InfoScale™ 9.0 Storage Foundation and High Availability Configuration and Upgrade Guide - Solaris
- Section I. Introduction to SFHA
- Section II. Configuration of SFHA
- Preparing to configure
- Preparing to configure SFHA clusters for data integrity
- About planning to configure I/O fencing
- Setting up the CP server
- Configuring the CP server manually
- Configuring CP server using response files
- Configuring SFHA
- Configuring Storage Foundation High Availability using the installer
- Configuring a secure cluster node by node
- Verifying and updating licenses on the system
- Configuring Storage Foundation High Availability using the installer
- Configuring SFHA clusters for data integrity
- Setting up disk-based I/O fencing using installer
- Setting up server-based I/O fencing using installer
- Manually configuring SFHA 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 SFHA cluster manually
- Setting up non-SCSI-3 fencing in virtual environments manually
- Setting up majority-based I/O fencing manually
- Performing an automated SFHA configuration using response files
- Performing an automated I/O fencing configuration using response files
- Section III. Upgrade of SFHA
- Planning to upgrade SFHA
- Preparing to upgrade SFHA
- Upgrading Storage Foundation and High Availability
- Performing a rolling upgrade of SFHA
- Performing a phased upgrade of SFHA
- About phased upgrade
- Performing a phased upgrade using the product installer
- Performing an automated SFHA upgrade using response files
- Upgrading SFHA using Boot Environment upgrade
- Performing post-upgrade tasks
- Post-upgrade tasks when VCS agents for VVR are configured
- Upgrading the Array Support Library
- About enabling LDAP authentication for clusters that run in secure mode
- Planning to upgrade SFHA
- Section IV. Post-installation tasks
- Section V. Adding and removing nodes
- Adding a node to SFHA clusters
- Adding the node to a cluster manually
- Adding a node using response files
- Configuring server-based fencing on the new node
- Removing a node from SFHA clusters
- Removing a node from a SFHA cluster
- Removing a node from a SFHA cluster
- Adding a node to SFHA clusters
- Section VI. Configuration and upgrade reference
- Appendix A. Installation scripts
- Appendix B. SFHA services and ports
- Appendix C. Configuration files
- Appendix D. Configuring the secure shell or the remote shell for communications
- Appendix E. Sample SFHA cluster setup diagrams for CP server-based I/O fencing
- Appendix F. Reconciling major/minor numbers for NFS shared disks
- Appendix G. 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
Converting from QuickLog to Multi-Volume support
The Version 6 and later disk layouts do not support QuickLog. The functionality provided by the Veritas Multi-Volume Support (MVS) feature replaces most of the functionality provided by QuickLog.
The following procedure describes how to convert from QuickLog to MVS. Unlike QuickLog, which allowed logging of up to 31 VxFS file systems to one device, MVS allows intent logging of only one file system per device. Therefore, the following procedure must be performed for each file system that is logged to a QuickLog device if the Version 6 or later disk layout is used.
The QuickLog device did not need to be related to the file system. For MVS, the log volume and the file system volume must be in the same disk group.
To convert Quicklog to MVS
- Select a QuickLog-enabled file system to convert to MVS and unmount it.
# umount myfs
- Detach one of the QuickLog volumes from the QuickLog device that the file system had been using. This volume will be used as the new intent log volume for the file system.
# qlogdetach -g diskgroup log_vol
- Create the volume set.
# vxvset make myvset myfs_volume
- Mount the volume set.
# mount -F vxfs /dev/vx/dsk/rootdg/myvset /mnt1
- Upgrade the volume set's file system to the Version 7 or later disk layout.
For example:
# vxupgrade -n 9 /mnt1
- Add the log volume from step 2 to the volume set.
# vxvset addvol myvset log_vol
- Add the log volume to the file system. The size of the volume must be specified.
# fsvoladm add /mnt1 log_vol 50m
- Move the log to the new volume.
# fsadm -o logdev=log_vol,logsize=16m /mnt1