InfoScale™ 9.0 Dynamic Multi-Pathing Administrator's Guide - Solaris
- Understanding DMP
- About Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP)
 - How DMP works
 - Multi-controller ALUA support
 - Multiple paths to disk arrays
 - Device discovery
 - Disk devices
 - Disk device naming in DMP
 
 - Setting up DMP to manage native devices
- About setting up DMP to manage native devices
 - Displaying the native multi-pathing configuration
 - Migrating ZFS pools to DMP
 - Migrating to DMP from EMC PowerPath
 - Migrating to DMP from Hitachi Data Link Manager (HDLM)
 - Migrating to DMP from Solaris Multiplexed I/O (MPxIO)
 - Using Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) devices with Oracle Automatic Storage Management (ASM)
- Enabling Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) devices for use with Oracle Automatic Storage Management (ASM)
 - Removing Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) devices from the listing of Oracle Automatic Storage Management (ASM) disks
 - Migrating Oracle Automatic Storage Management (ASM) disk groups on operating system devices to Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) devices
 
 - Enabling and disabling DMP support for the ZFS root pool
 - Adding DMP devices to an existing ZFS pool or creating a new ZFS pool
 - Removing DMP support for native devices
 
 - Administering DMP
- About enabling and disabling I/O for controllers and storage processors
 - About displaying DMP database information
 - Displaying the paths to a disk
 - Setting customized names for DMP nodes
 - Managing DMP devices for the ZFS root pool
 - Administering DMP using the vxdmpadm utility
- Retrieving information about a DMP node
 - Displaying consolidated information about the DMP nodes
 - Displaying the members of a LUN group
 - Displaying paths controlled by a DMP node, controller, enclosure, or array port
 - Displaying information about controllers
 - Displaying information about enclosures
 - Displaying information about array ports
 - User-friendly CLI outputs for ALUA arrays
 - Displaying information about devices controlled by third-party drivers
 - Displaying extended device attributes
 - Suppressing or including devices from VxVM control
 - Gathering and displaying I/O statistics
 - Setting the attributes of the paths to an enclosure
 - Displaying the redundancy level of a device or enclosure
 - Specifying the minimum number of active paths
 - Displaying the I/O policy
 - Specifying the I/O policy
 - Disabling I/O for paths, controllers, array ports, or DMP nodes
 - Enabling I/O for paths, controllers, array ports, or DMP nodes
 - Renaming an enclosure
 - Configuring the response to I/O failures
 - Configuring the I/O throttling mechanism
 - Configuring Subpaths Failover Groups (SFG)
 - Configuring Low Impact Path Probing (LIPP)
 - Displaying recovery option values
 - Configuring DMP path restoration policies
 - Stopping the DMP path restoration thread
 - Displaying the status of the DMP path restoration thread
 - Configuring Array Policy Modules
 - Configuring latency threshold tunable for metro/geo array
 
 
 - Administering disks
- About disk management
 - Discovering and configuring newly added disk devices
- Partial device discovery
 - About discovering disks and dynamically adding disk arrays
 - About third-party driver coexistence
 - How to administer the Device Discovery Layer
- Listing all the devices including iSCSI
 - Listing all the Host Bus Adapters including iSCSI
 - Listing the ports configured on a Host Bus Adapter
 - Listing the targets configured from a Host Bus Adapter or a port
 - Listing the devices configured from a Host Bus Adapter and target
 - Getting or setting the iSCSI operational parameters
 - Listing all supported disk arrays
 - Excluding support for a disk array library
 - Re-including support for an excluded disk array library
 - Listing excluded disk arrays
 - Listing disks claimed in the DISKS category
 - Displaying details about an Array Support Library
 - Adding unsupported disk arrays to the DISKS category
 - Removing disks from the DISKS category
 - Foreign devices
 
 
 - VxVM coexistence with ZFS
 - Changing the disk device naming scheme
 - Discovering the association between enclosure-based disk names and OS-based disk names
 
 - Dynamic Reconfiguration of devices
- About online Dynamic Reconfiguration
 - About the DMPDR utility
 - Reconfiguring a LUN online that is under DMP control using the Dynamic Reconfiguration tool
 - Manually reconfiguring a LUN online that is under DMP control
- Overview of manually reconfiguring a LUN
 - Manually removing LUNs dynamically from an existing target ID
 - Manually adding new LUNs dynamically to a new target ID
 - About detecting target ID reuse if the operating system device tree is not cleaned up
 - Scanning an operating system device tree after adding or removing LUNs
 - Manually cleaning up the operating system device tree after removing LUNs
 - Manually replacing a host bus adapter on an M5000 server
 
 - Changing the characteristics of a LUN from the array side
 - Upgrading the array controller firmware online
 
 - Event monitoring
- About the Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) event source daemon (vxesd)
 - Fabric Monitoring and proactive error detection
 - Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) automated device discovery
 - Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) discovery of iSCSI and SAN Fibre Channel topology
 - DMP event logging
 - Starting and stopping the Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) event source daemon
 
 - Performance monitoring and tuning
- About tuning Dynamic Multi-Pathing (DMP) with templates
 - DMP tuning templates
 - Example DMP tuning template
 - Tuning a DMP host with a configuration attribute template
 - Managing the DMP configuration files
 - Resetting the DMP tunable parameters and attributes to the default values
 - DMP tunable parameters and attributes that are supported for templates
 - DMP tunable parameters
 
 - Appendix A. DMP troubleshooting
 - Appendix B. Reference
 
Multi-controller ALUA support
Multi-controller ALUA support enables:
ALUA arrays with multiple storage controllers. DMP already supported storage arrays conforming to the ALUA standard, but the support was based on the traditional dual storage controller model.
User-friendly CLI outputs which displays ALUA Asymmetric Access State (AAS) instead of legacy PRIMARY or SECONDARY states in the PATH-TYPE[M] column. For ALUA arrays, the DMP management interface displays the following ALUA states like:
Active/Optimized
Active/Non-optimized
Standby
Unavailable
TransitionInProgress
Offline
Note:
The default value of the
dmp_display_alua_statestunable is on. You can change the display mode to show legacy PRIMARY or SECONDARY path type by turning off thedmp_display_alua_statestunable.