Storage Foundation for Sybase ASE CE 7.4.1 Configuration and Upgrade Guide - Linux
- Section I. Configuring SF Sybase ASE CE- Preparing to configure SF Sybase CE
- Configuring SF Sybase CE- About configuring SF Sybase CE
- Configuring the SF Sybase CE components using the script-based installer- Configuring the SF Sybase CE cluster- Configuring the cluster name
- Configuring private heartbeat links
- Configuring the virtual IP of the cluster
- Configuring SF Sybase CE in secure mode
- Configuring a secure cluster node by node
- Adding VCS users
- Configuring SMTP email notification
- Configuring SNMP trap notification
- Configuring global clusters
 
 
- Configuring the SF Sybase CE cluster
 
- Configuring SF Sybase CE clusters for data integrity- Setting up disk-based I/O fencing using installer
 
- Performing an automated SF Sybase CE configuration
- Performing an automated I/O fencing configuration using response files
- Configuring a cluster under VCS control using a response file
 
- Section II. Post-installation and configuration tasks
- Section III. Upgrade of SF Sybase CE- Planning to upgrade SF Sybase CE
- Performing a full upgrade of SF Sybase CE using the product installer
- Performing an automated full upgrade of SF Sybase CE using response files
- Performing a phased upgrade of SF Sybase CE- About phased upgrade
- Performing a phased upgrade of SF Sybase CE from version 6.2.1 and later release- Step 1: Performing pre-upgrade tasks on the first half of the cluster
- Step 2: Upgrading the first half of the cluster
- Step 3: Performing pre-upgrade tasks on the second half of the cluster
- Step 4: Performing post-upgrade tasks on the first half of the cluster
- Step 5: Upgrading the second half of the cluster
- Step 6: Performing post-upgrade tasks on the second half of the cluster
 
 
- Performing a rolling upgrade of SF Sybase CE
- Performing post-upgrade tasks
 
- Section IV. Installation and upgrade of Sybase ASE CE- Installing, configuring, and upgrading Sybase ASE CE- Before installing Sybase ASE CE
- Preparing for local mount point on VxFS for Sybase ASE CE binary installation
- Preparing for shared mount point on CFS for Sybase ASE CE binary installation
- Installing Sybase ASE CE software
- Preparing to create a Sybase ASE CE cluster
- Creating the Sybase ASE CE cluster
- Preparing to configure the Sybase instances under VCS control
- Configuring a Sybase ASE CE cluster under VCS control using the SF Sybase CE installer
- Upgrading Sybase ASE CE
 
 
- Installing, configuring, and upgrading Sybase ASE CE
- Section V. Adding and removing nodes- Adding a node to SF Sybase CE clusters- About adding a node to a cluster
- Before adding a node to a cluster
- Adding the node to a cluster manually- Starting Veritas Volume Manager (VxVM) on the new node
- Configuring cluster processes on the new node
- Setting up the node to run in secure mode
- Starting fencing on the new node
- Configuring Cluster Volume Manager (CVM) and Cluster File System (CFS) on the new node
- After adding the new node
- Configuring the ClusterService group for the new node
 
- Adding a node to a cluster using the Veritas InfoScale installer
- Adding the new instance to the Sybase ASE CE cluster
 
- Removing a node from SF Sybase CE clusters
 
- Adding a node to SF Sybase CE clusters
- Section VI. Configuration of disaster recovery environments
- Section VII. Installation reference- Appendix A. Installation scripts
- Appendix B. Sample installation and configuration values
- Appendix C. Tunable files for installation- About setting tunable parameters using the installer or a response file
- Setting tunables for an installation, configuration, or upgrade
- Setting tunables with no other installer-related operations
- Setting tunables with an un-integrated response file
- Preparing the tunables file
- Setting parameters for the tunables file
- Tunables value parameter definitions
 
- Appendix D. Configuration files- About sample main.cf files
- Sample main.cf files for Sybase ASE CE configurations- Sample main.cf for a basic Sybase ASE CE cluster configuration under VCS control with shared mount point on CFS for Sybase binary installation
- Sample main.cf for a basic Sybase ASE CE cluster configuration with local mount point on VxFS for Sybase binary installation
- Sample main.cf for a primary CVM VVR site
- Sample main.cf for a secondary CVM VVR site
 
 
- Appendix E. Configuring the secure shell or the remote shell for communications
- Appendix F. High availability agent information
 
Upgrading disk layout versions
In this release, you can create and mount only file systems with disk layout version 11, 12, 13, 14 and 15. You can local mount disk layout version 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10 to upgrade to a later disk layout version.
Note:
If you plan to use 64-bit quotas, you must upgrade to the disk layout version 10 or later.
Disk layout version 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10 are deprecated and you cannot cluster mount an existing file system that has any of these versions. To upgrade a cluster file system from any of these deprecated versions, you must local mount the file system and then upgrade it using the vxupgrade utility or the vxfsconvert utility.
The vxupgrade utility enables you to upgrade the disk layout while the file system is online. However, the vxfsconvert utility enables you to upgrade the disk layout while the file system is offline.
If you use the vxupgrade utility, you must incrementally upgrade the disk layout versions. However, you can directly upgrade to a desired version, using the vxfsconvert utility.
For example, to upgrade from disk layout version 6 to a disk layout version 11, using the vxupgrade utility:
# vxupgrade -n 7 /mnt # vxupgrade -n 8 /mnt # vxupgrade -n 9 /mnt # vxupgrade -n 10 /mnt # vxupgrade -n 11 /mnt
See the vxupgrade(1M) manual page.
See the vxfsconvert(1M) manual page.
Note:
Veritas recommends that before you begin to upgrade the product version, you must upgrade the existing file system to the highest supported disk layout version. Once a disk layout version has been upgraded, it is not possible to downgrade to the previous version.
Use the following command to check your disk layout version:
# fstyp -v /dev/vx/dsk/dg1/vol1 | grep -i version