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Veritas InfoScale™ 7.3.1 Installation Guide - Linux
Last Published:
2017-12-04
Product(s):
InfoScale & Storage Foundation (7.3.1)
- Section I. Introduction to Veritas InfoScale
- Section II. Planning and preparation
- System requirements
- Preparing to install
- Mounting the ISO image
- Setting up ssh or rsh for inter-system communications
- Obtaining installer patches
- Disabling external network connection attempts
- Verifying the systems before installation
- Setting up the private network
- Setting up shared storage
- Synchronizing time settings on cluster nodes
- Setting the kernel.hung_task_panic tunable
- Planning the installation setup for SF Oracle RAC and SF Sybase CE systems
- Section III. Installation of Veritas InfoScale
- Installing Veritas InfoScale using the installer
- Installing Veritas InfoScale using response files
- Installing Veritas Infoscale using operating system-specific methods
- Completing the post installation tasks
- Section IV. Uninstallation of Veritas InfoScale
- Uninstalling Veritas InfoScale using the installer
- Uninstalling Veritas InfoScale using response files
- Section V. Installation reference
- Appendix A. Installation scripts
- Appendix B. Tunable files for installation
- About setting tunable parameters using the installer or a response file
- Setting tunables for an installation, configuration, or upgrade
- Setting tunables with no other installer-related operations
- Setting tunables with an un-integrated response file
- Preparing the tunables file
- Setting parameters for the tunables file
- Tunables value parameter definitions
- Appendix C. Troubleshooting installation issues
Removing rootability
Perform this procedure if you configured rootability by encapsulating the root disk.
To remove rootability
- Check if the system's root disk is under VxVM control by running this command:
# df -v /
The root disk is under VxVM control if /dev/vx/dsk/rootdg/rootvol is listed as being mounted as the root (/) file system. If so, unmirror and unencapsulate the root disk as described in the following steps:
- Use the vxplex command to remove all the plexes of the volumes rootvol, swapvol, usr, var, opt and home that are on disks other than the root disk.
For example, the following command removes the plexes mirrootvol-01, and mirswapvol-01 that are configured on a disk other than the root disk:
# vxplex -o rm dis mirrootvol-01 mirswapvol-01
Warning:
Do not remove the plexes that correspond to the original root disk partitions.
- Enter the following command to convert all the encapsulated volumes in the root disk back to being accessible directly through disk partitions instead of through volume devices:
# /etc/vx/bin/vxunroot
Following the removal of encapsulation, the system is rebooted from the unencapsulated root disk.