Dynamic Multi-Pathing 7.4.1 Administrator's Guide - Linux
- Understanding DMP
- Setting up DMP to manage native devices
- About setting up DMP to manage native devices
- Displaying the native multi-pathing configuration
- Migrating LVM volume groups to DMP
- Migrating to DMP from EMC PowerPath
- Migrating to DMP from Hitachi Data Link Manager (HDLM)
- Migrating to DMP from Linux Device Mapper Multipath
- Using Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) devices with Oracle Automatic Storage Management (ASM)
- Enabling Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) devices for use with Oracle Automatic Storage Management (ASM)
- Removing Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) devices from the listing of Oracle Automatic Storage Management (ASM) disks
- Migrating Oracle Automatic Storage Management (ASM) disk groups on operating system devices to Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) devices
- Adding DMP devices to an existing LVM volume group or creating a new LVM volume group
- Removing DMP support for native devices
- Administering DMP
- About enabling and disabling I/O for controllers and storage processors
- About displaying DMP database information
- Displaying the paths to a disk
- Setting customized names for DMP nodes
- Administering DMP using the vxdmpadm utility
- Retrieving information about a DMP node
- Displaying consolidated information about the DMP nodes
- Displaying the members of a LUN group
- Displaying paths controlled by a DMP node, controller, enclosure, or array port
- Displaying information about controllers
- Displaying information about enclosures
- Displaying information about array ports
- User-friendly CLI outputs for ALUA arrays
- Displaying information about devices controlled by third-party drivers
- Displaying extended device attributes
- Suppressing or including devices from VxVM control
- Gathering and displaying I/O statistics
- Setting the attributes of the paths to an enclosure
- Displaying the redundancy level of a device or enclosure
- Specifying the minimum number of active paths
- Displaying the I/O policy
- Specifying the I/O policy
- Disabling I/O for paths, controllers, array ports, or DMP nodes
- Enabling I/O for paths, controllers, array ports, or DMP nodes
- Renaming an enclosure
- Configuring the response to I/O failures
- Configuring the I/O throttling mechanism
- Configuring Subpaths Failover Groups (SFG)
- Configuring Low Impact Path Probing (LIPP)
- Displaying recovery option values
- Configuring DMP path restoration policies
- Stopping the DMP path restoration thread
- Displaying the status of the DMP path restoration thread
- Configuring Array Policy Modules
- Administering disks
- About disk management
- Discovering and configuring newly added disk devices
- Partial device discovery
- About discovering disks and dynamically adding disk arrays
- About third-party driver coexistence
- How to administer the Device Discovery Layer
- Listing all the devices including iSCSI
- Listing all the Host Bus Adapters including iSCSI
- Listing the ports configured on a Host Bus Adapter
- Listing the targets configured from a Host Bus Adapter or a port
- Listing the devices configured from a Host Bus Adapter and target
- Getting or setting the iSCSI operational parameters
- Listing all supported disk arrays
- Excluding support for a disk array library
- Re-including support for an excluded disk array library
- Listing excluded disk arrays
- Listing disks claimed in the DISKS category
- Displaying details about an Array Support Library
- Adding unsupported disk arrays to the DISKS category
- Removing disks from the DISKS category
- Foreign devices
- Changing the disk device naming scheme
- Discovering the association between enclosure-based disk names and OS-based disk names
- Dynamic Reconfiguration of devices
- About online Dynamic Reconfiguration
- Reconfiguring a LUN online that is under DMP control using the Dynamic Reconfiguration tool
- Manually reconfiguring a LUN online that is under DMP control
- Overview of manually reconfiguring a LUN
- Manually removing LUNs dynamically from an existing target ID
- Manually adding new LUNs dynamically to a new target ID
- About detecting target ID reuse if the operating system device tree is not cleaned up
- Scanning an operating system device tree after adding or removing LUNs
- Manually cleaning up the operating system device tree after removing LUNs
- Changing the characteristics of a LUN from the array side
- Upgrading the array controller firmware online
- Reformatting NVMe devices manually
- Event monitoring
- Performance monitoring and tuning
- About tuning Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) with templates
- DMP tuning templates
- Example DMP tuning template
- Tuning a DMP host with a configuration attribute template
- Managing the DMP configuration files
- Resetting the DMP tunable parameters and attributes to the default values
- DMP tunable parameters and attributes that are supported for templates
- DMP tunable parameters
- Appendix A. DMP troubleshooting
- Appendix B. Reference
About tuning Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) with templates
Dynamic Multi-Pathing has multiple tunable parameters and attributes that you can configure for optimal performance. DMP provides a template method to update several tunable parameters and attributes with a single operation. The template represents a full or partial DMP configuration, showing the values of the parameters and attributes of the host.
To view and work with the tunable parameters, you can dump the configuration values of the DMP tunable parameters to a file. Edit the parameters and attributes, if required. Then, load the template file to a host to update all of the values in a single operation.
You can load the configuration file to the same host, or to another similar host. The template method is useful for the following scenarios:
Configure multiple similar hosts with the optimal performance tuning values.
Configure one host for optimal performance. After you have configured the host, dump the tunable parameters and attributes to a template file. You can then load the template file to another host with similar requirements. Veritas recommends that the hosts that use the same configuration template have the same operating system and similar I/O requirements.
Define multiple specialized templates to handle different I/O load requirements.
When the load changes on a host, you can load a different template for the best performance. This strategy is appropriate for predictable, temporary changes in the I/O load. As the system administrator, after you define the system's I/O load behavior, you can customize tuning templates for particular loads. You can then automate the tuning, since there is a single load command that you can use in scripts or cron jobs.
At any time, you can reset the configuration, which reverts the values of the tunable parameters and attributes to the DMP default values.
You can manage the DMP configuration file with the vxdmpadm config commands.
See the vxdmpadm(1m) man page.