Veritas InfoScale™ 7.3.1 Troubleshooting Guide - Solaris
- Introduction
- Section I. Troubleshooting Veritas File System
- Section II. Troubleshooting Veritas Volume Manager
- Recovering from hardware failure
- About recovery from hardware failure
- Listing unstartable volumes
- Displaying volume and plex states
- The plex state cycle
- Recovering an unstartable mirrored volume
- Recovering an unstartable volume with a disabled plex in the RECOVER state
- Forcibly restarting a disabled volume
- Clearing the failing flag on a disk
- Reattaching failed disks
- Recovering from a failed plex attach or synchronization operation
- Failures on RAID-5 volumes
- Recovering from an incomplete disk group move
- Restarting volumes after recovery when some nodes in the cluster become unavailable
- Recovery from failure of a DCO volume
- Recovering from instant snapshot failure
- Recovering from the failure of vxsnap prepare
- Recovering from the failure of vxsnap make for full-sized instant snapshots
- Recovering from the failure of vxsnap make for break-off instant snapshots
- Recovering from the failure of vxsnap make for space-optimized instant snapshots
- Recovering from the failure of vxsnap restore
- Recovering from the failure of vxsnap refresh
- Recovering from copy-on-write failure
- Recovering from I/O errors during resynchronization
- Recovering from I/O failure on a DCO volume
- Recovering from failure of vxsnap upgrade of instant snap data change objects (DCOs)
- Recovering from failed vxresize operation
- Recovering from boot disk failure
- VxVM and boot disk failure
- Possible root, swap, and usr configurations
- Booting from an alternate boot disk on Solaris SPARC systems
- The boot process on Solaris SPARC systems
- Hot-relocation and boot disk failure
- Recovery from boot failure
- Repair of root or /usr file systems on mirrored volumes
- Replacement of boot disks
- Recovery by reinstallation
- Managing commands, tasks, and transactions
- Backing up and restoring disk group configurations
- Troubleshooting issues with importing disk groups
- Recovering from CDS errors
- Logging and error messages
- Troubleshooting Veritas Volume Replicator
- Recovery from RLINK connect problems
- Recovery from configuration errors
- Errors during an RLINK attach
- Errors during modification of an RVG
- Recovery on the Primary or Secondary
- About recovery from a Primary-host crash
- Recovering from Primary data volume error
- Primary SRL volume error cleanup and restart
- Primary SRL volume error at reboot
- Primary SRL volume overflow recovery
- Primary SRL header error cleanup and recovery
- Secondary data volume error cleanup and recovery
- Secondary SRL volume error cleanup and recovery
- Secondary SRL header error cleanup and recovery
- Secondary SRL header error at reboot
- Troubleshooting issues in cloud deployments
- Recovering from hardware failure
- Section III. Troubleshooting Dynamic Multi-Pathing
- Section IV. Troubleshooting Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability
- Troubleshooting Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability
- About troubleshooting Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability
- Troubleshooting CFS
- Troubleshooting fenced configurations
- Troubleshooting Cluster Volume Manager in Veritas InfoScale products clusters
- CVM group is not online after adding a node to the Veritas InfoScale products cluster
- Shared disk group cannot be imported in Veritas InfoScale products cluster
- Unable to start CVM in Veritas InfoScale products cluster
- Removing preexisting keys
- CVMVolDg not online even though CVMCluster is online in Veritas InfoScale products cluster
- Shared disks not visible in Veritas InfoScale products cluster
- Troubleshooting Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability
- Section V. Troubleshooting Cluster Server
- Troubleshooting and recovery for VCS
- VCS message logging
- Log unification of VCS agent's entry points
- Enhancing First Failure Data Capture (FFDC) to troubleshoot VCS resource's unexpected behavior
- GAB message logging
- Enabling debug logs for agents
- Enabling debug logs for IMF
- Enabling debug logs for the VCS engine
- About debug log tags usage
- Gathering VCS information for support analysis
- Gathering LLT and GAB information for support analysis
- Gathering IMF information for support analysis
- Message catalogs
- Troubleshooting the VCS engine
- Troubleshooting Low Latency Transport (LLT)
- Troubleshooting Group Membership Services/Atomic Broadcast (GAB)
- Troubleshooting VCS startup
- Troubleshooting Intelligent Monitoring Framework (IMF)
- Troubleshooting service groups
- VCS does not automatically start service group
- System is not in RUNNING state
- Service group not configured to run on the system
- Service group not configured to autostart
- Service group is frozen
- Failover service group is online on another system
- A critical resource faulted
- Service group autodisabled
- Service group is waiting for the resource to be brought online/taken offline
- Service group is waiting for a dependency to be met.
- Service group not fully probed.
- Service group does not fail over to the forecasted system
- Service group does not fail over to the BiggestAvailable system even if FailOverPolicy is set to BiggestAvailable
- Restoring metering database from backup taken by VCS
- Initialization of metering database fails
- Troubleshooting resources
- Troubleshooting I/O fencing
- Node is unable to join cluster while another node is being ejected
- The vxfentsthdw utility fails when SCSI TEST UNIT READY command fails
- Manually removing existing keys from SCSI-3 disks
- System panics to prevent potential data corruption
- Cluster ID on the I/O fencing key of coordinator disk does not match the local cluster's ID
- Fencing startup reports preexisting split-brain
- Registered keys are lost on the coordinator disks
- Replacing defective disks when the cluster is offline
- The vxfenswap utility exits if rcp or scp commands are not functional
- Troubleshooting CP server
- Troubleshooting server-based fencing on the Veritas InfoScale products cluster nodes
- Issues during online migration of coordination points
- Troubleshooting notification
- Troubleshooting and recovery for global clusters
- Troubleshooting the steward process
- Troubleshooting licensing
- Validating license keys
- Licensing error messages
- [Licensing] Insufficient memory to perform operation
- [Licensing] No valid VCS license keys were found
- [Licensing] Unable to find a valid base VCS license key
- [Licensing] License key cannot be used on this OS platform
- [Licensing] VCS evaluation period has expired
- [Licensing] License key can not be used on this system
- [Licensing] Unable to initialize the licensing framework
- [Licensing] QuickStart is not supported in this release
- [Licensing] Your evaluation period for the feature has expired. This feature will not be enabled the next time VCS starts
- Verifying the metered or forecasted values for CPU, Mem, and Swap
- VCS message logging
- Troubleshooting and recovery for VCS
- Section VI. Troubleshooting SFDB
About disk group configuration backup
Disk group configuration backup and restoration allows you to backup and restore all configuration data for Veritas Volume Manager (VxVM) disk groups, and for VxVM objects such as volumes that are configured within the disk groups. Using this feature, you can recover from corruption of a disk group's configuration that is stored as metadata in the private region of a VxVM disk. After the disk group configuration has been restored, and the volume enabled, the user data in the public region is available again without the need to restore this from backup media.
Warning:
The backup and restore utilities act only on VxVM configuration data. They do not back up or restore any user or application data that is contained within volumes or other VxVM objects. If you use vxdiskunsetup and vxdisksetup on a disk, and specify attributes that differ from those in the configuration backup, this may corrupt the public region and any data that it contains.
The vxconfigbackupd daemon monitors changes to the VxVM configuration and automatically records any configuration changes that occur, probably after an hour. Two utilities, vxconfigbackup and vxconfigrestore, are provided for backing up and restoring a VxVM configuration for a disk group.
When importing a disk group, any of the following errors in the vxconfigd log indicates that the disk group configuration and/or disk private region headers have become corrupted:
VxVM vxconfigd ERROR V-5-1-569 Disk group group,Disk disk:Cannot auto-import group: reason
The reason for the error is usually one of the following:
Configuration records are inconsistent Disk group has no valid configuration copies Duplicate record in configuration Errors in some configuration copies Format error in configuration copy Invalid block number Invalid magic number
If VxVM cannot update a disk group's configuration because of disk errors, it disables the disk group and displays the following error:
VxVM vxconfigd ERROR V-5-1-123 Disk group group: Disabled by errors
If such errors occur, you can restore the disk group configuration from a backup after you have corrected any underlying problem such as failed or disconnected hardware.
Configuration data from a backup allows you to reinstall the private region headers of VxVM disks in a disk group whose headers have become damaged, to recreate a corrupted disk group configuration, or to recreate a disk group and the VxVM objects within it. You can also use the configuration data to recreate a disk group on another system if the original system is not available.
Note:
To restore a disk group configuration, you must use the same physical disks that were configured in the disk group when you took the backup.