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InfoScale™ 9.0 Dynamic Multi-Pathing Administrator's Guide - Solaris
Last Published:
2025-04-14
Product(s):
InfoScale & Storage Foundation (9.0)
Platform: Solaris
- Understanding DMP
- How DMP works
- Disk device naming in DMP
- Setting up DMP to manage native devices
- Using Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) devices with Oracle Automatic Storage Management (ASM)
- Administering DMP
- Managing DMP devices for the ZFS root pool
- Administering DMP using the vxdmpadm utility
- Gathering and displaying I/O statistics
- Specifying the I/O policy
- Administering disks
- Discovering and configuring newly added disk devices
- About discovering disks and dynamically adding disk arrays
- How to administer the Device Discovery Layer
- Changing the disk device naming scheme
- Dynamic Reconfiguration of devices
- About the DMPDR utility
- Reconfiguring a LUN online that is under DMP control using the Dynamic Reconfiguration tool
- Manually reconfiguring a LUN online that is under DMP control
- Event monitoring
- Performance monitoring and tuning
- Appendix A. DMP troubleshooting
- Appendix B. Reference
About Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP)
Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) provides multi-pathing functionality for the operating system native devices that are configured on the system. DMP creates DMP metadevices (also known as DMP nodes) to represent all the device paths to the same physical LUN.
DMP metadevices support ZFS. You can create ZFS pools on DMP metadevices. DMP supports both root and non-root ZFS pools. For versions prior to Solaris 11 update 1, DMP supports only non-root ZFS file systems.
Volume Manager (VxVM) volumes and disk groups can co-exist with ZFS pools, but each device can only support one of the types. If a disk has a VxVM label, then the disk is not available to ZFS. Similarly, if a disk is in use by ZFS, then the disk is not available to VxVM.