InfoScale™ 9.0 Cluster Server Bundled Agents Reference Guide - Solaris
- Introducing bundled agents
- Storage agents
- About the storage agents
- DiskGroup agent
- DiskGroupSnap agent
- Dependencies for DiskGroupSnap agent
- Agent functions for DiskGroupSnap agent
- State definitions for DiskGroupSnap agent
- Attributes for DiskGroupSnap agent
- Notes for DiskGroupSnap agent
- Resource type definition for DiskGroupSnap agent
- Sample configurations for DiskGroupSnap agent
- Debug log levels for DiskGroupSnap agent
- Disk agent
- Volume agent
- VolumeSet agent
- Dependencies for VolumeSet agent
- Agent functions for VolumeSet agent
- State definitions for VolumeSet agent
- Attributes for VolumeSet agent
- Resource type definition for VolumeSet agent
- Sample configurations for VolumeSet agent
- Agent notes for VolumeSet agent
- Inaccessible volumes prevent the VolumeSet agent from coming online
- Debug log levels for VolumeSet agent
- Mount agent
- IMF awareness
- Dependencies for Mount agent
- Agent functions for Mount agent
- State definitions for Mount agent
- Attributes for Mount agent
- Resource type definition for Mount agent
- Notes for Mount agent
- High availability fire drill
- VxFS file system lock
- IMF usage notes
- IPv6 usage notes
- Support for loopback file system
- Enabling Level two monitoring for the Mount agent
- ZFS file system and pool creation example
- Support for VxFS direct mount inside non-global zones
- Sample configurations for Mount agent
- Debug log levels for Mount agent
- Zpool agent
- VMwareDisks agent
- SFCache agent
- Network agents
- About the network agents
- IP agent
- NIC agent
- About the IPMultiNICB and MultiNICB agents
- IPMultiNICB agent
- Dependencies for IPMultiNICB agent
- Requirements for IPMultiNICB
- Agent functions for IPMultiNICB agent
- State definitions for IPMultiNICB agent
- Attributes for IPMultiNICB agent
- Resource type definition for IPMultiNICB agent
- Manually migrating a logical IP address for IPMultiNICB agent
- Sample configurations for IPMultiNICB agent
- Debug log levels for IPMultiNICB agent
- MultiNICB agent
- Base and Multi-pathing modes for MultiNICB agent
- Oracle trunking for MultiNICB agent
- The haping utility for MultiNICB agent
- Dependencies for MultiNICB agent
- Agent functions for MultiNICB agent
- State definitions for MultiNICB agent
- Attributes for MultiNICB agent
- Optional attributes for Base and Mpathd modes for MultiNICB agent
- Optional attributes for Base mode for MultiNICB agent
- Optional attributes for Multi-pathing mode for MultiNICB agent
- Resource type definition for MultiNICB agent
- Solaris operating modes: Base and Multi-Pathing for MultiNICB agent
- Base mode for MultiNICB agent
- Failover and failback for MultiNICB agent
- Multi-Pathing mode for MultiNICB agent
- Configuring MultiNICB and IPMultiNICB agents on Solaris 11
- Trigger script for MultiNICB agent
- Sample configurations for MultiNICB agent
- Debug log levels for MultiNICB agent
- DNS agent
- Dependencies for DNS agent
- Agent functions for DNS agent
- State definitions for DNS agent
- Attributes for DNS agent
- Resource type definition for DNS agent
- Agent notes for DNS agent
- About using the VCS DNS agent on UNIX with a secure Windows DNS server
- High availability fire drill for DNS agent
- Monitor scenarios for DNS agent
- Sample Web server configuration for DNS agent
- Secure DNS update for BIND 9 for DNS agent
- Setting up secure updates using TSIG keys for BIND 9 for DNS agent
- Sample configurations for DNS agent
- Debug log levels for DNS agent
- File share agents
- About the file service agents
- NFS agent
- NFSRestart agent
- Share agent
- About the Samba agents
- NetBios agent
- Service and application agents
- About the services and applications agents
- AlternateIO agent
- Apache HTTP server agent
- Application agent
- IMF awareness
- High availability fire drill for Application agent
- Dependencies for Application agent
- Agent functions
- State definitions for Application agent
- Attributes for Application agent
- Resource type definition for Application agent
- Notes for Application agent
- Sample configurations for Application agent
- Debug log levels for Application agent
- CoordPoint agent
- LDom agent
- Configuring primary and logical domain dependencies and failure policy
- IMF awareness
- Dependencies
- Agent functions
- State definitions
- Attributes
- Resource type definition
- LDom agent notes
- About the auto-boot? variable
- Notes for the DomainFailurePolicy attribute
- Using VCS to migrate a logical domain
- Configuring the LDom agent for DR in a Global Cluster environment
- Using the LDom agent with IMF
- Sample configuration 1
- Sample configuration 2
- Configuration to support user-initiated LDom migration
- Configuration for VCS-initiated migration
- Sample configuration (Dynamic virtual machine service group failover)
- Debug log levels
- Process agent
- IMF awareness
- High availability fire drill for Process agent
- Dependencies for Process agent
- Agent functions for Process agent
- State definitions for Process agent
- Attributes for Process agent
- Resource type definition for Process agent
- Usage notes for Process agent
- Sample configurations for Process agent
- Debug log levels for Process agent
- ProcessOnOnly agent
- Project agent
- RestServer agent
- Zone agent
- Infrastructure and support agents
- Testing agents
- Replication agents
SFCache agent
The SmartIO feature of Arctera InfoScale enables data efficiency on your SSDs through I/O caching. Using SmartIO to improve efficiency, you can optimize the cost per I/O per second (IOPS). SmartIO uses advanced, customizable heuristics to determine what data to cache and how that data gets removed from the cache. The heuristics take advantage of InfoScale's knowledge of the characteristics of the workload.
SmartIO uses a cache area on the target device or devices. The cache area is the storage space that SmartIO uses to store the cached data and the metadata about the cached data. The type of the cache area determines whether it supports VxFS caching or VxVM caching. To start using SmartIO, you can create a cache area with a single command, while the application is online.
For more information about SmartIO, see InfoScale SmartIO for Solid State Drives Solutions Guide.
The SFCache agent enables, disables, and monitors cache. In case of a cache fault, the application still runs without any issues on the very same system, but with degraded I/O performance. Considering this, the SFCache agent provides an attribute to control the agent behavior. You can either choose to "IGNORE" or initiate "FAILOVER" in case of cache fault.
The SmartIO feature allows more than one cache area for VxFS and one cache area for VxVM on a single node; all object-level caches are created in these cache areas. An SFCache resource is configured per object (either mount point or volume) for which the SmartIO feature needs to be enabled. For VxFS caching, the SFCache resource depends on the Mount or CFSMount resource. For VxVM caching, the SFCache resource depends on the DiskGroup, Volume, VolumeSet, or CVMVolDg resource.
If the SmartIO feature is not enabled on a node, the SFCache agent will work as a simple FileOnOff agent. The SFCache resource state will be reported as ONLINE/OFFLINE, but caching-related operations will not be performed.