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InfoScale™ 9.0 Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability Configuration and Upgrade Guide - AIX
Last Published:
2025-04-18
Product(s):
InfoScale & Storage Foundation (9.0)
Platform: AIX
- Section I. Introduction to SFCFSHA
- Introducing Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability
- Section II. Configuration of SFCFSHA
- Preparing to configure
- Preparing to configure SFCFSHA clusters for data integrity
- About planning to configure I/O fencing
- Setting up the CP server
- Configuring the CP server manually
- Configuring SFCFSHA
- Configuring a secure cluster node by node
- Verifying and updating licenses on the system
- Configuring SFCFSHA clusters for data integrity
- Setting up disk-based I/O fencing using installer
- Setting up server-based I/O fencing using installer
- Performing an automated SFCFSHA configuration using response files
- Performing an automated I/O fencing configuration using response files
- Configuring CP server using response files
- Manually configuring SFCFSHA clusters for data integrity
- Setting up disk-based I/O fencing manually
- Setting up server-based I/O fencing manually
- Configuring server-based fencing on the SFCFSHA cluster manually
- Setting up non-SCSI-3 fencing in virtual environments manually
- Setting up majority-based I/O fencing manually
- Section III. Upgrade of SFCFSHA
- Planning to upgrade SFCFSHA
- Preparing to upgrade SFCFSHA
- Upgrading the operating system
- Performing a full upgrade of SFCFSHA using the installer
- Performing a rolling upgrade of SFCFSHA
- Performing a phased upgrade of SFCFSHA
- About phased upgrade
- Performing a phased upgrade using the product installer
- Performing an automated SFCFSHA upgrade using response files
- Upgrading Volume Replicator
- Performing post-upgrade tasks
- Planning to upgrade SFCFSHA
- Section IV. Post-configuration tasks
- Section V. Configuration of disaster recovery environments
- Section VI. Adding and removing nodes
- Adding a node to SFCFSHA clusters
- Adding the node to a cluster manually
- Setting up the node to run in secure mode
- Adding a node using response files
- Configuring server-based fencing on the new node
- Removing a node from SFCFSHA clusters
- Adding a node to SFCFSHA clusters
- Section VII. Configuration and Upgrade reference
- Appendix A. Support for AIX Live Update
- Appendix B. Installation scripts
- Appendix C. Configuration files
- Appendix D. Configuring the secure shell or the remote shell for communications
- Appendix E. High availability agent information
- Appendix F. Sample SFCFSHA cluster setup diagrams for CP server-based I/O fencing
- Appendix G. Changing NFS server major numbers for VxVM volumes
- Appendix H. Configuring LLT over UDP
- Using the UDP layer for LLT
- Manually configuring LLT over UDP using IPv4
- Using the UDP layer of IPv6 for LLT
- Manually configuring LLT over UDP using IPv6
Activating the first subcluster
To activate the first subcluster
- On any node in the subcluster, edit the
/etc/gabtab
file to remove "-n numericValue" and add "-x" instead.Note:
This steps needs to be reversed after the upgrade process is successfully completed.
- Restart the node.
- On the first half of the cluster, start SFCFSHA:
# cd /opt/VRTS/install
# ./installer -start sys1 sys2
- Unfreeze the nodes in the first half of the cluster. Enter the following:
# haconf -makerw # hasys -unfreeze -persistent node_name # haconf -dump -makero
- On the first half of the cluster, bring the VCS service groups online. Enter the following:
# hagrp -online group_name -sys node_name
After you bring the CVM service group ONLINE, all the GAB ports u, v, w and f come ONLINE and all the CFS mounts service groups also come ONLINE automatically. Only failover service groups need to be brought ONLINE manually.
- Manually mount the VxFS and CFS file systems that are not managed by VCS. [Downtime ends now.]