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Virtual Business Services - Availability User's Guide
Last Published:
2024-12-04
Product(s):
InfoScale & Storage Foundation (8.0.2)
Platform: Windows,Solaris,Linux,AIX
- Overview of Virtual Business Services
- About Virtual Business Services
- Features of Virtual Business Services
- Sample virtual business service configuration
- VMware virtualization support prerequisites for Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager Virtual Business Services
- About the Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager policy checks for Virtual Business Services
- Supported operating systems for Virtual Business Services
- Internationalization (I18N) support
- Installing and configuring Virtual Business Services
- About Virtual Business Services components
- Virtual Business Services workflow
- Support matrix for VBS
- Prerequisites for Configuring VBS
- Installing the Virtual Business Services package using Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager
- Configuring a virtual business service
- Considerations for creating a virtual business service
- Creating virtual business services
- Editing virtual business services
- Deleting virtual business services
- Virtual Business Services daemon
- Communication among VBS daemons
- Auto discovery of VBS Daemon on each cluster
- Configuring auto discovery for each cluster in VBS
- Configuring dependencies for a virtual business service
- Configure Virtual Business Service dependencies - Specify service group dependencies panel options
- Link Service Groups panel options
- Unlink Service Groups panel options
- Specify Script Execution details panel options
- Configure Virtual Business Service dependencies - Specify VMs start or stop panel options
- Managing Microsoft Failover Clustering from VBS
- Uninstalling the VRTSvbs package
- Uninstalling VBS from Microsoft Failover Clusters
- Virtual Business Services operations
- Starting and stopping Virtual Business Services
- Viewing the information on a Virtual Business Service
- Viewing Virtual Business Services in the data center
- Viewing the service groups associated with Virtual Business Services
- Viewing the clusters associated with virtual business services
- Viewing the virtual business services status from the command line
- Viewing the information on a virtual business service in the Server perspective
- Viewing the dependency associated with Virtual Business Services in the Server perspective
- Viewing the dependency associated with Virtual Business Services
- Viewing the properties of a virtual business service
- Viewing application recovery point and startup time of a VBS
- Tracking VBS operations
- Logs of a virtual business service
- Fault management for a virtual business service
- Virtual Business Services security
- Fault management in Virtual Business Services
- Disaster recovery in Virtual Business Services
- About disaster recovery for Virtual Business Services
- Prerequisites
- Sample disaster recovery configuration
- Disaster recovery alerts
- Disaster recovery limitations
- About the disaster recovery plan
- Bringing up Virtual Business Services at the DR site
- Performing planned migration of virtual business services
- Concurrency violation
- Upgrading Virtual Business Services
- Appendix A. Command reference
- Appendix B. Troubleshooting and recovery
- Appendix C. Known issues and limitations
- Known issues and limitations
- Complete cluster fault is not handled
- Fault propagation for shared service groups
- Propagation of multiple child fault or recovery events may be missed if fault action on parent service group is in progress (2745323)
- ClusterService group having vbsapp resource does not link vbsapp to newly created gcoip (2713002)
- CLI command returns incorrect state of the virtual machine in VBS (2789621)
- VBS dependencies get deleted during the upgrade of SFWHA configured in a VBS [2832599]
- VBS start operation may fail from Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager when VM start/stop is enabled [2848118]
- Clusters running on SFWHA 5.1SP1 or 5.1SP2 configured with virtual IP addresses cannot migrate to VIP-less communication (2845412)
- Pop up showing error message during VBS uninstallation on Windows remains hidden behind other windows (2872716)
- Events generated for VBSD lack correct description (2833160)
- DR fails to start in VBS 8.0.2 or lower for VBS formed of global service groups [3240419]
- Installation or upgrade of VRTSsfmh or VRTSvbs package from Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager may fail if publisher is set (3306997)
- Operation performed on service groups with disabled resources remains stuck or fails by timing out [3280718, 3288725]
- Recover and takeover messages are not displayed during DR of a VBS with a global service group [3315435]
- Known issues and limitations
Security mechanism for cluster C2
When the VBS daemon on C2 is started, it reads the contents of the configuration file on the host to determine the clusters that are allowed to communicate with C2. As VBS B consists of C2 and C3, the VBS daemon determines that C3 can communicate with C2. However, C2 is part of both VBS A and VBS B. So, it can also communicate with C1, which is part of VBS A.
Hence, the VBS daemon adds the Cluster IDs of C1, C2, and C3 to the access control file, $VBS_HOME/web/admin/.xprtlaccess.
# cat /opt/VRTSvbs/web/admin/.xprtlaccess
<ClusterId of C1>@vbs_domain@<Name of VIOM CMS>.vx:user
<ClusterId of C2>@vbs_domain@<Name of VIOM CMS>.vx:user
<ClusterId of C3>@vbs_domain@<Name of VIOM CMS>.vx:user
No external hosts or clusters can pretend to be one of C1, C2, or C3 because they do not have the credential.