InfoScale™ 9.0 Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability Configuration and Upgrade Guide - 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
Enabling and disabling intelligent resource monitoring for agents manually
Review the following procedures to enable or disable intelligent resource monitoring manually. The intelligent resource monitoring feature is enabled by default. The IMF resource type attribute determines whether an IMF-aware agent must perform intelligent resource monitoring.
To enable intelligent resource monitoring
- Make the VCS configuration writable.
# haconf -makerw
Run the following command to enable intelligent resource monitoring.
To enable intelligent monitoring of offline resources:
# hatype -modify resource_type IMF -update Mode 1
To enable intelligent monitoring of online resources:
# hatype -modify resource_type IMF -update Mode 2
To enable intelligent monitoring of both online and offline resources:
# hatype -modify resource_type IMF -update Mode 3
- If required, change the values of the MonitorFreq key and the RegisterRetryLimit key of the IMF attribute.
Review the agent-specific recommendations in the attribute definition tables to set these attribute key values.
See Attribute definition for CVMVxconfigd agent.
- Save the VCS configuration.
# haconf -dump -makero
- Make sure that the AMF kernel driver is configured on all nodes in the cluster.
/etc/init.d/amf.rc status
If the AMF kernel driver is configured, the output resembles:
AMF: Module loaded and configured
Configure the AMF driver if the command output returns that the AMF driver is not loaded or not configured.
- Restart the agent. Run the following commands on each node.
# haagent -stop agent_name -force -sys sys_name # haagent -start agent_name -sys sys_name
To disable intelligent resource monitoring
- Make the VCS configuration writable.
# haconf -makerw
- To disable intelligent resource monitoring for all the resources of a certain type, run the following command:
# hatype -modify resource_type IMF -update Mode 0
- To disable intelligent resource monitoring for a specific resource, run the following commands:
# hares -override resource_name IMF # hares -modify resource_name IMF -update Mode 0
- Save the VCS configuration.
# haconf -dump -makero
Note:
VCS provides haimfconfig script to enable or disable the IMF functionality for agents. You can use the script with VCS in running or stopped state. Use the script to enable or disable IMF for the IMF-aware bundled agents, enterprise agents, and custom agents.