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Storage Foundation for Oracle® RAC 7.4.1 Configuration and Upgrade Guide - Solaris
Last Published:
2019-06-18
Product(s):
InfoScale & Storage Foundation (7.4.1)
Platform: 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
Verifying the VCS configuration for PrivNIC and MultiPrivNIC
After you complete the steps for configuring PrivNIC/MultiPrivNIC and the private IP addresses, verify the configuration in the VCS main.cf configuration file.
To verify the VCS configuration for PrivNIC and MultiPrivNIC
- View the main.cf file located in the directory
/etc/VRTSvcs/conf/config
:# more /etc/VRTSvcs/conf/config/main.cf
For a configuration using the PrivNIC agent:
Verify that the PrivNIC resource displays in the file.
For example:
PrivNIC ora_priv ( Critical = 0 Device @sys1 = {net1= 0, net2= 1} Device @sys2 = {net1= 0, net2= 1} Address @sys1 = "192.168.12.1" Address @sys2 = "192.168.12.2" NetMask = "255.255.255.0" )
Verify that the PrivNIC resource is online on all nodes in the cluster:
# hares -state priv_resname Resource Attribute System Value ora_priv State sys1 ONLINE ora_priv State sys2 ONLINE
For a configuration using the MultiPrivNIC agent:
Verify that the MultiPrivNIC resource displays in the file.
For example:
MultiPrivNIC multi_priv ( Critical = 0 Device @sys1 = {net1= 0, net2 = 1} Device @sys2 = {net1= 0, net2 = 1} Address @sys1 = {"192.168.12.1" =0, "192.168.2.1" =1} Address @sys2 = {"192.168.12.2" =0, "192.168.2.2" =1} NetMask = "255.255.255.0" )
Verify that the MultiPrivNIC resource is online on all systems in the cluster:
# hares -state multipriv_resname Resource Attribute System Value multi_priv State sys1 ONLINE multi_priv State sys2 ONLINE
- Make sure that the specified private IP addresses and devices are displayed when you run the following command:
# ifconfig -a
- From each system, verify that the private IP addresses are operational using the ping command.