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Oracle Solaris Cluster 3.3 Hardware Administration Manual     Oracle Solaris Cluster
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Document Information

Preface

1.  Introduction to Oracle Solaris Cluster Hardware

Installing Oracle Solaris Cluster Hardware

Installing Oracle Solaris Cluster Hardware

Maintaining Oracle Solaris Cluster Hardware

Powering Oracle Solaris Cluster Hardware On and Off

Dynamic Reconfiguration Operations For Oracle Solaris Cluster Nodes

DR Operations in a Cluster With DR-Enabled Servers

Local and Multihost Disks in an Oracle Solaris Cluster Environment

Removable Media in an Oracle Solaris Cluster Environment

SAN Solutions in an Oracle Solaris Cluster Environment

Hardware Restrictions

2.  Installing and Configuring the Terminal Concentrator

3.  Installing Cluster Interconnect Hardware and Configuring VLANs

4.  Maintaining Cluster Interconnect Hardware

5.  Installing and Maintaining Public Network Hardware

6.  Maintaining Platform Hardware

7.  Campus Clustering With Oracle Solaris Cluster Software

8.  Verifying Oracle Solaris Cluster Hardware Redundancy

Index

Maintaining Oracle Solaris Cluster Hardware

Oracle Solaris Cluster 3.3 Hardware Administration Manual augments documentation that ships with your hardware components by providing information on maintaining the hardware specifically in an Oracle Solaris Cluster environment. Table 1-2 describes some of the differences between maintaining cluster hardware and maintaining standalone hardware.

Table 1-2 Sample Differences Between Servicing Standalone and Cluster Hardware

Task
Standalone Hardware
Cluster Hardware
Shutting down a node
Use the shutdown command.
To perform an orderly node shutdown, first use the clnode evacuate to switch device groups and resource groups to another node. Then shut down the node by running the shutdown(1M) command.
Adding a disk
Perform a reconfiguration boot or use devfsadm to assign a logical device name to the disk. You also need to run volume manager commands to configure the new disk if the disks are under volume management control.
Use the devfsadm, cldevice populate, and cldevice or scdidadm commands. You also need to run volume manager commands to configure the new disk if the disks are under volume management control.
Adding a transport adapter or public network adapter
Perform an orderly node shutdown, then install the public network adapter. After you install the network adapter, update the /etc/hostname.adapter and/etc/inet/hosts files.
Perform an orderly node shutdown, then install the public network adapter. After you install the public network adapter, update the /etc/hostname.adapter and/etc/inet/hosts files. Finally, add this public network adapter to an IPMP group.