Veritas High Availability 7.3.1 Solution Guide for VMware - Linux
- Introducing the Veritas High Availability solution for VMware
- How the Veritas High Availability solution works in a VMware environment
- How the Veritas HA Plug-in for vSphere Web Client works with VCS
- How the VMwareDisks agent communicates with the vCenter Server instead of the ESX/ESXi host
- Getting started with vCenter-integrated Veritas High Availability solution
- Getting started with the VIOM-integrated Veritas High Availability solution
- Understanding Veritas High Availability terminology
- Supported VMware versions
- Important release information
- How the Veritas High Availability solution works in a VMware environment
- Deploying the Veritas High Availability solution
- Administering application availability from the vSphere Client
- Accessing the Veritas High Availability view
- Administering application monitoring from the Veritas High Availability view
- Understanding the Veritas High Availability view
- Configuring a cluster by using the VCS cluster configuration wizard
- To configure or unconfigure application monitoring
- Adding a system to a VCS cluster
- To start or stop applications
- To switch an application to another system
- To add or remove a failover system
- To suspend or resume application monitoring
- To clear Fault state
- To resolve a held-up operation
- To determine application state
- To remove all monitoring configurations
- To remove VCS cluster configurations
- Administering application monitoring settings
- Administering application availability using Veritas High Availability dashboard
- Understanding the dashboard work area
- Accessing the dashboard
- Monitoring applications across a data center
- Monitoring applications across an ESX cluster
- Searching for application instances by using filters
- Selecting multiple applications for batch operations
- Starting an application using the dashboard
- Stopping an application by using the dashboard
- Entering an application into maintenance mode
- Bringing an application out of maintenance mode
- Switching an application
- Resolving dashboard alerts
- Appendix A. Roles and privileges
- Appendix B. Troubleshooting
- Agent logging on virtual machine
- Troubleshooting wizard-based configuration issues
- Veritas High Availability Configuration wizard displays the "hadiscover is not recognized as an internal or external command" error
- Running the 'hastop -all' command detaches virtual disks
- Validation may fail when you add a failover system
- Adding a failover system may fail if you configure a cluster with communication links over UDP
- Troubleshooting issues with the Veritas High Availability view
- Veritas high availability view is not visible from a cluster system
- Veritas High Availability view does not display the application monitoring status
- Veritas High Availability view may freeze due to special characters in application display name
- If the Console host abruptly restarts, the high availability view may disappear
- Veritas high availability view may fail to load or refresh
- Operating system commands to unmount resource may fail
About assigning privileges to VMwareDisks agent
The application monitoring configuration for Cluster Server (VCS) agents in a VMware virtual environment involves the VMwareDisks agent. In the event of an application failure, the VMwareDisks agent sends a disk-detach request to the ESX host, and then attaches the disk to the failover target system.
To enable the VMwareDisks agent to communicate with the ESX host, during the application monitoring configuration workflow, you must specify an ESX user account. The specified ESX user account must have administrative privileges, or should be a root user. If the ESX user account does not have these privileges, you must create a role, add certain privileges to the created role, and then assign the role to the ESX user account.
If you do not want to assign the role to an existing ESX user account, you can create a new ESX user account, and then assign the role. You can further integrate the new ESX user account with an Active Directory-based authentication service if available in the VMware environment. The VMwareDisks agent can then use the same user account to perform its tasks on all ESX hosts linked to the Active Directory.