InfoScale™ 9.0 Solutions Guide - Linux
- Section I. Introducing Veritas InfoScale
- Section II. Solutions for Veritas InfoScale products
- Solutions for Veritas InfoScale products
- Solutions for Veritas InfoScale products
- Section III. Stack-level migration to IPv6 or dual stack
- Section IV. Improving database performance
- Overview of database accelerators
- Improving database performance with Veritas Concurrent I/O
- Improving database performance with atomic write I/O
- Section V. Using point-in-time copies
- Understanding point-in-time copy methods
- Backing up and recovering
- Preserving multiple point-in-time copies
- Online database backups
- Backing up on an off-host cluster file system
- Database recovery using Storage Checkpoints
- Backing up and recovering in a NetBackup environment
- Off-host processing
- Creating and refreshing test environments
- Creating point-in-time copies of files
- Section VI. Maximizing storage utilization
- Optimizing storage tiering with SmartTier
- Optimizing storage with Flexible Storage Sharing
- Optimizing storage tiering with SmartTier
- Section VII. Migrating data
- Understanding data migration
- Offline migration from LVM to VxVM
- Offline conversion of native file system to VxFS
- Online migration of a native file system to the VxFS file system
- Migrating a source file system to the VxFS file system over NFS v4
- VxFS features not available during online migration
- Migrating storage arrays
- Migrating data between platforms
- Overview of the Cross-Platform Data Sharing (CDS) feature
- CDS disk format and disk groups
- Setting up your system to use Cross-platform Data Sharing (CDS)
- Maintaining your system
- Disk tasks
- Disk group tasks
- Displaying information
- File system considerations
- Specifying the migration target
- Using the fscdsadm command
- Maintaining the list of target operating systems
- Migrating a file system on an ongoing basis
- Converting the byte order of a file system
- Migrating from Oracle ASM to Veritas File System
- Section VIII. Veritas InfoScale 4K sector device support solution
- Section IX. REST API support
- Support for configurations and operations using REST APIs
- Support for configurations and operations using REST APIs
- Section X. Reference
Defaults files
The following system defaults files in the /etc/default directory are used to specify the alignment of VxVM objects, the initialization or encapsulation of VM disks, the conversion of LVM disks, and the conversion of disk groups and their disks to the CDS-compatible format
Specifies default values for the following parameters to the vxcdsconvert command that have an effect on the alignment of VxVM objects: dgalign_checking, diskalign, and nodiskalign. See the vxassist(1M) manual page. | |
Specifies default values for the following parameters to the vxcdsconvert command: evac_disk_list, evac_subdisks_ok, min_split_size, move_subdisks_ok, privlen, and split_subdisks_ok. The following is a sample vxcdsconvert defaults file: evac_subdisks_ok=no min_split_size=64k move_subdisks_ok=yes privlen=2048 split_subdisks_ok=move An alternate defaults file can be specified by using the -d option with the vxcdsconvert command. See the vxcdsconvert(1M) manual page. | |
Specifies default values for the cds, default_activation_mode and enable_activation parameters to the vxdg command. The default_activation_mode and enable_activation parameters are only used with shared disk groups in a cluster. The following is a sample vxdg defaults file: cds=on See the vxdg(1M) manual page. | |
Specifies default values for the format and privlen parameters to the vxdisk and vxdisksetup commands. These commands are used when disks are initialized by VxVM for the first time.They are also called implicitly by the vxdiskadm command and the Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager GUI. The following is a sample vxdisk defaults file: format=cdsdisk privlen=2048 See the vxdisk(1M) manual page. See the vxdisksetup(1M) manual page. | |
Specifies default values for the format, privlen, privoffset and puboffset parameters to the vxencap and vxlvmencap commands. These commands are used when disks with existing partitions or slices are encapsulated, or when LVM disks are converted to VM disks. It is also called implicitly by the vxdiskadm, vxconvert (on AIX) and vxvmconvert (on HP-UX) commands, and by the Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager. The following is a sample vxencap defaults file: format=sliced privlen=4096 privoffset=0 puboffset=1 See the vxencap(1M) manual page. See the vxconvert(1M) manual page. See the vxvmconvert(1M) manual page. |
In the defaults files, a line that is empty, or that begins with a "#" character in the first column, is treated as a comment, and is ignored.
Apart from comment lines, all other lines must define attributes and their values using the format attribute=value. Each line starts in the first column, and is terminated by the value. No white space is allowed around the = sign.
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