Veritas InfoScale™ 7.4.1 Solutions in Cloud Environments
- Overview and preparation
- Overview of InfoScale solutions in cloud environments
 - InfoScale agents for monitoring resources in cloud environments
 - InfoScale feature for storage sharing in cloud environments
 - About SmartIO in AWS environments
 - Preparing for InfoScale installations in cloud environments
 - Installing the AWS CLI package
 
 - Configurations for Amazon Web Services - Linux
 - Configurations for Amazon Web Services - Windows
- Replication configurations in AWS - Windows
 - HA and DR configurations in AWS - Windows
- Failover within a subnet of an AWS AZ using virtual private IP - Windows
 - Failover across AWS subnets using overlay IP - Windows
 - Public access to InfoScale cluster nodes in AWS using Elastic IP - Windows
 - DR from on-premises to AWS and across AWS regions or VPCs - Windows
 - DR from on-premises to AWS - Windows
 
 
 - Configurations for Microsoft Azure - Linux
 - Configurations for Microsoft Azure - Windows
 - Configurations for Google Cloud Platform- Linux
 - Configurations for Google Cloud Platform - Windows
 - Replication to and across cloud environments
 - Migrating files to the cloud using Cloud Connectors
- About cloud connectors
 - About InfoScale support for cloud connectors
 - How InfoScale migrates data using cloud connectors
 - Limitations for file-level tiering
 - About operations with Amazon Glacier
 - Migrating data from on-premise to cloud storage
 - Reclaiming object storage space
 - Removing a cloud volume
 - Examining in-cloud storage usage
 - Sample policy file
 - Replication support with cloud tiering
 
 - Troubleshooting issues in cloud deployments
 
About identifying a temporary resource disk - Linux
Typically, a temporary resource disk is named as /dev/sdb and is mounted at /mnt. However, the location may change depending on whether or not it is utilized for swap space or is unmounted by a user.
To identify whether or not swap space is configured and a disk utilized for swap space
- Identify the swap space configuration and check the swap file:
# swapon
Following is the sample output of this command:
NAME TYPE SIZE USED PRIO /mnt/resource/swapfile file 2G 0B -1
Where, /mnt/resource is the default location where a temporary disk is mounted when used for swap space.
 - Identify the disk used for swap space:
# mount | grep "/mnt/resource"
Following is the sample output of this command:
/dev/sdb on /mnt/resource type filesystem
Where /dev/sdb is the temporary disk.
 - Identify a VxVM disk that corresponds to a temporary disk.
# vxdisk -e list | grep sdb (If sdb is the OS device name for temporary disk found in the earlier step)
Following is the sample output for the command:
10-0-15-6_disk_490 auto:none - - online invalid sdb -