots
- FastResync
- Provisioning new usable storage
- Administering disks
- Disk devices
- Discovering and configuring newly added disk devices
- Discovering disks and dynamically adding disk arrays
- How to administer the Device Discovery Layer
- Changing the disk-naming scheme
- Adding a disk to VxVM
- Rootability
- Displaying disk information
- Removing disks
- Removing and replacing disks
- Administering Dynamic Multi-Pathing
- How DMP works
- Administering DMP using vxdmpadm
- Gathering and displaying I/O statistics
- Specifying the I/O policy
- Online dynamic reconfiguration
- Reconfiguring a LUN online that is under DMP control
- Creating and administering disk groups
- About disk groups
- Displaying disk group information
- Creating a disk group
- Importing a disk group
- Moving disk groups between systems
- Handling cloned disks with duplicated identifiers
- Handling conflicting configuration copies
- Reorganizing the contents of disk groups
- Destroying a disk group
- Creating and administering subdisks and plexes
- Displaying plex information
- Reattaching plexes
- Creating volumes
- Types of volume layouts
- Creating a volume
- Using vxassist
- Creating a volume on specific disks
- Creating a mirrored volume
- Creating a striped volume
- Creating a volume using vxmake
- Initializing and starting a volume
- Using rules and persistent attributes to make volume allocation more efficient
- Administering volumes
- Displaying volume information
- Monitoring and controlling tasks
- Reclamation of storage on thin reclamation arrays
- Stopping a volume
- Resizing a volume
- Adding a mirror to a volume
- Preparing a volume for DRL and instant snapshots
- Adding traditional DRL logging to a mirrored volume
- Enabling FastResync on a volume
- Performing online relayout
- Adding a RAID-5 log
- Creating and administering volume sets
- Configuring off-host processing
- Administering hot-relocation
- How hot-relocation works
- Moving relocated subdisks
- Administering cluster functionality (CVM)
- Overview of clustering
- Multiple host failover configurations
- CVM initialization and configuration
- Dirty region logging in cluster environments
- Administering VxVM in cluster environments
- Changing the CVM master manually
- Importing disk groups as shared
- Administering sites and remote mirrors
- About sites and remote mirrors
- Fire drill - testing the configuration
- Changing the site name
- Administering the Remote Mirror configuration
- Failure and recovery scenarios
- Performance monitoring and tuning
- Appendix A. Using Veritas Volume Manager commands
- Appendix B. Configuring Veritas Volume Manager
Examining which subdisks were hot-relocated from a disk
If a subdisk was hot relocated more than once due to multiple disk failures, it can still be unrelocated back to its original location. For instance, if mydg01 failed and a subdisk named mydg01-01 was moved to mydg02, and then mydg02 experienced disk failure, all of the subdisks residing on it, including the one which was hot-relocated to it, will be moved again. When mydg02 was replaced, a vxunreloc operation for mydg02 will do nothing to the hot-relocated subdisk mydg01-01. However, a replacement of mydg01 followed by a vxunreloc operation, moves mydg01-01 back to mydg01 if vxunreloc is run immediately after the replacement.
After the disk that experienced the failure is fixed or replaced, vxunreloc can be used to move all the hot-relocated subdisks back to the disk. When a subdisk is hot-relocated, its original disk-media name and the offset into the disk are saved in the configuration database. When a subdisk is moved back to the original disk or to a new disk using vxunreloc, the information is erased. The original disk-media name and the original offset are saved in the subdisk records. To print all of the subdisks that were hot-relocated from mydg01 in the mydg disk group, use the following command:
# vxprint -g mydg -se 'sd_orig_dmname="mydg01"'