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Veritas High Availability 7.4.2 Solution Guide for VMware - Linux
Last Published:
2020-06-01
Product(s):
InfoScale & Storage Foundation (7.4.2)
Platform: Linux
- Introducing the Veritas High Availability solution for VMware
- How the Veritas High Availability solution works in a VMware environment
- Getting started with the VIOM-integrated Veritas High Availability solution
- Understanding Veritas High Availability terminology
- How the Veritas High Availability solution works in a VMware environment
- Deploying the Veritas High Availability solution
- Administering application availability from the vSphere Client
- Administering application monitoring from the Veritas High Availability view
- Understanding the Veritas High Availability view
- Administering application availability using Veritas High Availability dashboard
- Understanding the dashboard work area
- Accessing the dashboard
- Appendix A. Roles and privileges
- Appendix B. Troubleshooting
- Troubleshooting wizard-based configuration issues
- Troubleshooting issues with the Veritas High Availability view
Running the 'hastop -all' command detaches virtual disks
The hastop - all command takes offline all the components and components groups of a configured application, and then stops the VCS cluster. In the process, the command detaches the virtual disks from the VCS cluster nodes. (2920101)
Workaround: If you want to stop the VCS cluster (and not the applications running on cluster nodes), instead of the "hastop - all", use the following command:
hastop -all -force
This command stops the cluster without affecting the virtual disks attached to the VCS cluster nodes.