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          Storage Foundation 7.4.1 Administrator's Guide - Linux
                Last Published: 
				2019-09-25
                
              
              
                Product(s): 
				InfoScale & Storage Foundation (7.4.1)
                 
              
              
                Platform: Linux
              
            - Section I. Introducing Storage Foundation
- Overview of Storage Foundation
 - How Dynamic Multi-Pathing works
 - How Veritas Volume Manager works
- How Veritas Volume Manager works with the operating system
 - How Veritas Volume Manager handles storage management
 - Volume layouts in Veritas Volume Manager
 - Online relayout
 - Volume resynchronization
 - Hot-relocation
 - Dirty region logging
 - Volume snapshots
 - Support for atomic writes
 - FastResync
 - Volume sets
 - How VxVM handles hardware clones or snapshots
 - Volume encryption
 
 - How Veritas File System works
 
 - Section II. Provisioning storage
- Provisioning new storage
 - Advanced allocation methods for configuring storage
- Customizing allocation behavior
- Setting default values for vxassist
 - Using rules to make volume allocation more efficient
 - Understanding persistent attributes
 - Customizing disk classes for allocation
 - Specifying allocation constraints for vxassist operations with the use clause and the require clause
 - Management of the use and require type of persistent attributes
 
 - Creating volumes of a specific layout
 - Creating a volume on specific disks
 - Creating volumes on specific media types
 - Creating encrypted volumes
 - Changing the encryption password
 - Viewing encrypted volumes
 - Automating startup for encrypted volumes
 - Configuring a Key Management Server
 - Specifying ordered allocation of storage to volumes
 - Site-based allocation
 - Changing the read policy for mirrored volumes
 
 - Customizing allocation behavior
 - Creating and mounting VxFS file systems
- Creating a VxFS file system
 - Converting a file system to VxFS
 - Mounting a VxFS file system
- log mount option
 - delaylog mount option
 - tmplog mount option
 - logiosize mount option
 - nodatainlog mount option
 - blkclear mount option
 - mincache mount option
 - convosync mount option
 - ioerror mount option
 - largefiles and nolargefiles mount options
 - cio mount option
 - mntlock mount option
 - ckptautomnt mount option
 - Combining mount command options
 
 - Unmounting a file system
 - Resizing a file system
 - Displaying information on mounted file systems
 - Identifying file system types
 - Monitoring free space
 
 - Extent attributes
 
 - Section III. Administering multi-pathing with DMP
- Administering Dynamic Multi-Pathing
- 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
 - Displaying details about an Array Support Library
 - 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
 - Adding unsupported disk arrays to the DISKS category
 - Removing disks from the DISKS category
 - Foreign devices
 
 
 - Making devices invisible to VxVM
 - Making devices visible to VxVM
 - About enabling and disabling I/O for controllers and storage processors
 - About displaying DMP database information
 - Displaying the paths to a disk
 - 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
 - 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 Low Impact Path Probing (LIPP)
 - Configuring Subpaths Failover Groups (SFG)
 - 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
 
 
 - Discovering and configuring newly added disk devices
 - Dynamic Reconfiguration of devices
- About online dynamic reconfiguration
 - 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
 
 - Changing the characteristics of a LUN from the array side
 - Upgrading the array controller firmware online
 - Reformatting NVMe devices manually
 
 - Managing devices
- Displaying disk information
 - Changing the disk device naming scheme
 - About disk installation and formatting
 - Adding and removing disks
 - Renaming a disk
 
 - Event monitoring
 
 - Administering Dynamic Multi-Pathing
 - Section IV. Administering Storage Foundation
- Administering sites and remote mirrors
- About sites and remote mirrors
 - Making an existing disk group site consistent
 - Configuring a new disk group as a Remote Mirror configuration
 - Fire drill - testing the configuration
 - Changing the site name
 - Administering the Remote Mirror configuration
 - Examples of storage allocation by specifying sites
 - Displaying site information
 - Failure and recovery scenarios
 
 
 - Administering sites and remote mirrors
 - Section V. Optimizing I/O performance
- Veritas File System I/O
 - Veritas Volume Manager I/O
- Veritas Volume Manager throttling of administrative I/O
 - Managing application I/O workloads using maximum IOPS settings
- About application volume groups
 - Creating application volume groups
 - Viewing the list of application volume groups
 - Setting the maximum IOPS threshold on application volume groups
 - Viewing the IOPS statistics for application volume groups
 - Removing the maximum IOPS setting from application volume groups
 - Adding volumes to an application volume group
 - Removing volumes from an application volume group
 - Removing an application volume group
 
 
 
 - Section VI. Using Point-in-time copies
- Understanding point-in-time copy methods
- About point-in-time copies
 - When to use point-in-time copies
 - About Storage Foundation point-in-time copy technologies
 - Volume-level snapshots
 - Storage Checkpoints
 - About FileSnaps
 - About snapshot file systems
 
 - Administering volume snapshots
- About volume snapshots
 - Traditional third-mirror break-off snapshots
 - Full-sized instant snapshots
- Creating instant snapshots
- Adding an instant snap DCO and DCO volume
 - Creating and managing space-optimized instant snapshots
 - Creating and managing full-sized instant snapshots
 - Creating and managing third-mirror break-off snapshots
 - Creating and managing linked break-off snapshot volumes
 - Creating multiple instant snapshots
 - Creating instant snapshots of volume sets
 - Adding snapshot mirrors to a volume
 - Removing a snapshot mirror
 - Removing a linked break-off snapshot volume
 - Adding a snapshot to a cascaded snapshot hierarchy
 - Refreshing an instant space-optimized snapshot
 - Reattaching an instant full-sized or plex break-off snapshot
 - Reattaching a linked break-off snapshot volume
 - Restoring a volume from an instant space-optimized snapshot
 - Dissociating an instant snapshot
 - Removing an instant snapshot
 - Splitting an instant snapshot hierarchy
 - Displaying instant snapshot information
 - Controlling instant snapshot synchronization
 - Listing the snapshots created on a cache
 - Tuning the autogrow attributes of a cache
 - Monitoring and displaying cache usage
 - Growing and shrinking a cache
 - Removing a cache
 
 
 - Creating instant snapshots
 - Linked break-off snapshots
 - Cascaded snapshots
 - Creating multiple snapshots
 - Restoring the original volume from a snapshot
 - Adding a version 0 DCO and DCO volume
 
 - Administering Storage Checkpoints
- About Storage Checkpoints
 - Storage Checkpoint administration
 - Storage Checkpoint space management considerations
 - Restoring from a Storage Checkpoint
 - Storage Checkpoint quotas
 
 - Administering FileSnaps
 - Administering snapshot file systems
 
 - Understanding point-in-time copy methods
 - Section VII. Optimizing storage with Storage Foundation
- Understanding storage optimization solutions in Storage Foundation
 - Migrating data from thick storage to thin storage
 - Maintaining Thin Storage with Thin Reclamation
- Reclamation of storage on thin reclamation arrays
 - Identifying thin and thin reclamation LUNs
 - Displaying VxFS file system usage on thin reclamation LUNs
 - Reclaiming space on a file system
 - Reclaiming space on a disk, disk group, or enclosure
 - About the reclamation log file
 - Monitoring Thin Reclamation using the vxtask command
 - Configuring automatic reclamation
 
 - Veritas InfoScale 4k sector device support solution
 
 - Section VIII. Maximizing storage utilization
- Understanding storage tiering with SmartTier
 - Creating and administering volume sets
 - Multi-volume file systems
- About multi-volume file systems
 - About volume types
 - Features implemented using multi-volume file system (MVFS) support
 - Creating multi-volume file systems
 - Converting a single volume file system to a multi-volume file system
 - Adding a volume to and removing a volume from a multi-volume file system
 - Volume encapsulation
 - Reporting file extents
 - Load balancing
 - Converting a multi-volume file system to a single volume file system
 
 - Administering SmartTier
- About SmartTier
 - Supported SmartTier document type definitions
 - Placement classes
 - Administering placement policies
 - File placement policy grammar
 - File placement policy rules
 - Calculating I/O temperature and access temperature
 - Multiple criteria in file placement policy rule statements
- Multiple file selection criteria in SELECT statement clauses
 - Multiple placement classes in <ON> clauses of CREATE statements and in <TO> clauses of RELOCATE statements
 - Multiple placement classes in <FROM> clauses of RELOCATE and DELETE statements
 - Multiple conditions in <WHEN> clauses of RELOCATE and DELETE statements
 
 - File placement policy rule and statement ordering
 - File placement policies and extending files
 - Using SmartTier with solid state disks
 - Sub-file relocation
 
 - Administering hot-relocation
- About hot-relocation
 - How hot-relocation works
 - Configuring a system for hot-relocation
 - Displaying spare disk information
 - Marking a disk as a hot-relocation spare
 - Removing a disk from use as a hot-relocation spare
 - Excluding a disk from hot-relocation use
 - Making a disk available for hot-relocation use
 - Configuring hot-relocation to use only spare disks
 - Moving relocated subdisks
 - Modifying the behavior of hot-relocation
 
 - Deduplicating data
 - Compressing files
- About compressing files
 - Compressing files with the vxcompress command
 - Interaction of compressed files and other commands
 - Interaction of compressed files and other features
 - Interaction of compressed files and applications
 - Use cases for compressing files
 
 
 - Section IX. Administering storage
- Managing volumes and disk groups
- Rules for determining the default disk group
 - Moving volumes or disks
 - Monitoring and controlling tasks
 - Using vxnotify to monitor configuration changes
 - Performing online relayout
 - Adding a mirror to a volume
 - Configuring SmartMove
 - Removing a mirror
 - Setting tags on volumes
 - Managing disk groups
- Disk group versions
 - Displaying disk group information
 - Creating a disk group
 - Removing a disk from a disk group
 - Deporting a disk group
 - Importing a disk group
 - Handling of minor number conflicts
 - Moving disk groups between systems
 - Importing a disk group containing hardware cloned disks
 - Setting up configuration database copies (metadata) for a disk group
 - Renaming a disk group
 - Handling conflicting configuration copies
 - Disabling a disk group
 - Destroying a disk group
 - Backing up and restoring disk group configuration data
 - Working with existing ISP disk groups
 
 - Managing plexes and subdisks
 - Decommissioning storage
 
 - Rootability
- Root Disk Encapsulation (RDE) is not supported
 - Encapsulating a disk
 - Device name format changes in RHEL 7 environments after encapsulation
 - Rootability
- Restrictions on using rootability with Linux
 - Sample supported root disk layouts for encapsulation
- Example 1: supported root disk layouts for encapsulation
 - Example 2: supported root disk layouts for encapsulation
 - Example 3: supported root disk layouts for encapsulation
 - Example 4: supported root disk layouts for encapsulation
 - Sample unsupported root disk layouts for encapsulation
 - Example 1: unsupported root disk layouts for encapsulation
 - Example 2: unsupported root disk layouts for encapsulation
 - Example 3: unsupported root disk layouts for encapsulation
 - Example 4: unsupported root disk layouts for encapsulation
 
 - Booting root volumes
 - Boot-time volume restrictions
 - Creating redundancy for the root disk
 - Creating an archived back-up root disk for disaster recovery
 - Encapsulating and mirroring the root disk
 - Upgrading the kernel on a root encapsulated system
 
 - Administering an encapsulated boot disk
 - Unencapsulating the root disk
 
 - Quotas
- About Veritas File System quota limits
 - About quota files on Veritas File System
 - About Veritas File System quota commands
 - About quota checking with Veritas File System
 - Using Veritas File System quotas
- Turning on Veritas File System quotas
 - Turning on Veritas File System quotas at mount time
 - Editing Veritas File System quotas
 - Modifying Veritas File System quota time limits
 - Viewing Veritas File System disk quotas and usage
 - Displaying blocks owned by users or groups
 - Turning off Veritas File System quotas
 - Support for 64-bit Quotas
 
 
 - File Change Log
 
 - Managing volumes and disk groups
 - Section X. Reference
- Appendix A. Reverse path name lookup
 - Appendix B. Tunable parameters
- About tuning Storage Foundation
 - Tuning the VxFS file system
 - DMP tunable parameters
 - Methods to change Dynamic Multi-Pathing tunable parameters
 - Tunable parameters for VxVM
 - Methods to change Veritas Volume Manager tunable parameters
 
 - Appendix C. Command reference
 
 
Example 4: supported root disk layouts for encapsulation
Figure: Boot configured on a primary partition, and root and swap configured in the extended partition shows an example of a supported layout with boot configured on a primary partition, and root and swap configured in the extended partition.
Figure: Boot configured on a primary partition, and root and swap configured in the extended partition
Two primary partitions are in use by /boot and an extended partition that contains the root file system and swap area. A new logical partition can be created for the private region by taking space from the end of the swap partition.