04-26-2013 12:24 PM
Hi All,
I am interested in learning storage foundation for unix / solaris and windows. I have discussed with my fellow colleagues at work to get some understanding of the product itself and have seen some videos too.
Can someone guide me on setting up a lab for storage foundation, my understanding is :
Storage Foundation is a Suite of products, which includes :
Veritas filesystem
Veritas Volume Manager
Veritas Volume Replicator
What is Storage Foundation HA ? Is it a software or a suite with the above products and HA funcionality?
Also, any tips in learning this product and having a play around testing will be really helpful
Thanks
Solved! Go to Solution.
04-26-2013 01:53 PM
I would create a vxfs filesystem on a Veritas volume (in a diskgroup) as this is what you want to test.
Yes, VCS joins two node in a veritas cluster
What you test depends on what you want to get out of the product - http://www.symantec.com/storage-foundation gives a good overview of the features, but seems to be missing mentioning the ability to mirror across arrays in conjuction with site awareness feature.
I would also recommend installing VOM in another VM which is a centralised management tool which is installed on a Windows/Linux/Unix server such as Windows 2003/2008 or RedHat Enterprise Linux and you access VOM via a web browser on a client desktop. VOM can manage VCS and SF nodes installed on Windows, Linux and UNIX.
Mike
04-26-2013 12:34 PM
Yes SFHA adds HA funcionality - i.e VCS
Veritas Volume Replicator (VVR) is part of Veritas Volume Manager (VxVM), but requires an additional license.
You can setup this up in VMWare using Linux - you can learn VxVM and Vxfs (filesystem) on one node and you can learn a fair bit if VCS with one node, but 2 nodes are better. VVR requires 2 nodes and VVR will replicate storage over IP.
From 5.1 onwards an eval license for 60 days is built-in.
Mike
04-26-2013 12:50 PM
Thanks Mike, for a prompt response - Much appreciated.
So, I have already setup 2 x Solaris 11 Virtual Machines on ESX 5.1 ( i have got around 48GB RAM on my ESX cluster) I have allocated 4GB RAM to each Solaris 11 VM.
I have used "Think Disks" for the VM's - is that OK ?
Now as ZFS is the filesystem on Solaris 11, so I should be adding another DISK to each of the VM's and then upload the binaries / installer I will download for storage foundation, then follow the install guide for solaris ?
Once the additional disk is mounted, shall i create a zfs filesystem or a vertias file system (vxfs) ?
Also, when they say Storage Foundation HA - they refer to Veritas Cluster Server, which basically joins two node in a veritas cluster ?
Sorry - I have never used these products and given there complexity I want to get a good grip on it's understanding, deployment and maintenance !!
Thanks again for your assistance !!
EDIT : Also, once I have successfully installed Veritas Volume Manager, Veritas filesystem - what will you suggest to test and or do as a lab to get to know the benefits of this product ?
04-26-2013 01:53 PM
I would create a vxfs filesystem on a Veritas volume (in a diskgroup) as this is what you want to test.
Yes, VCS joins two node in a veritas cluster
What you test depends on what you want to get out of the product - http://www.symantec.com/storage-foundation gives a good overview of the features, but seems to be missing mentioning the ability to mirror across arrays in conjuction with site awareness feature.
I would also recommend installing VOM in another VM which is a centralised management tool which is installed on a Windows/Linux/Unix server such as Windows 2003/2008 or RedHat Enterprise Linux and you access VOM via a web browser on a client desktop. VOM can manage VCS and SF nodes installed on Windows, Linux and UNIX.
Mike
04-28-2013 12:58 AM
Hi rihatum,
Install and practise Storage Foundation only is recommended for you for entry level understanding the product. It's generally a more powerful and functional product for volume and filesystem.
You can start with creat, recover, modify volume groups, volume mirrors(with/without GCO), snapshot, filesystem. And you could understand the product by having LVM knowledges if you do.
VCS is a cluster product which could say more powerful in high availability. Usually it needs VxVM resource in it for application usage.