Veritas InfoScale™ 7.4.1 Virtualization Guide - Solaris
- Section I. Overview of Veritas InfoScale Solutions used in Solaris virtualization
- Section II. Zones and Projects
- Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions support for Solaris Zones
- About Solaris Zones
- About VCS support for zones
- Overview of how VCS works with zones
- About the ContainerInfo service group attribute
- About the ContainerOpts resource type attribute
- About the ResContainerInfo resource type attribute
- Zone-aware resources
- About the Mount agent
- About networking agents
- About the Zone agent
- About configuring failovers among physical and virtual servers
- Configuring VCS in zones
- Prerequisites for configuring VCS in zones
- Deciding on the zone root location
- Performing the initial internal zone configuration
- About installing applications in a zone
- Configuring the service group for the application
- Configuring a zone resource in a failover service group with the hazonesetup utility
- Configuring zone resource in a parallel service group with the hazonesetup utility
- Configuring multiple zone resources using same VCS user for password less communication
- Modifying the service group configuration
- Verifying the zone configuration
- Synchronizing the zone configuration across cluster nodes
- Performing maintenance tasks
- Troubleshooting zones
- Configuring for physical to virtual and virtual to physical failovers - a typical setup
- Adding VxFS file systems to a non-global zone
- Mounting VxFS as lofs into a non-global zone
- Mounting VxFS directly into a non-global zone from global zone
- Mounting VxFS as VxFS inside a non-global zone
- Adding a direct mount to a zone's configuration
- Benefits of a VxFS mount in a non-global zone over VxFS mount from global zone into the non-global zone
- SFCFSHA mounts
- Concurrent I/O access in non-global zones
- Veritas Extension for Oracle Disk Manager
- Exporting VxVM volumes to a non-global zone
- About SF Oracle RAC support for Oracle RAC in a zone environment
- Supported configuration
- Known issues with supporting SF Oracle RAC in a zone environment
- CFS mount agent does not support mounting VxVM devices inside non-global zones
- Issue with VCS agents
- Stopping non-global zones configured with direct-mount file systems from outside VCS causes the corresponding zone resource to fault or go offline
- Error message displayed for PrivNIC resource if zone is not running
- Warning messages displayed when VCS restarts
- The installer log of non-global zone contains warning messages
- Issue with CFS mounts
- Configuring Solaris non-global zones for disaster recovery
- Software limitations of Storage Foundation support of non-global zones
- Administration commands are not supported in non-global zone
- VxFS file system is not supported as the root of a non-global zone
- QIO and CQIO are not supported
- Package installation in non-global zones
- Package removal with non-global zone configurations
- Root volume cannot be added to non-global zones
- Some Veritas Volume Manager operations can cause volume device names to go out of sync
- Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions support for Solaris Projects
- Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions support for Solaris Zones
- Section III. Oracle VM Server for SPARC
- Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions support for Oracle VM Server for SPARC
- About Oracle VM Server for SPARC
- Terminology for Oracle VM Server for SPARC
- Oracle VM Server for SPARC deployment models
- Benefits of deploying Storage Foundation High Availability solutions in Oracle VM server for SPARC
- Features
- Split Storage Foundation stack model
- Guest-based Storage Foundation stack model
- Layered Storage Foundation stack model
- System requirements
- Product release notes
- Product licensing
- Installing Storage Foundation in a Oracle VM Server for SPARC environment
- Exporting a Veritas volume to a guest domain from the control domain
- Provisioning storage for a guest domain
- Using Veritas Volume Manager snapshots for cloning logical domain boot disks
- Support of live migration for Solaris LDOMs with fencing configured in DMP mode
- Configuring Oracle VM Server for SPARC guest domains for disaster recovery
- Software limitations
- Known issues
- Cluster Server support for using CVM with multiple nodes in a Oracle VM Server for SPARC environment
- VCS: Configuring Oracle VM Server for SPARC for high availability
- About VCS in a Oracle VM Server for SPARC environment
- About Cluster Server configuration models in an Oracle VM Server for SPARC environment
- Cluster Server setup to fail over a logical domain on a failure of logical domain
- Cluster Server setup to fail over an Application running inside logical domain on a failure of Application
- Oracle VM Server for SPARC guest domain migration in VCS environment
- Overview of a warm migration
- Overview of a live migration
- Prerequisites before you perform domain migration
- Supported deployment models for Oracle VM Server for SPARC domain migration with VCS
- Migrating Oracle VM guest when VCS is installed in the control domain that manages the guest domain
- Migrating Oracle VM guest when VCS is installed in the control domain and single-node VCS is installed inside the guest domain to monitor applications inside the guest domain
- Migrating Oracle VM guest when VCS cluster is installed in the guest domains to manage applications for Oracle VM Server for SPARC version 2.1 and above
- Migrating Oracle VM guest when VCS cluster is installed in the guest domains to manage applications for Oracle VM Server for SPARC version 2.0
- About configuring VCS for Oracle VM Server for SPARC with multiple I/O domains
- Configuring VCS to manage a Logical Domain using services from multiple I/O domains
- A typical setup for a Logical Domain with multiple I/O services
- Identify supported storage and network services
- Determine the number of nodes to form VCS cluster
- Install and configure VCS inside the control domain and alternate I/O domain
- Configuring storage services
- Configure storage service groups
- Configure network service groups
- Configure a service group to monitor services from multiple I/O domains
- Configure the AlternateIO resource
- Configure the service group for a Logical Domain
- Failover scenarios
- Recommendations while configuring VCS and Oracle VM Server for SPARC with multiple I/O domains
- Sample VCS configuration for AlternateIO resource configured as a fail over type
- Configuring VCS on logical domains to manage applications using services from multiple I/O domains
- SF Oracle RAC support for Oracle VM Server for SPARC environments
- About deploying SF Oracle RAC in Oracle VM Server for SPARC environments
- Sample configuration scenarios
- Preparing to deploy SF Oracle RAC in logical domain environments
- SF Oracle RAC with Oracle RAC database on I/O domains of two hosts
- SF Oracle RAC with Oracle RAC database on guest domains of two hosts
- SF Oracle RAC with Oracle RAC database on guest domains of single host
- SF Oracle RAC with Oracle RAC database on I/O domain and guest domain of single host
- Support for live migration in FSS environments
- Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions support for Oracle VM Server for SPARC
- Section IV. Reference
Cluster Volume Manager in the control domain for providing high availability
The main advantage of clusters is protection against hardware failure. Should the primary node fail or otherwise become unavailable, applications can continue to run by transferring their execution to standby nodes in the cluster.
CVM can be deployed in the control domains of multiple physical hosts running Oracle VM Server for SPARC, providing high availability of the control domain.
Figure: CVM configuration in an Oracle VM Server for SPARC environment illustrates a CVM configuration.
If a control domain encounters a hardware or software failure causing the domain to shut down, all applications running in the guest domains on that host are also affected. These applications can be failed over and restarted inside guests running on another active node of the cluster.
Caution:
As such applications running in the guests may resume or time out based on the individual application settings. The user must decide if the application must be restarted on another guest on the failed-over control domain. There is a potential data corruption scenario if the underlying shared volumes get accessed from both of the guests simultaneously.
Shared volumes and their snapshots can be used as a backing store for guest domains.
Note:
The ability to take online snapshots is currently inhibited because the file system in the guest cannot coordinate with the VxVM drivers in the control domain.
Make sure that the volume whose snapshot is being taken is closed before the snapshot is taken.
The following example procedure shows how snapshots of shared volumes are administered in such an environment. In the example, datavol1 is a shared volume being used by guest domain ldom1 and c0d1s2 is the front end for this volume visible from ldom1.
To take a snapshot of datavol1
- Unmount any VxFS file systems that exist on c0d1s0.
- Stop and unbind ldom1:
primary# ldm stop ldom1 primary# ldm unbind ldom1
This ensures that all the file system metadata is flushed down to the backend volume, datavol1.
- Create a snapshot of datavol1.
See the Storage Foundation Administrator's Guide for information on creating and managing third-mirror break-off snapshots.
- Once the snapshot operation is complete, rebind and restart ldom1.
primary# ldm bind ldom1 primary# ldm start ldom1
- Once ldom1 boots, remount the VxFS file system on c0d1s0.
Note:
If CVM is configured inside the guest domain and the guest domain is planned for migration, perform this step:
Set the value of the LLT peerinact parameter to sufficiently high value on all nodes in the cluster. You set the value to very high value so that while the logical domain is in migration, the system is not thrown out of the cluster by the other members in the cluster.
If the CVM stack is unconfigured, the applications can stop.
See the Cluster Server Administrator's Guide for LLT tunable parameter configuration instructions.