adding new volumes to a DG that has a RVG under VCS cluster
hi, i am having a VCS cluster with GCO and VVR. on each node of the cluster i have a DG with an associated RVG, this RVG contains 11 data volume for Oracle database, these volumes are getting full so i am going to add new disks to the DG and create new volumes and mount points to be used by the Oracle Database. my question:can i add the disks to the DG and volumes to RVGwhile the database is UP and the replication is ON? if the answer is no, please let me know what should be performed on the RVG and rlinkto add these volumes also what to perform on the database resource group to not failover. thanks in advance.Solved4.4KViews0likes14CommentsSmartIO blueprint and deployment guide for Solaris platform
SmartIO for Solaris was introduced in Storage Foundation HA 6.2. SmartIO enables data efficiency on your SSDs through I/O caching. Using SmartIO to improve efficiency, you can optimize the cost per Input/Output Operations Per Second (IOPS). SmartIO supports both read and write-back caching for the VxFS file systems that are mounted on VxVM volumes, in multiple caching modes and configurations. SmartIO also supports block-level read caching for applications running on VxVM volumes. The SmartIO Blueprint for Solaris give an overview of the benefits of using SmartIO technology, the underlying technology, and the essential configuration steps to configure it. In the SmartIO Deployment Guide for Solaris, multiple deployment scenarios of SmartIO and how to manage them are covered in detail. Let us know if you have any questions or feedback!456Views3likes0CommentsSymantec ApplicationHA 6.2: Monitoring applications with Intelligent Monitoring Framework
Symantec ApplicationHA 6.2: Monitoring applications with Intelligent Monitoring Framework Introduced in this release, the Intelligent Monitoring Framework (IMF) feature improves ApplicationHA efficiency with: Faster detection of application faults Ability to monitor a large number of application components, with minimal effect on performance IMF is automatically enabled, if you use the Symantec High Availability Wizard to configure an application for monitoring. The feature was introduced in ApplicationHA 6.1 for Windows. In ApplicationHA 6.2, it is extended to AIX, Linux, and Solaris. For details, see the following topics: How intelligent monitoring works:AIX,Linux (KVM), Linux (VMware), andSolaris. Enabling debug logs for IMF:AIX,Linux (KVM),Linux (VMware), andSolaris. Gathering IMF information for support analysis:AIX,Linux (KVM),Linux (VMware), andSolaris. This release introduces IMF support for the folloing ApplicationHA agents: Apache HTTP Server DB2 Database (not applicable to Oracle VM Server for SPARC environment) Oracle Database Generic (custom) applications The following topics describe how to use the Symantec High Availability wizard to configure each supported application for IMF-enabled monitoring: Configuring application monitoring for Apache:AIX,Linux (KVM),Linux (VMware), andSolaris. Configuring application monitoring for DB2:AIX,Linux (KVM),and(Linux (VMware). Configuring application monitoring for Oracle:AIX,Linux (KVM),(Linux (VMware), andSolaris. Configuring application monitoring for generic applications:AIX,Linux (KVM),(Linux (VMware), andSolaris. You can use Symantec Cluster Server (VCS) commands to perform more advanced IMF actions. ApplicationHA and VCS documentation is available on the SORTwebsite.467Views2likes0CommentsSFHA Solutions 6.2 (Solaris): Dynamic application failover in a virtual environment
The AdaptiveHA feature was introduced in Storage Foundation and High Availability (SFHA) 6.1. Beginning in this release, Symantec Cluster Server (VCS) supports dynamic selection of target nodes for a virtual machine service group (VMSG). In this release, this feature is supported only on Oracle VM Server for SPARC. When you install VCS, this feature is enabled by default. In a VMSG, you do not need to include CPU, Memory, and Swap values when specifying the Load because the Load is auto-populated by aggregating resource utilization. VCS monitors and forecasts the available capacity of the physical server in terms of SCPU and SMem.SCPU and SMem are resource-level meters. If you set the FailOverPolicy service group attribute to BiggestAvailable, VCS dynamically selects the biggest available target physical server to bring the VMSG online, or switch or failover the VMSG. For more information about dynamic application failover in a virtual environment, see: About defining failover policies About AdaptiveHA Prerequisites for enabling resource level metering for a virtual machine service group Disabling metering Re-enabling metering The following table lists the attributes that are modified or newly introduced for this feature. Cluster attributes HostAvailableMeters HostMeters MeterControl MeterUnit MeterWeight Resource attribute Utilization Resource type attributes AvailableMeters MeterEnabled MeterRegList MeterRetryLimit Meters MeterTimeout Service group attribute Load System attributes ServerAvailableCapacity ServerAvailableForecast ServerCapacity ServerReservedCapacity Symantec Storage Foundation and High Availability documentation for other releases and platforms can be found on the SORT website.542Views0likes0CommentsSFW 6.1: Support for Cluster Volume Manager (CVM)
Cluster Volume Manager (CVM) is a new feature introduced in Symantec Storage Foundation for Windows (SFW) 6.1. CVM is a new way to manage storage in a clustered environment. With CVM, failover capabilities are available at the volume level. Volumes under CVM allow exclusive write access across multiple nodes of a cluster. In a Microsoft Failover Clustering environment, you can create clustered storage out of shared disks, which lets you share volume configurations and enable fast failover support at the volume level. Each node recognizes the same logical volume layout and, more importantly, the same state of all volume resources. Each node has the same logical view of the disk configuration as well as any changes to this view. Note: CVM (and related cluster-shared disk groups) is supported only in a Microsoft Hyper-V environment. It is not supported for a physical environment. CVM is based on a "Master and Slave" architecture pattern. One node of the cluster acts as a Master, while the rest of the nodes are Slaves. The Master node maintains the configuration information. The Master node uses Global Atomic Broadcast (GAB) and Low Latency Transport (LLT) to transport its configuration data. Each time a Master node fails, a new Master node is selected from the surviving nodes. With CVM, storage services on a per virtual machine (VM) basis for Hyper-V virtual machines protects VM data from single LUN/array failures, helping maintain availability of the critical VM data. CVM helps you achieve the following: Live migration of Hyper-V virtual machines, which is supported with the following: Virtual Hard Disks (VHDs) of virtual machine lying on one or more SFW volumes Coexistence with Cluster Shared Volumes (CSV) Mapping of one cluster-shared volume to one virtual machine only Seamless migration between arrays Migration of volumes (hosting VHDs) from any array to another array Easy administration using the Storage Migration Wizard Moving of the selected virtual machines’ storage to new target LUNs Copying of only those NTFS blocks that contain user data using SmartMove Availability of all the volume management functionality The following are the main features supported in CVM: New cluster-shared disk group (CSDG) and cluster-shared volumes Disk group accessibility from multiple nodes in a cluster where volumes remain exclusively accessible from only one node in the cluster Failover at a volume level All the SFW storage management features, such as: SmartIO Thin provisioning and storage reclamation Symantec Dynamic Multi-Pathing for Windows (DMPW) Site-aware allocation using the site-aware read policy Storage migration Standard features for fault tolerance: mirroring across arrays, hot relocation, dirty region logging (DRL), and dynamic relayout Microsoft Failover Clustering integrated I/O fencing New Volume Manager Shared Volume resource for Microsoft failover cluster New GUI elements in VEA related to the new disk group and volume CVM does not support: Active/Passive (A/P) arrays Storage migration on volumes that are offline in the cluster Volume replication on CVM volumes using Symantec Storage Foundation Volume Replicator For information aboutconfiguring a CVM cluster, refer to the quick start guide at: www.symantec.com/docs/DOC8119 The Storage Foundation for Windows documentation for other releases and platforms can be found on the SORT website.1.1KViews1like0CommentsSFHA Solutions 6.1: New Virtual Business Services features
The following Virtual Business Services (VBS) features are available in the 6.1 release: VBS can remain operational in spite of a tier failure Ability to run custom script on service groups VBS status tracking This article provides a brief overview of the new features. You can access the Virtual Business Service –Availability User’s Guide for additional information on the features and the steps to implement the new features. VBS can remain operational in spite of a tier failure Before the VBS 6.1 release, the VBS start and stop operations did not complete if any of its tier had failed. This feature allows you to proceed with the operation in spite of the failed tiers in the VBS. Ability to run custom script on service groups This feature enables you to run a customized script that performs the required actions on a parent tier when a child tier recovers. This allows the parent tier to run without any interruptions while the child tier recovers and its dependency is reestablished seamlessly. You can configure the custom script when you configure service group dependencies in a VBS. To configure a custom script, see: Custom script execution Configuring custom script execution for soft dependencies Configuring dependencies for a virtual business service VBS operations status tracking This feature makes the VBS operations more transparent and easier to track from the command line. You can track the status and details of operations (tasks) performed on virtual business services and the corresponding actions taken on constituent tiers. This is especially useful in virtual business services with a large number of tiers and dependencies. For more information on VBS status tracking, see: Tracking VBS operations Tracking information about tasks performed on a VBS Tracking information about tier-level sub-tasks performed as a part of a VBS task Tracking step-by-step progress of a VBS task Symantec Storage Foundation and High Availability documentation for other releases and platforms can be found on the SORT website.881Views0likes0CommentsAdding Shared Storage - Possible Inconsistancy?
Hi Folks, Can you clarify my understandinging? I have added an extra disk into a server, however when I view it frommylittleexpensiveserver02 I get a different view see below DEVICE TYPE DISK GROUP STATUS disk_0 auto:none - - online invalid fas31400_1 auto:cdsdisk netbackup02 netbackup online thinrclm nohotuse fas31400_2 auto:cdsdisk netbackup01 netbackup online thinrclm nohotuse fas31400_3 auto:cdsdisk netbackup03 netbackup online thinrclm fas31400_4 auto - - error [root@server01 ~]# DEVICE TYPE DISK GROUP STATUS disk_0 auto:none - - online invalid fas31400_1 auto:cdsdisk - (netbackup) online thinrclm fas31400_2 auto:cdsdisk - (netbackup) online thinrclm fas31400_3 auto - - error fas31400_4 auto:cdsdisk - (netbackup) online thinrclm [root@server02 ~]# group resource system message --------------- -------------------- -------------------- -------------------- server01 RUNNING server02 RUNNING nbu server01 ONLINE nbu server02 OFFLINE ------------------------------------------------------------------------- nbu_dg server01 ONLINE nbu_dg server02 OFFLINE nbu_ip server01 ONLINE nbu_ip server02 OFFLINE nbu_mount server01 ONLINE ------------------------------------------------------------------------- nbu_mount server02 OFFLINE nbu_server server01 ONLINE nbu_server server02 OFFLINE nbu_CISN-STOR-UNIX_proxy server01 ONLINE nbu_CISN-STOR-UNIX_proxy server02 ONLINE ------------------------------------------------------------------------- nbu_bond0_proxy server01 ONLINE nbu_bond0_proxy server02 ONLINE nbu_ie1csnap002_proxy server01 ONLINE nbu_ie1csnap002_proxy server02 ONLINE nbu_vol server01 ONLINE ------------------------------------------------------------------------- nbu_vol server02 OFFLINE I dont understand why I am seeing different views of the storage unless server02 is looking at it down a different scsi bus? Any help appreciated --Steve920Views1like4CommentsSFHA Solutions 6.1: Using AdaptiveHA to select the largest system for failover
Symantec Cluster Server (VCS) service groups are virtual containers that manage groups of resources required to run a managed application. The FailOverPolicy service group attribute governs how VCS determines the target system for failover. For more information, see About service groups Service group attributes Cluster attributes About defining failover policies When you set FailOverPolicy to BiggestAvailable, AdaptiveHA enables VCS to dynamically select the cluster node with the most available resources to fail over an application. VCS monitors and forecasts the unused capacity of systems in terms of CPU, Memory, and Swap, to select the largest available system. If you set FailOverPolicy to BiggestAvailable for a service group, you must specify the load values in terms such as, 1 CPU, 1GB RAM, and 1GB SWAP, in the Load service group attribute.You only need to specify those resources that are used by the service group. For example, if the service group does not use the Swap resource, only specify the CPU and Memory resources in the Load attribute. Note: The Load FailOverPolicy isbeingdeprecated after this release. Symantec recommends that you change to theBiggestAvailableFailOverPolicy for enabling AdaptiveHA. For more information, see About AdaptiveHA Enabling AdaptiveHA for a service group If you upgrade VCS manually, ensure that you update the VCS configuration file (main.cf) to enable AdaptiveHA. When you upgrade from an older version of VCS using the installer, the main.cf file gets automatically upgraded. For more information, seeManually upgrading the VCS configuration file to the latest version VCS documentation for other platforms and releases can be found on theSORTwebsite.489Views2likes0CommentsSFHA Solutions 6.0.1: About Veritas Cluster Server service groups
Veritas Cluster Server service groups are virtual containers that manage groups of resources required to run a managed application. You can create multiple service groups on a single node and they can function independently of each other. Moreover, you can also assign dependencies among the service groups depending on the complexity of your managed application. For more information, see About service groups. VCS supports three types of service groups: Failover service groups are configured for applications that do not support simultaneous access from multiple systems. A failover service group requires fewer resources but you must factor in some down time when the service group fails over to another node. Parallel service groups are configured if applications can run on multiple nodes without data corruption and also allow simultaneous access from multiple machines. A parallel service group is especially useful for high availability applications as there is no down time. A hybrid service group is for replicated data clusters and is a combination of the failover and parallel service groups. It behaves as a failover group within a system zone and as a parallel group across system zones. A hybrid service group cannot fail over across system zones. VCS allows a switch operation on a hybrid group only if both systems are within the same system zone. If no systems exist within a zone for failover, VCS calls the nofailover trigger on the lowest numbered node. Hybrid service groups adhere to the same rules governing group dependencies as do parallel groups. For more information on failover service groups, parallel service groups, and hybrid service groups, see: About failover service groups About parallel service groups About hybrid service groups For more information on campus clusters, see Setting up campus clusters. VCS components are configured using attributes. Attributes contain data about the cluster, systems, service groups, resources, resource types, agent, and heartbeats if you use global clusters. Moreover, the value assigned to the parallel attribute determines whether the service group is failover, parallel, or hybrid. For more information, see About VCS attributes and Service group attributes. Administering service groups You can administer service groups using the Java console, VCS command line interface, or Veritas Operations Manager (VOM). Symantec recommends using VOM to manage Cluster Server environments. The following are the links to the topics addressing administration of service groups using either method. Components for administering VCS About Veritas Operations Manager Administering service groups from Veritas Operations Manager (VOM) To administer service groups from VOM, refer to Managing service groups. Administering service groups from the command line Adding and deleting service groups Bringing service groups online Taking service groups offline Switching service groups Freezing and unfreezing service groups Enabling and disabling service groups Clearing faulted resources in a service group Flushing service groups Linking and unlinking service groups Administering service groups from the Java Console Adding a service group Deleting a service group Bringing a service group online Taking a service group offline Switching a service group Freezing a service group Unfreezing a service group Enabling a service group Disabling a service group Autoenabling a service group Flushing a service group Linking service groups Unlinking service groups Veritas Cluster Server documentation for other platforms and releases can be found on the SORTwebsite.1KViews1like0CommentsSFHA Solutions 6.0.1: About managing Virtual Business Services using VOM and the VBS command line interface
Virtual Business Services (VBS) is a feature that represents a multi-tier application as a single consolidated entity in Veritas Operations Manager (VOM). It builds on the high availability and disaster recovery features provided by Symantec products, such as, Veritas Cluster Server (VCS) and Symantec ApplicationHA. VBS enables administrators to improve operational efficiency of managing a heterogeneous multi-tier application. You can control VBS from the VOM graphical user interface and the VBS command line interface (CLI). When you install SFHA, the VBS installation packages, VRTSvbs and VRTSsfmh, are automatically installed on the nodes. From the VOM interface, you can define a VBS that consists of service groups from multiple clusters. You can also use the VBS CLI to performcommand line operations on that VBS. The clustering solutions that are offered today can only manage applications running on the same operating system. So, deploying the clustering solutions for a multi-tier, cross-platform setup can be difficult to manage. VBS can work across a heterogeneous environment to enable IT organizations to ensure that the applications across tiers can be made highly available. A typical multi-tier environment comprises of a database on a UNIX server, applications running in a Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM) on a Linux server, and a Web server on a VMware virtual machine. VBS works across the heterogeneous environment to communicate between local operating systems to see the end-to-end state of multi-tier applications and to control start and stop ordering of the applications. With VBS there are relationships between tiers that you can customize to fit your environment. You can set up policies for the events that result in a failure or for the specific events that happen on tiers. For example, you can set up a policy that restarts the application service groups when the database service group fails over to another node. For more information about VBS features, components, and workflow, see: Features of Virtual Business Services Sample Virtual Business Service configuration Virtualization support in Virtual Business Services About the Veritas Operations Manager policy checks for Virtual Business Services About the Virtual Business Services components Virtual Business Services workflow Support matrix for VBS Prerequisites for using VBS Availability Add-on You can configure and manage a VBS created in VOM by using the VOM VBS Availability Add-on utility. You can also control a VBS from the VBS CLI, but you cannot create a VBS from the VBS CLI. The VBS Availability Add-on utility enables you to: Start or stop service groups associated to a VBS. Establish service group relationships that decide the order in which service groups are brought online or taken offline. Decide the reaction of application components in each tier when an event fault occurs on a tier. Recover a VBS from a remote site when a disaster occurs. For more information about installing the VBS add-on, packages, and configuring a VBS using VOM, see: Installing Veritas Operations Manager Virtual Business Services Availability Add-on Installing the VRTSvbs package using Veritas Operations Manager Configuring a Virtual Business Service For more information on managing VBS using VOM and the VBS command-line, see: Operations using Veritas Operations Manager and command line Starting and stopping Virtual Business Services Viewing the overview of a Virtual Business Service Viewing the Virtual Business Service status from the command line Enabling fault management for a Virtual Business Service Disabling fault management for a Virtual Business Service Fault management overview For more information on VBS commands, troubleshooting issues, and recovery operations, see: Virtual Business Services commands Troubleshooting Virtual Business Services Virtual Business Services log files For more information on managing VBS using VOM and the VBS command line, see: Virtual Business Service-Availability User's Guide Virtual Business Services documentation for other SFHA releases can be found on the SORT website.597Views1like0Comments