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Veritas InfoScale™ 8.0.2 Disaster Recovery Implementation Guide - AIX
Last Published:
2023-06-05
Product(s):
InfoScale & Storage Foundation (8.0.2)
Platform: AIX
- Section I. Introducing Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions for disaster recovery
- About supported disaster recovery scenarios
- About disaster recovery scenarios
- About campus cluster configuration
- About replicated data clusters
- About global clusters
- How VCS global clusters work
- User privileges for cross-cluster operations
- VCS global clusters: The building blocks
- Visualization of remote cluster objects
- About global service groups
- About global cluster management
- About serialization - The Authority attribute
- About resiliency and "Right of way"
- VCS agents to manage wide-area failover
- About the Steward process: Split-brain in two-cluster global clusters
- Secure communication in global clusters
- Disaster recovery feature support for components in the Veritas InfoScale product suite
- Virtualization support for InfoScale 8.0.2 products in replicated environments
- Planning for disaster recovery
- About supported disaster recovery scenarios
- Section II. Implementing campus clusters
- Setting up campus clusters for VCS and SFHA
- About setting up a campus cluster configuration
- Preparing to set up a campus cluster configuration
- Configuring I/O fencing to prevent data corruption
- Configuring VxVM disk groups for campus cluster configuration
- Configuring VCS service group for campus clusters
- Setting up campus clusters for VxVM and VCS using Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager
- Fire drill in campus clusters
- About the DiskGroupSnap agent
- About running a fire drill in a campus cluster
- About setting up a campus cluster configuration
- Setting up campus clusters for SFCFSHA, SFRAC
- About setting up a campus cluster for disaster recovery for SFCFSHA or SF Oracle RAC
- Preparing to set up a campus cluster in a parallel cluster database environment
- Configuring I/O fencing to prevent data corruption
- Configuring VxVM disk groups for a campus cluster in a parallel cluster database environment
- Configuring VCS service groups for a campus cluster for SFCFSHA and SF Oracle RAC
- Tuning guidelines for parallel campus clusters
- Best practices for a parallel campus cluster
- Setting up campus clusters for VCS and SFHA
- Section III. Implementing replicated data clusters
- Configuring a replicated data cluster using VVR
- Configuring a replicated data cluster using third-party replication
- About setting up a replicated data cluster configuration using third-party replication
- About typical replicated data cluster configuration using third-party replication
- About setting up third-party replication
- Configuring the service groups for third-party replication
- Fire drill in replicated data clusters using third-party replication
- Section IV. Implementing global clusters
- Configuring global clusters for VCS and SFHA
- Installing and Configuring Cluster Server
- Setting up VVR replication
- About configuring VVR replication
- Best practices for setting up replication
- Creating a Replicated Data Set
- Creating a Primary RVG of an RDS
- Adding a Secondary to an RDS
- Changing the replication settings for a Secondary
- Synchronizing the Secondary and starting replication
- Starting replication when the data volumes are zero initialized
- Setting up third-party replication
- Configuring clusters for global cluster setup
- Configuring service groups for global cluster setup
- Fire drill in global clusters
- Configuring a global cluster with Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability or Storage Foundation for Oracle RAC
- About global clusters
- About replication for parallel global clusters using Storage Foundation and High Availability (SFHA) Solutions
- About setting up a global cluster environment for parallel clusters
- Configuring the primary site
- Configuring the secondary site
- Setting up replication between parallel global cluster sites
- Testing a parallel global cluster configuration
- Configuring a global cluster with Volume Replicator and Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability or Storage Foundation for Oracle RAC
- About configuring a parallel global cluster using Volume Replicator (VVR) for replication
- Setting up replication on the primary site using VVR
- Setting up replication on the secondary site using VVR
- Starting replication of the primary site database volume to the secondary site using VVR
- Configuring Cluster Server to replicate the database volume using VVR
- Replication use cases for global parallel clusters
- Configuring global clusters for VCS and SFHA
- Section V. Implementing disaster recovery configurations in virtualized environments
- Section VI. Reference
Configuring VCS service groups for a campus cluster for SFCFSHA and SF Oracle RAC
Follow the procedure below to configure the disk groups under Storage Foundation (SF) for Oracle RAC control and set up the Cluster Server (VCS) attributes to define parallel applications in campus clusters. The Cluster Volume Manager (CVM) and Oracle service groups can be configured by editing the VCS configuration file, the main.cf, to define the service groups.
To configure the VCS service groups
- Configure the disk groups under SFCFSHA or SF Oracle RAC control and set up the VCS attributes to define parallel applications in campus clusters. The CVM and Oracle service groups can be configured by editing the VCS configuration file, main.cf, to define the service groups.
- Configure the SystemZones attribute in the service group definition as explained previously.
- Group the hosts at each physical site into a single logical SystemZone. This will enable the failover applications to try to come up on local nodes before they try to come up on a remote site.
Not all SFCFSHA or SF Oracle RAC service groups are parallel. In the sample configuration file, hosts sys1 and sys2 should be configured in zone 0 and hosts sys3 and sys4 in zone 1. In the event of a failure, this setting instructs VCS to failover the group first within the same site and then across the sites.
- After configuring your service groups and before putting your configuration into production, you can verify your configuration resilience by means of testing various failure scenarios.
See sfrac11_main.cf file.