InfoScale™ 9.0 Virtualization Guide - Solaris
- Section I. Overview of InfoScale solutions in Solaris virtualization environments
- Section II. Zones
- InfoScale Enterprise Solutions support for Solaris Native Zones
- About VCS support for zones
- 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 InfoScale SFRAC component support for Oracle RAC in a zone environment
- Known issues with supporting a InfoScale SFRAC component in a zone environment
- Software limitations of InfoScale support of non-global zones
- InfoScale Enterprise Solutions support for Solaris Native Zones
- Section III. Oracle VM Server for SPARC
- InfoScale Enterprise Solutions support for Oracle VM Server for SPARC
- Oracle VM Server for SPARC deployment models
- Benefits of deploying Arctera InfoScale Enterprise solutions in Oracle VM server for SPARC
- Features
- Split InfoScale stack model
- Guest-based InfoScale stack model
- Layered InfoScale stack model
- System requirements
- Installing InfoScale 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
- SFRAC support for Oracle VM Server for SPARC environments
- Support for live migration in FSS environments
- Using SmartIO in the virtualized environment
- InfoScale Enterprise Solutions support for Oracle VM Server for SPARC
- Section IV. Reference
Oracle VM Server for SPARC guest domain migration in VCS environment
VCS supports cold, warm, and live migration, also known as domain migration, for Oracle VM Server for SPARC guest domains.
Domain migration enables you to migrate a guest domain from one host system to another host system. The system on which the migration is initiated is the source system. The system to which the domain is migrated is the target system.
While a migration operation is in progress, the domain that you want to migrate transfers from the source system to the migrated domain on the target system.
The domain migration until Oracle VM Server for SPARC 2.0 release is a warm migration. A warm migration is where the domain that you want to migrate enters a suspended state before the migration.
The Oracle VM Server for SPARC 2.1 introduces live migration, which provides performance improvements that enable an active domain to migrate while it continues to run.
In addition to live migration, you can migrate bound or inactive domains. This migration is a cold migration.
You can use domain migration to perform tasks such as the following:
Balancing the load between systems
Performing hardware maintenance while a guest domain continues to run