Veritas InfoScale™ 7.4 Solutions Guide - Solaris
- Section I. Introducing Veritas InfoScale
- Section II. Solutions for Veritas InfoScale products
- Section III. Improving database performance
- Overview of database accelerators
- Improving database performance with Veritas Quick I/O
- About Quick I/O
- Improving database performance with Veritas Cached Quick I/O
- Improving database performance with Veritas Concurrent I/O
- Section IV. Using point-in-time copies
- Understanding point-in-time copy methods
- Backing up and recovering
- Preserving multiple point-in-time copies
- Online database backups
- Backing up on an off-host cluster file system
- Database recovery using Storage Checkpoints
- Backing up and recovering in a NetBackup environment
- Off-host processing
- Creating and refreshing test environments
- Creating point-in-time copies of files
- Section V. Maximizing storage utilization
- Optimizing storage tiering with SmartTier
- Optimizing storage with Flexible Storage Sharing
- Optimizing storage tiering with SmartTier
- Section VI. Migrating data
- Understanding data migration
- Offline migration from Solaris Volume Manager to Veritas Volume Manager
- How Solaris Volume Manager objects are mapped to VxVM objects
- Overview of the conversion process
- Planning the conversion
- Preparing a Solaris Volume Manager configuration for conversion
- Setting up a Solaris Volume Manager configuration for conversion
- Converting from the Solaris Volume Manager software to VxVM
- Post conversion tasks
- Online migration of a native file system to the VxFS file system
- Migrating a source file system to the VxFS file system over NFS v3
- VxFS features not available during online migration
- Migrating storage arrays
- Migrating data between platforms
- Overview of the Cross-Platform Data Sharing (CDS) feature
- CDS disk format and disk groups
- Setting up your system to use Cross-platform Data Sharing (CDS)
- Maintaining your system
- Disk tasks
- Disk group tasks
- Displaying information
- File system considerations
- Specifying the migration target
- Using the fscdsadm command
- Maintaining the list of target operating systems
- Migrating a file system on an ongoing basis
- Converting the byte order of a file system
- Migrating from Oracle ASM to Veritas File System
- Section VII. Veritas InfoScale 4K sector device support solution
About Cross-platform Data Sharing (CDS) disk groups
A Cross-platform Data Sharing (CDS) disk group allows cross-platform data sharing of Veritas Volume Manager (VxVM) objects, so that data written on one of the supported platforms may be accessed on any other supported platform. A CDS disk group is composed only of CDS disks (VxVM disks with the disk format cdsdisk), and is only available for disk group version 110 and greater.
Starting with disk group version 160, CDS disk groups can support disks of greater than 1 TB.
Note:
The CDS conversion utility, vxcdsconvert, is provided to convert non-CDS VxVM disk formats to CDS disks, and disk groups with a version number less than 110 to disk groups that support CDS disks.
All VxVM objects in a CDS disk group are aligned and sized so that any system can access the object using its own representation of an I/O block. The CDS disk group uses a platform-independent alignment value to support system block sizes of up to 8K.
CDS disk groups can be used in the following ways:
Initialized on one system and then used "as-is" by VxVM on a system employing a different type of platform.
Imported (in a serial fashion) by Linux, Solaris, AIX, and HP-UX systems.
Imported as private disk groups, or shared disk groups (by CVM).
You cannot include the following disks or volumes in a CDS disk group:
Volumes of usage type root and swap. You cannot use CDS to share boot devices.
Encapsulated disks.
Note:
On Solaris and Linux systems, the process of disk encapsulation places the slices or partitions on a disk (which may contain data or file systems) under VxVM control. On AIX and HP-UX systems, LVM volumes may similarly be converted to VxVM volumes.