You can also set the fencing protocol for a single storage device.
The phys-schost# prompt reflects a global-cluster prompt. Perform this procedure on a global cluster.
This procedure provides the long forms of the Oracle Solaris Cluster commands. Most commands also have short forms. Except for the long and short forms of the command names, the commands are identical.
Caution - If fencing is turned off under the wrong circumstances, your data can be vulnerable to corruption during application failover. Examine this data corruption possibility carefully when you are considering turning fencing off. Fencing can be turned off if the shared storage device does not support the SCSI protocol or if you want to allow access to the cluster's storage from hosts outside the cluster. |
cldevice set -p default_fencing ={pathcount | \ scsi3 | global | nofencing | nofencing-noscrub} device
Modifies the default_fencing property of the device.
Determines the fencing protocol by the number of DID paths that are attached to the shared device.
Uses the SCSI-3 protocol.
Uses the global default fencing setting. The global setting is used for non-quorum devices.
Turns fencing off by setting the fencing status for the specified DID instance.
Scrubbing the device ensures that the device is cleared of all persistent SCSI reservation information and allows access to the storage device from systems outside the cluster. Use the nofencing-noscrub option only for storage devices that have severe problems with SCSI reservations.
Specifies the name of the device path or device name.
For more information, see the cluster(1CL) man page.
The following example sets the device d5, specified by device number, to the SCSI-3 protocol.
# cldevice set -p default_fencing=prefer3 d5
The following example turns default fencing off for the d11 device.
#cldevice set -p default_fencing=nofencing d11