Storage Foundation for Oracle® RAC 7.4.1 Configuration and Upgrade Guide - Solaris
- Section I. Configuring SF Oracle RAC
- Preparing to configure SF Oracle RAC
- Configuring SF Oracle RAC using the script-based installer
- Configuring the SF Oracle RAC components using the script-based installer
- Configuring the SF Oracle RAC cluster
- Configuring SF Oracle RAC in secure mode
- Configuring a secure cluster node by node
- Configuring the SF Oracle RAC cluster
- Setting up disk-based I/O fencing using installer
- Setting up server-based I/O fencing using installer
- Configuring the SF Oracle RAC components using the script-based installer
- Performing an automated SF Oracle RAC configuration
- Section II. Post-installation and configuration tasks
- Verifying the installation
- Performing additional post-installation and configuration tasks
- Section III. Upgrade of SF Oracle RAC
- Planning to upgrade SF Oracle RAC
- Performing a full upgrade of SF Oracle RAC using the product installer
- Performing an automated full upgrade of SF Oracle RAC using response files
- Performing a phased upgrade of SF Oracle RAC
- Performing a phased upgrade of SF Oracle RAC from version 6.2.1 and later release
- Performing a rolling upgrade of SF Oracle RAC
- Upgrading SF Oracle RAC using Live Upgrade or Boot Environment upgrade
- Performing post-upgrade tasks
- Section IV. Installation and upgrade of Oracle RAC
- Before installing Oracle RAC
- Preparing to install Oracle RAC using the SF Oracle RAC installer or manually
- Creating users and groups for Oracle RAC
- Creating storage for OCR and voting disk
- Configuring private IP addresses for Oracle RAC 11.2.0.1
- Configuring private IP addresses for Oracle RAC 11.2.0.2 and later versions
- Installing Oracle RAC
- Performing an automated Oracle RAC installation
- Performing Oracle RAC post-installation tasks
- Configuring the CSSD resource
- Relinking the SF Oracle RAC libraries with Oracle RAC
- Configuring VCS service groups for Oracle RAC
- Upgrading Oracle RAC
- Before installing Oracle RAC
- Section V. Adding and removing nodes
- Adding a node to SF Oracle RAC clusters
- Adding a node to a cluster using the Veritas InfoScale installer
- Adding the node to a cluster manually
- Setting up the node to run in secure mode
- Configuring server-based fencing on the new node
- Preparing the new node manually for installing Oracle RAC
- Adding a node to the cluster using the SF Oracle RAC response file
- Configuring private IP addresses for Oracle RAC 11.2.0.2 and later versions on the new node
- Removing a node from SF Oracle RAC clusters
- Adding a node to SF Oracle RAC clusters
- Section VI. Configuration of disaster recovery environments
- Configuring disaster recovery environments
- Configuring disaster recovery environments
- Section VII. Installation reference
- Appendix A. Installation scripts
- Appendix B. Tunable files for installation
- Appendix C. Sample installation and configuration values
- SF Oracle RAC worksheet
- Appendix D. Configuration files
- Sample configuration files
- Sample configuration files for CP server
- Appendix E. Configuring the secure shell or the remote shell for communications
- Appendix F. Automatic Storage Management
- Appendix G. Creating a test database
- Appendix H. High availability agent information
- About agents
- CVMCluster agent
- CVMVxconfigd agent
- CVMVolDg agent
- CFSMount agent
- CFSfsckd agent
- PrivNIC agent
- MultiPrivNIC agent
- CSSD agent
- VCS agents for Oracle
- Oracle agent functions
- Resource type definition for the Oracle agent
- Resource type definition for the Netlsnr agent
- Resource type definition for the ASMDG agent
- Oracle agent functions
- CRSResource agent
- Appendix I. SF Oracle RAC deployment scenarios
- Configuration diagrams for setting up server-based I/O fencing
sfrac12_main.cf and sfrac13_main.cf files
The sample configuration, sfrac12_main.cf, describes a disaster recovery configuration for the primary site. The sample configuration, sfrac13_main.cf, describes a disaster recovery configuration for the secondary site with fire-drill capability. The sample configuration uses Hitachi True Copy technology for replicating data between the sites.
Note:
You can use other supported hardware-based replication technologies with this configuration.
This sample file describes the following configuration:
Two SF Oracle RAC clusters, comprising two nodes each, hosted at different geographical locations.
A single Oracle database that is stored on CFS.
The database is managed by the VCS agent for Oracle.
The agent starts, stops, and monitors the database.
The database uses the Oracle UDP IPC for database cache fusion.
A common IP address is used by Oracle Clusterware and database cache fusion. The private IP address is managed by the PrivNIC agent for high availability.
One virtual IP address must be configured under the ClusterService group on each site for inter-cluster communication.
The Oracle Cluster Registry (OCR) and voting disk are stored on CFS.
Hitachi True Copy is used to replicate data between the sites.
The HTC disk groups that are replicated across the sites using HTC technology and the replication mode are specified under the HTC resource in the database group. The CVM disk group that comprises the HTC disk group must be configured under the CVMVolDg resource in the database group.
The database group will be online on the primary cluster. The HTC resource determines where the database group will be brought online.
The database group is configured as a global group by specifying the clusters on the primary and secondary sites as values for the ClusterList group attribute.
The database group oradb_grp_fd on the secondary is configured for fire drill.
When the group oradb_grp_fd is brought online, the HTCSnap creates a snapshot of the disk group configured under the HTC resource in the database group oradg_grp.
Further, the Oracle database and the associated volumes and mount points configured under the service group oradb_grp_fd are brought online using the snapshots created by HTCSnap.
Figure: Service group configuration for sfrac12_main.cf file illustrates the configuration on the primary site.
Figure: Service group configuration for sfrac13_main.cf file illustrates the configuration on the secondary site.