Veritas Access Administrator's Guide
- Section I. Introducing Veritas Access
- Section II. Configuring Veritas Access
- Adding users or roles
- Configuring the network
- About configuring the Veritas Access network
- About bonding Ethernet interfaces
- Bonding Ethernet interfaces
- Configuring DNS settings
- About Ethernet interfaces
- Displaying current Ethernet interfaces and states
- Configuring IP addresses
- Configuring Veritas Access to use jumbo frames
- Configuring VLAN interfaces
- Configuring NIC devices
- Swapping network interfaces
- Excluding PCI IDs from the cluster
- About configuring routing tables
- Configuring routing tables
- Changing the firewall settings
- IP load balancing
- Configuring Veritas Access in IPv4 and IPv6 mixed mode
- Configuring authentication services
- Section III. Managing Veritas Access storage
- Configuring storage
- About storage provisioning and management
- About configuring disks
- About configuring storage pools
- Configuring storage pools
- About quotas for usage
- Enabling, disabling, and displaying the status of file system quotas
- Setting and displaying file system quotas
- Setting user quotas for users of specified groups
- About quotas for CIFS home directories
- About Flexible Storage Sharing
- Limitations of Flexible Storage Sharing
- Workflow for configuring and managing storage using the Veritas Access CLI
- Displaying information for all disk devices associated with the nodes in a cluster
- Displaying WWN information
- Importing new LUNs forcefully for new or existing pools
- Initiating host discovery of LUNs
- Increasing the storage capacity of a LUN
- Formatting or reinitializing a disk
- Removing a disk
- Configuring data integrity with I/O fencing
- Configuring ISCSI
- Veritas Access as an iSCSI target
- Configuring storage
- Section IV. Managing Veritas Access file access services
- Configuring the NFS server
- About using the NFS server with Veritas Access
- Using the kernel-based NFS server
- Accessing the NFS server
- Displaying and resetting NFS statistics
- Configuring Veritas Access for ID mapping for NFS version 4
- Configuring the NFS client for ID mapping for NFS version 4
- About authenticating NFS clients
- Setting up Kerberos authentication for NFS clients
- Using Veritas Access as a CIFS server
- About configuring Veritas Access for CIFS
- About configuring CIFS for standalone mode
- Configuring CIFS server status for standalone mode
- Changing security settings
- About Active Directory (AD)
- About configuring CIFS for Active Directory (AD) domain mode
- Setting NTLM
- About setting trusted domains
- Specifying trusted domains that are allowed access to the CIFS server
- Allowing trusted domains access to CIFS when setting an IDMAP backend to rid
- Allowing trusted domains access to CIFS when setting an IDMAP backend to ldap
- Allowing trusted domains access to CIFS when setting an IDMAP backend to hash
- Allowing trusted domains access to CIFS when setting an IDMAP backend to ad
- About configuring Windows Active Directory as an IDMAP backend for CIFS
- Configuring the Active Directory schema with CIFS-schema extensions
- Configuring the LDAP client for authentication using the CLI
- Configuring the CIFS server with the LDAP backend
- Setting Active Directory trusted domains
- About storing account information
- Storing user and group accounts
- Reconfiguring the CIFS service
- About mapping user names for CIFS/NFS sharing
- About the mapuser commands
- Adding, removing, or displaying the mapping between CIFS and NFS users
- Automatically mapping UNIX users from LDAP to Windows users
- About managing home directories
- About CIFS clustering modes
- About migrating CIFS shares and home directories
- Setting the CIFS aio_fork option
- About managing local users and groups
- Enabling CIFS data migration
- Configuring an FTP server
- About FTP
- Creating the FTP home directory
- Using the FTP server commands
- About FTP server options
- Customizing the FTP server options
- Administering the FTP sessions
- Uploading the FTP logs
- Administering the FTP local user accounts
- About the settings for the FTP local user accounts
- Configuring settings for the FTP local user accounts
- Using Veritas Access as an Object Store server
- Configuring the NFS server
- Section V. Monitoring and troubleshooting
- Section VI. Provisioning and managing Veritas Access file systems
- Creating and maintaining file systems
- About creating and maintaining file systems
- About encryption at rest
- Considerations for creating a file system
- Best practices for creating file systems
- Choosing a file system layout type
- Determining the initial extent size for a file system
- About striping file systems
- About creating a tuned file system for a specific workload
- About FastResync
- About fsck operation
- Setting retention in files
- Setting WORM over NFS
- Manually setting WORM-retention on a file over CIFS
- About managing application I/O workloads using maximum IOPS settings
- Creating a file system
- Bringing the file system online or offline
- Listing all file systems and associated information
- Modifying a file system
- Managing a file system
- Destroying a file system
- Upgrading disk layout versions
- Creating and maintaining file systems
- Section VII. Provisioning and managing Veritas Access shares
- Creating shares for applications
- Creating and maintaining NFS shares
- About NFS file sharing
- Displaying file systems and snapshots that can be exported
- Exporting an NFS share
- Displaying exported directories
- About managing NFS shares using netgroups
- Unexporting a directory or deleting NFS options
- Exporting an NFS share for Kerberos authentication
- Mounting an NFS share with Kerberos security from the NFS client
- Exporting an NFS snapshot
- Creating and maintaining CIFS shares
- About managing CIFS shares
- Exporting a directory as a CIFS share
- Configuring a CIFS share as secondary storage for an Enterprise Vault store
- Exporting the same file system/directory as a different CIFS share
- About the CIFS export options
- Setting share properties
- Displaying CIFS share properties
- Hiding system files when adding a CIFS normal share
- Allowing specified users and groups access to the CIFS share
- Denying specified users and groups access to the CIFS share
- Exporting a CIFS snapshot
- Deleting a CIFS share
- Modifying a CIFS share
- Making a CIFS share shadow copy aware
- Using Veritas Access with OpenStack
- Integrating Veritas Access with Data Insight
- Section VIII. Managing Veritas Access storage services
- Compressing files
- About compressing files
- Use cases for compressing files
- Best practices for using compression
- Compression tasks
- Compressing files
- Showing the scheduled compression job
- Scheduling compression jobs
- Listing compressed files
- Uncompressing files
- Modifying the scheduled compression
- Removing the specified schedule
- Stopping the schedule for a file system
- Removing the pattern-related rule for a file system
- Removing the modified age related rule for a file system
- Configuring episodic replication
- About Veritas Access episodic replication
- How Veritas Access episodic replication works
- Starting Veritas Access episodic replication
- Setting up communication between the source and the destination clusters
- Setting up the file systems to replicate
- Setting up files to exclude from an episodic replication unit
- Scheduling the episodic replication
- Defining what to replicate
- About the maximum number of parallel episodic replication jobs
- Managing an episodic replication job
- Replicating compressed data
- Displaying episodic replication job information and status
- Synchronizing an episodic replication job
- Behavior of the file systems on the episodic replication destination target
- Accessing file systems configured as episodic replication destinations
- Episodic replication job failover and failback
- Configuring continuous replication
- About Veritas Access continuous replication
- How Veritas Access continuous replication works
- Starting Veritas Access continuous replication
- Setting up communication between the source and the target clusters
- Setting up the file system to replicate
- Managing continuous replication
- Displaying continuous replication information and status
- Unconfiguring continuous replication
- Continuous replication failover and failback
- Using snapshots
- Using instant rollbacks
- About instant rollbacks
- Creating a space-optimized rollback
- Creating a full-sized rollback
- Listing Veritas Access instant rollbacks
- Restoring a file system from an instant rollback
- Refreshing an instant rollback from a file system
- Bringing an instant rollback online
- Taking an instant rollback offline
- Destroying an instant rollback
- Creating a shared cache object for Veritas Access instant rollbacks
- Listing cache objects
- Destroying a cache object of a Veritas Access instant rollback
- Compressing files
- Section IX. Reference
- Index
Creating a file system
Veritas Access supports the following types of file systems:
Cluster File System (CFS) - creates a standard CFS file system. The CFS file system is the default file system when creating a new file system.
Veritas Access supports the following file system layouts:
Simple - creates a file system of a specified size, and you can specify a block size for the file system.
Mirrored - creates a mirrored file system with a specified number of mirrors along with a list of pools and online status.
Mirrored-stripe - creates a mirrored-stripe file system with a specified number of columns, mirrors, pools, and protection options.
Striped - creates a striped file system. A striped file system is a file system that stores its data across multiple disks rather than storing the data on just one disk.
Striped-mirror - creates a striped-mirror file system with a specified number of columns, mirrors, pools, and protection options.
The default block size is determined based on the size of the file system when the file system is created. For example, 1 KB is the default block size for up to a 2-TB file system size. Other default block sizes, 2 KB, 4 KB, and 8 KB are available for different ranges of file system sizes. If you create a 1-TB file system, and then increase it to 3 TB, the file system block size remains at 1 KB.
See the storage_fs(1) man page for detailed examples.
For details on the limitations on the length of the file system name, See About creating and maintaining file systems.
You can also create a file system for customized workloads.
See About creating a tuned file system for a specific workload.
Note:
If the configuration file system creation fails, the originating file system request also fails. Veritas Access requires at least two disks for the mirrored configuration file system, and in case of Flexible Shared Storage (FSS), at least two nodes are required to be part of the storage pool.
Note:
Veritas recommends that you do not create a file system whose name format is such as <file system name_integer>. This is because such file names are reserved for internal objects and may lead to file system creation errors.
To create a simple file system of a specified size
- Create a simple file system with a specified size.
Storage> fs create simple fs_name size pool1[,disk1,...] [blksize] [pdir_enable] [encrypt] [worm] [autocorr] [datacheck]
To create a mirrored file system
- Create a mirrored file system.
Storage> fs create mirrored fs_name size nmirrors pool1[,disk1,...] [protection=disk|pool] [blksize=bytes] [pdir_enable] [encrypt] [worm] [autocorr] [datacheck] [mediatype] [multi_volume]
Note:
Multivolume=yes option is not supported for mirrrored and striped-mirrored file system layout in this release.
To create a mirrored-stripe file system
- Create a mirrored-stripe file system.
Storage> fs create mirrored-stripe fs_name size nmirrors ncolumns pool1[,disk1,...] [protection=disk|pool] [stripeunit=kilobytes] [blksize=bytes] [pdir_enable] [encrypt] [worm] [autocorr] [datacheck] [mediatype]
To create a striped-mirror file system
- Create a striped-mirror file system.
Storage> fs create striped-mirror fs_name size nmirrors ncolumns pool1[,disk1,...] [protection=disk|pool] [stripeunit=kilobytes] [blksize=bytes] [pdir_enable] [encrypt] [worm] [autocorr] [datacheck] [mediatype] [multi_volume]
Note:
Multivolume=yes option is not supported for mirrrored and striped-mirrored file system layout in this release.
To create a striped file system
- Create a striped file system.
Storage> fs create striped fs_name size ncolumns pool1[,disk1,...] [stripeunit=kilobytes] [blksize=bytes] [pdir_enable] [encrypt] [worm] [autocorr] [datacheck]
fs_name | Specifies the name of the file system being created. The file system name should be a string. If you enter a file that already exists, you receive an error message and the file system is not created. |
size | Specifies the size of a file system. To create a file system, you need at least 10 MB of space. You can create a file system in the following units:
You can enter the units with either uppercase (10 M) or lowercase (10 m) letters. To see how much space is available on a pool, use the Storage> pool free command. |
nmirrors | Specifies the number of mirrors for the file system. You must enter a positive integer. |
ncolumns | Specifies the number of columns for the striped file system. The number of columns represents the number of disks to stripe the information across. If the number of columns exceeds the number of disks for the entered pools, an error message is displayed. This message indicates that there is not enough space to create the striped file system. |
pool1[,disk1,...] | Specifies the pool(s) or disk(s) for the file system. If you specify a pool or disk that does not exist, you receive an error message. You can specify more than one pool or disk by separating the name with a comma. Do not include a space between the comma and the name. To find a list of pools and disks, use the Storage> pool list command. To find a list of disks, use the Storage> disk list command. The disk must be part of the pool or an error message is displayed. |
protection | If you do not specify a protection option, the default is "disk." The available options for this field are:
|
stripeunit=kilobytes | Specifies a stripe unit (in kilobytes). The following are the possible values:
|
blksize=bytes | Specifies the block size for the file system. The following are the possible values in bytes:
Block sizes can affect the file size. For example, to create a file system greater than 32 TB, the block size needs to be 8192. |
pdir_enable | Specifies if you want to enable a partition directory for the file system. By default, this feature is not enabled. |
encrypt | Enable encryption. You can set encrypt=on/encrypt=off. |
worm | Enables WORM. The possible values are worm=yes/worm=no. |
autocorr | Enables auto-correction of the computer clock. The possible values are autocorr=yes/autocorr=no. |
datacheck | Enable datacheck. The possible values are datacheck=yes/datacheck=no. |
mediatype | Specifies the disk type for the file system. |
multi_volume | Create multiple volumes. |
After a file system is created, the file system reserves some space for internal logging. Internal logging provides additional data integrity. Due to the space that is reserved for internal logging, the file system may appear to be used immediately after file system creation. The space that is reserved for internal logging increases with the number of nodes in the Veritas Access cluster.
Log file sizes for the file systems are as follows:
10 GB to 100 GB | Log size = 60 MB per node |
100 GB to 1 TB | Log size = 100 MB per node |
1 TB and above | Log size = 256 MB per node |