The scsetup(1M) utility is an interactive interface to the scconf(1M) command. scsetup generates scconf commands. Generated commands are shown in the examples at the end of some procedures.
Sun Cluster software automatically creates a raw disk device group for each disk and tape device in the cluster. However, cluster device groups remain in an offline state until you access the groups as global devices.
Task |
For Instructions, Go To… |
---|---|
Update the global device namespace without a reconfiguration reboot - Use scgdevs(1M) | |
Add Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager disksets and register them as disk device groups - Use metaset(1M) |
How to Add and Register a Disk Device Group (Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager) |
Remove Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager disk device groups from the configuration - Use metaset and metaclear(1M) |
How to Remove and Unregister a Disk Device Group (Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager) |
Remove a node from all disk device groups - Use scconf, metaset, and scsetup | |
Remove a node from a Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager disk device group - Use metaset |
How to Remove a Node From a Disk Device Group (Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager) |
Add VERITAS Volume Manager disk groups as disk device groups - Use VxVM commands and scsetup(1M) |
How to Create a New Disk Group When Initializing Disks (VERITAS Volume Manager)
How to Create a New Disk Group When Encapsulating Disks (VERITAS Volume Manager)
How to Add a New Volume to an Existing Disk Device Group (VERITAS Volume Manager)
How to Make an Existing Disk Group Into a Disk Device Group (VERITAS Volume Manager)
How to Assign a New Minor Number to a Disk Device Group (VERITAS Volume Manager)
How to Register a Disk Group as a Disk Device Group (VERITAS Volume Manager)
How to Register Disk Group Configuration Changes (VERITAS Volume Manager) |
Remove VERITAS Volume Manager disk device groups from the configuration - Use scsetup (to generate scconf) |
How to Remove a Volume From a Disk Device Group (VERITAS Volume Manager)
How to Remove and Unregister a Disk Device Group (VERITAS Volume Manager) |
Add a node to a VERITAS Volume Manager disk device group - Use scsetup to generate scconf |
How to Add a Node to a Disk Device Group (VERITAS Volume Manager) |
Remove a node from a VERITAS Volume Manager disk device group - Use scsetup to generate scconf |
How to Remove a Node From a Disk Device Group (VERITAS Volume Manager) |
Remove a node from a raw disk device group - Use scconf(1M) | |
Change disk device group properties - Use scsetup to generate scconf | |
Display disk device groups and properties - Use scconf | |
Change the desired number of secondaries for a device group - Use scsetup to generate scconf |
How to Change the Desired Number of Secondaries for a Device Group |
Switch the primary for a disk device group - Use scswitch(1M) | |
Put a disk device group in maintenance state - Use metaset or vxdg |
When adding a new global device, manually update the global device namespace by running scgdevs(1M).
The scgdevs command does not have any effect if the node that is running the command is not currently a cluster member. The command also has no effect if the /global/.devices/node@nodeID file system is not mounted.
Become superuser on any node of the cluster.
Use the scgdevs command to reconfigure the namespace.
# scgdevs |
The following example shows output generated by a successful run of scgdevs.
# scgdevs Configuring the /dev/global directory (global devices)... obtaining access to all attached disks reservation program successfully exiting |
Use the metaset(1M) command to create a Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager diskset and register the disk set as a Sun Cluster disk device group. When you register the diskset, the name that you assigned to the diskset is automatically assigned to the disk device group.
Become superuser on the node connected to the disks where you want to create the diskset.
Calculate the number of metadevice names needed for your configuration, and modify the /kernel/drv/md.conf file on each node.
See “How to Set the Number of Metadevice Names and Disksets ” in the Sun Cluster 3.1 Software Installation Guide .
Use the metaset(1M)command to add the Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager diskset and register it as a disk device group with Sun Cluster.
# metaset -s diskset -a -h nodelist |
Specifies the diskset to be created.
Adds the list of nodes that can master the diskset.
Running the metaset command to set up a Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager device group on a cluster results in one secondary by default, regardless of the number of nodes that are included in that device group. You can change the desired number of secondary nodes by using the scsetup(1M) utility after the device group has been created. Refer to How to Change the Desired Number of Secondaries for a Device Group for more information about disk failover.
Verify that the disk device group has been added.
The disk device group name matches the diskset name that is specified with metaset.
# scconf -p | grep disk-device-group |
The following example shows the creation of the diskset and disk device group and verifies that the disk device group has been created.
# metaset -s dg-schost-1 -a -h phys-schost-1 # scconf -p | grep dg-schost-1 Device group name: dg-schost-1 |
Disk device groups are Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager disksets that have been registered with Sun Cluster. To remove a Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager disk device group, use the metaclear(1M) and metaset(1M) commands. These commands remove the disk device group with the same name and unregister the disk group as a Sun Cluster disk device group.
Refer to the Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager documentation for the steps to remove a diskset.
Use this procedure to remove a cluster node from all disk device groups that list the node in their lists of potential primaries.
Become superuser on the node you want to remove as a potential primary of all disk device groups.
Determine the disk device group(s) of which the node to be removed is a member.
Look for the node name in the Device group node list for each disk device group.
# scconf -p | grep ¨Device group¨ |
Are any of the disk device groups identified in Step 2 of the device group type SDS/SVM?
If yes, perform the procedures in How to Remove a Node From a Disk Device Group (Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager).
If no, go to Step 4.
Are any of the disk device groups identified in Step 2 of the device group type VxVM?
If yes, perform the procedures in How to Remove a Node From a Disk Device Group (VERITAS Volume Manager).
If no, go to Step 5.
Determine the raw disk device groups of which the node to be removed is a member.
Note that the following command contains two “v”s in -pvv. The second “v” is needed to display raw disk device groups.
# scconf -pvv | grep ¨Device group¨ |
Are any of the disk device groups listed in Step 5 of the device group types Disk, Local_Disk, or both?
If yes, perform the procedures in How to Remove a Node From a Raw Disk Device Group.
If no, go to Step 7.
Verify that the node has been removed from the potential primaries list of all disk device groups.
The command returns nothing if the node is no longer listed as a potential primary of any disk device group.
# scconf -pvv | grep ¨Device group¨ | grep nodename |
Use this procedure to remove a cluster node from the list of potential primaries of a Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager disk device group. Repeat the metaset command for each disk device group from which you want to remove the node.
Verify that the node is still a member of the group and that the group is an SDS/SVM device group.
Device group type SDS/SVM indicates a Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager disk device group.
phys-suncluster-1% scconf -pv | grep '(global-galileo)' (global-galileo) Device group type: SDS/SVM (global-galileo) Device group failback enabled: no (global-galileo) Device group node list: phys-suncluster-1, phys-suncluster-2 (global-galileo) Diskset name: global-galileo phys-suncluster-1% |
Determine which node is the current primary for the device group.
# scstat -D |
Become superuser on the node that currently owns the disk device group that you want to modify.
Delete the node's hostname from the disk device group.
# metaset -s setname -d -h nodelist |
Specifies the disk device group name
Deletes from the disk device group the nodes identified with -h
Removes the node from the list of nodes that can master the disk device group
The update can take several minutes to complete.
If the command fails, add the -f (Force) option to the command.
# metaset -s setname -d -f -h nodelist |
Repeat Step 4 for each disk device group from which the node is being removed as a potential primary.
Verify that the node has been removed from the disk device group.
The disk device group name matches the diskset name that is specified with metaset.
phys-suncluster-1% scconf -pv |grep Device group node list: phys-suncluster-1, phys-suncluster-2, phys-suncluster-1% |
The following example shows the removal of the host name phys-schost-2 from a disk device group configuration. This example eliminates phys-schost-2 as a potential primary for the designated disk device group. Verify removal of the node by running the scstat -D command. Check that the removed node is no longer displayed in the screen text.
[Determine the Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager disk device group(2) for the node:] # scconf -pv | grep Device Device group name: dg-schost-1 Device group type: SDS/SVM Device group failback enabled: no Device group node list: phys-schost-1, phys-schost-2 Device group ordered node list: yes Device group diskset name: dg-schost-1 [Determine the disk device group(s) for the node:] # scstat -D -- Device Group Servers -- Device Group Primary Secondary ------------ ------- --------- Device group servers: dg-schost-1 phys-schost-1 phys-schost-2 [Become superuser.] [Remove the hostname from the disk device group:] # metaset -s dg-schost-1 -d -h phys-schost-2 [Verify removal of the node:] phys-suncluster-1% scconf -pv |grep Device Group Servers -- Device Group Primary Secondary ------------ ------- --------- Device group node list: dg-schost-1, phys-schost-2, |
If you intend to create more than three disksets in the cluster, perform the following steps before you create the disksets. Follow these steps if you are installing disksets for the first time or if you are adding more disksets to a fully configured cluster.
Ensure that the value of the md_nsets variable is high enough. The value should accommodate the total number of disksets you intend to create in the cluster.
On any node of the cluster, check the value of the md_nsets variable in the /kernel/drv/md.conf file.
If the number of disksets in the cluster will be greater than the existing value of md_nsets minus one, increase the value of md_nsets on each node.
The maximum permissible number of disksets is the value of md_nsets minus one. The maximum possible value of md_nsets is 32.
Ensure that the /kernel/drv/md.conf file is identical on each node of the cluster.
Failure to follow this guideline can result in serious Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager errors and possible loss of data.
From one node, shut down the cluster.
# scshutdown -g0 -y |
Reboot each node of the cluster.
ok> boot |
On each node in the cluster, run the devfsadm(1M) command.
You can run this command on all nodes in the cluster at the same time.
From one node of the cluster, run the scgdevs(1M) command.
On each node, verify that the scgdevs command has completed before you attempt to create any disksets.
The scgdevs(1M) command calls itself remotely on all nodes, even when the command is run from just one node. To determine whether the scgdevs command has completed processing, run the following command on each node of the cluster.
% ps -ef | grep scgdevs |
This procedure is only for initializing disks. If you are encapsulating disks, use the procedure How to Create a New Disk Group When Encapsulating Disks (VERITAS Volume Manager).
After adding the VxVM disk group, you need to register the disk device group.
If you use VxVM to set up shared disk groups for Oracle Parallel Server/Real Application Clusters, use the cluster functionality of VxVM as described in the VERITAS Volume Manager Administrator's Reference Guide. See Creating Shared Disk Groups for Oracle Parallel Server/Real Application Clusters for more information.
Become superuser on any cluster node that is physically connected to disks that make up the disk group being added.
Create the VxVM disk group and volume.
Use your preferred method to create the disk group and volume.
If you are setting up a mirrored volume, use Dirty Region Logging (DRL) to decrease volume recovery time after a node failure. However, DRL might decrease I/O throughput.
See the VERITAS Volume Manager documentation for the procedures to complete this step.
Register the VxVM disk group as a Sun Cluster disk device group.
See How to Register a Disk Group as a Disk Device Group (VERITAS Volume Manager).
Do not register the Oracle Parallel Server/Real Application Clusters shared disk groups with the cluster framework.
This procedure is only for encapsulating disks. If you are initializing disks, use the procedure How to Create a New Disk Group When Initializing Disks (VERITAS Volume Manager).
You can make non-root disks into Sun Cluster disk device groups by encapsulating the disks as VxVM disk groups, then registering the disk groups as Sun Cluster disk device groups.
Disk encapsulation is only supported during initial creation of a VxVM disk group. After a VxVM disk group is created and registered as a Sun Cluster disk device group, only disks which can be initialized should be added to the disk group.
If you use VxVM to set up shared disk groups for Oracle Parallel Server/Real Application Clusters, use the cluster functionality of VxVM as described in the VERITAS Volume Manager Administrator's Reference Guide. See Creating Shared Disk Groups for Oracle Parallel Server/Real Application Clusters for more information.
Become superuser on any node of the cluster.
If the disk being encapsulated has file system entries in the /etc/vfstab file, make sure that the mount at boot option is set to no.
Set back to yes once the disk is encapsulated and registered as a Sun Cluster disk device group.
Encapsulate the disks.
Use vxdiskadm menus or the graphical user interface to encapsulate the disks. VxVM requires two free partitions as well as unassigned cylinders at the beginning or the end of the disk. Slice two must also be set to the entire disk. See the vxdiskadm(1M) man page for more information.
Shut down and restart the node.
The scswitch(1M) command switches all resource groups and device groups from the primary node to the next preferred node. Use shutdown(1M) to shut down and restart the node.
# scswitch -S -h node[,...] # shutdown -g0 -y -i6 |
If necessary, switch all resource groups and device groups back to the original node.
If the resource groups and device groups were initially configured to fail back to the primary node, this step is not necessary.
# scswitch -z -D disk-device-group -hnode[,...] # scswitch -z -g resource-group -hnode[,...] |
Register the VxVM disk group as a Sun Cluster disk device group.
See How to Register a Disk Group as a Disk Device Group (VERITAS Volume Manager).
Do not register the Oracle Parallel Server/Real Application Clusters shared disk groups with the cluster framework.
After adding the volume, you need to register the configuration change by using the procedure How to Register Disk Group Configuration Changes (VERITAS Volume Manager).
When you add a new volume to an existing VxVM disk device group, perform the procedure from the primary node of the online disk device group.
Become superuser on any node of the cluster.
Determine the primary node for the disk device group to which you are adding the new volume.
# scstat -D |
If the disk device group is offline, bring the device group online.
# scswitch -z -D disk-device-group -h node[,...] |
Switches the specified device group.
Specifies the name of the node to switch the disk device group to. This node becomes the new primary.
From the primary node (the node currently mastering the disk device group), create the VxVM volume in the disk group.
Refer to your VERITAS Volume Manager documentation for the procedure used to create the VxVM volume.
Register the VxVM disk group changes so the global namespace gets updated.
See How to Register Disk Group Configuration Changes (VERITAS Volume Manager).
You can make an existing VxVM disk group into a Sun Cluster disk device group by importing the disk group onto the current node, then registering the disk group as a Sun Cluster disk device group.
Become superuser on any node of the cluster.
Import the VxVM disk group onto the current node.
# vxdg import diskgroup |
Register the VxVM disk group as a Sun Cluster disk device group.
See How to Register a Disk Group as a Disk Device Group (VERITAS Volume Manager).
If disk device group registration fails because of a minor number conflict with another disk group, you must assign the new disk group a new, unused minor number. After assigning the new minor number, rerun the procedure to register the disk group as a Sun Cluster disk device group.
Become superuser on any node of the cluster.
Determine the minor numbers in use.
# ls -l /global/.devices/node@nodeid/dev/vx/dsk/* |
Choose another multiple of 1000 not in use as the base minor number for the new disk group.
Assign the new minor number to the disk group.
# vxdg reminor diskgroup base-minor-number |
Register the VxVM disk group as a Sun Cluster disk device group.
See How to Register a Disk Group as a Disk Device Group (VERITAS Volume Manager).
This example uses the minor numbers 16000-16002 and 4000-4001. The vxdg reminor command is used to assign the base minor number 5000 to the new disk device group.
# ls -l /global/.devices/node@nodeid/dev/vx/dsk/* /global/.devices/node@nodeid/dev/vx/dsk/dg1 brw------- 1 root root 56,16000 Oct 7 11:32 dg1v1 brw------- 1 root root 56,16001 Oct 7 11:32 dg1v2 brw------- 1 root root 56,16002 Oct 7 11:32 dg1v3 /global/.devices/node@nodeid/dev/vx/dsk/dg2 brw------- 1 root root 56,4000 Oct 7 11:32 dg2v1 brw------- 1 root root 56,4001 Oct 7 11:32 dg2v2 # vxdg reminor dg3 5000 |
This procedure uses the scsetup(1M) utility to register the associated VxVM disk group as a Sun Cluster disk device group.
After a disk device group has been registered with the cluster, never import or deport a VxVM disk group by using VxVM commands. If you make a change to the VxVM disk group or volume, use the procedure How to Register Disk Group Configuration Changes (VERITAS Volume Manager) to register the disk device group configuration changes. This procedure ensures that the global namespace is in the correct state.
The prerequisites to register a VxVM disk device group are:
Superuser privilege on a node in the cluster.
The name of the VxVM disk group to be registered as a disk device group.
A preferred order of nodes to master the disk device group.
A desired number of secondary nodes for the disk device group.
When you define the preference order, you also specify whether you want the disk device group to be switched back to the most preferred node in the event that the most preferred node goes down and later returns to the cluster.
See scconf(1M) for more information on node preference and failback options.
Non-primary cluster nodes (spares) transition to secondary according to the node preference order. The default number of secondaries for a device group is normally set to one. This default setting minimizes performance degradation caused by primary checkpointing of multiple secondary nodes during normal operation. For example, in a four node cluster, the default behavior configures one primary, one secondary, and two spare nodes. See alsoHow to Set the Desired Number of Secondaries (VERITAS Volume Manager).
Become superuser on any node of the cluster.
Enter the scsetup utility.
# scsetup |
The Main Menu is displayed.
To work with VxVM disk device groups, type 4 (Device groups and volumes).
The Device Groups Menu is displayed.
To register a VxVM disk device group, type 1 (Register a VxVM disk group as a device group).
Follow the instructions and enter the name of the VxVM disk group to be registered as a Sun Cluster disk device group.
If you use VxVM to set up shared disk groups for Oracle Parallel Server/Real Application Clusters, you do not register the shared disk groups with the cluster framework. Use the cluster functionality of VxVM as described in the VERITAS Volume Manager Administrator's Reference Guide.
If you encounter the following error while attempting to register the disk device group, reminor the disk device group.
scconf: Failed to add device group - in use |
To reminor the disk device group, use the procedure How to Assign a New Minor Number to a Disk Device Group (VERITAS Volume Manager). This procedure enables you to assign a new minor number that does not conflict with a minor number used by an existing disk device group.
Verify that the disk device group is registered and online.
If the disk device group is properly registered, information for the new disk device group displays when using the following command.
# scstat -D |
If you change any configuration information for a VxVM disk group or volume that is registered with the cluster, you must reregister the disk device group by using scsetup(1M). Such configuration changes include adding or removing volumes, as well as changing the group, owner, or permissions of existing volumes. Reregistration after configuration changes ensures that the global namespace is in the correct state. See How to Update the Global Device Namespace.
The following example shows the scconf command generated by scsetup when registering a VxVM disk device group (dg1), and the verification step. This example assumes that the VxVM disk group and volume were created previously.
# scsetup scconf -a -D type=vxvm,name=dg1,nodelist=phys-schost-1:phys-schost-2 # scstat -D -- Device Group Servers -- Device Group Primary Secondary ------------ ------- --------- Device group servers: dg1 phys-schost-1 phys-schost-2 -- Device Group Status -- Device Group Status ------------ ------ Device group status: dg1 Online |
To create a cluster file system on the VxVM disk device group, see How to Add a Cluster File System.
If there are problems with the minor number, see How to Assign a New Minor Number to a Disk Device Group (VERITAS Volume Manager).
When you change any configuration information for a VxVM disk group or volume, you need to register the configuration changes for the Sun Cluster disk device group. Registration ensures that the global namespace is in the correct state.
Become superuser on any node in the cluster.
Run the scsetup(1M) utility.
# scsetup |
The Main Menu is displayed.
To work with VxVM disk device groups, type 4 (Device groups and volumes).
The Device Groups Menu is displayed.
To register configuration changes, type 2 (Synchronize volume information for a VxVM device group).
Follow the instructions and enter the VxVM disk group that has changed configuration.
The following example shows the scconf command generated by scsetup when registering a changed VxVM disk device group (dg1). This example assumes that the VxVM disk group and volume were created previously.
# scsetup scconf -c -D name=dg1,sync |
The numsecondaries property specifies the number of nodes within a device group that can master the group if the primary node fails. The default number of secondaries for device services is one. The value can be set to any integer between one and the number of operational non-primary provider nodes in the device group.
This setting is an important factor in balancing cluster performance and availability. For example, increasing the desired number of secondaries increases the device group's opportunity to survive multiple failures that occur simultaneously within a cluster. Increasing the number of secondaries also decreases performance regularly during normal operation. A smaller number of secondaries typically results in better performance, but reduces availability. However, a larger number of secondaries does not always result in greater availability of the file system or device group in question. Refer to “Key Concepts – Administration and Application Development” in Sun Cluster 3.1 Concepts Guide for more information.
Become superuser on any node of the cluster.
Run the scsetup(1M) utility.
# scsetup |
The Main Menu is displayed.
To work with VxVM disk device groups, type 4 (Device groups and volumes).
The Device Groups Menu is displayed.
To change key properties of a device group, type 6 (Change key properties of a device group).
The Change Key Properties Menu is displayed.
To change the desired number of secondaries, type 2 (Change the numsecondaries property).
Follow the instructions and type the desired number of secondaries to be configured for the disk device group. After an appropriate value has been typed, the corresponding scconf command is executed. Following, a log is printed, and the user is returned to the previous menu.
Validate the device group configuration by using the scconf -p command.
# scconf -p | grep Device Device group name: dg-schost-1 Device group type: VxVM Device group failback enabled: yes Device group node list: phys-schost-1,phys-scot-2, phys-schst-3 Device group ordered node list: yes Device group desired number of secondaries: 1 Device group diskset name: dg-schost-1 |
If you change any configuration information for a VxVM disk group or volume that is registered with the cluster, you must reregister the disk device group by using scsetup. Such configuration changes include adding or removing volumes, as well as changing the group, owner, or permissions of existing volumes. Reregistration after configuration changes ensures that the global namespace is in the correct state. See How to Update the Global Device Namespace.
Verify the primary node and status for the disk device group.
# scstat -D |
The following example shows the scconf command that is generated by scsetup when it configures the desired number of secondaries for a device group (diskgrp1). See How to Change the Desired Number of Secondaries for a Device Group for information about changing the desired number of secondaries after a device group is created.
# scconf -a -D type=vxvm,name=diskgrp1, nodelist=host1:host2:host3,preferenced=true,failback=enabled,numsecondaries=2 |
After removing the volume from the disk device group, you must register the configuration changes to the disk device group using the procedure How to Register Disk Group Configuration Changes (VERITAS Volume Manager).
Become superuser on any node of the cluster.
Determine the primary node and status for the disk device group.
# scstat -D |
If the disk device group is offline, bring it online.
# scswitch -z -D disk-device-group -h node[,...] |
Performs the switch.
Specifies the device group to switch.
Specifies the name of the node to switch to. This node becomes the new primary.
From the primary node (the node currently mastering the disk device group), remove the VxVM volume in the disk group.
# vxedit -g diskgroup -rf rm volume |
Specifies the VxVM disk group containing the volume.
Removes the specified volume.
Register the disk device group configuration changes to update the global namespace, using scsetup(1M).
See How to Register Disk Group Configuration Changes (VERITAS Volume Manager).
Removing a Sun Cluster disk device group will cause the corresponding VxVM disk group to be deported, not destroyed. However, even though the VxVM disk group still exists, it cannot be used in the cluster unless re-registered.
This procedure uses the scsetup(1M) utility to remove a VxVM disk group and unregister it as a Sun Cluster disk device group.
Become superuser on any node of the cluster.
Take the disk device group offline.
# scswitch -F -D disk-device-group |
Places the disk device group offline.
Specifies the device group to take offline.
Enter the scsetup utility.
The Main Menu is displayed.
# scsetup |
To work with VxVM device groups, type 4 (Device groups and volumes).
The Device Groups Menu is displayed.
To unregister a VxVM disk group, type 3 (Unregister a VxVM device group).
Follow the instructions and enter the VxVM disk group to be unregistered.
The following example shows the VxVM disk device group dg1 taken offline, and the scconf(1M) command generated by scsetup when it removes and unregisters the disk device group.
# scswitch -F -D dg1 # scsetup scconf -r -D name=dg1 |
This procedure adds a node to a disk device group using the scsetup(1M) utility.
The prerequisites to add a node to a VxVM disk device group are:
Superuser privilege on a node in the cluster
The name of the VxVM device group to which the node will be added
The name or node ID of the nodes to add
Become superuser on any node of the cluster.
Enter the scsetup(1M) utility
The Main Menu is displayed.
# scsetup |
To work with VxVM disk device groups, type 4 (Device groups and volumes).
The Device Groups Menu is displayed.
To add a node to a VxVM disk device group, type 4 (Add a node to a VxVM device group).
Follow the instructions and enter the device group and node names.
Verify that the node has been added.
Look for the device group information for the new disk displayed by the following command.
# scconf -p |
The following example shows the scconf command generated by scsetup when it adds a node (phys-schost-3) to a VxVM disk device group (dg1), and the verification step.
# scsetup scconf a D type=vxvm,name=dg1,nodelist=phys-schost-3 # scconf -p Device group name: dg1 Device group type: VXVM Device group failback enabled: yes Device group node list: phys-schost-1, phys-schost-3 |
Use this procedure to remove a cluster node from the list of potential primaries of a VERITAS Volume Manager (VxVM) disk device group (disk group).
Verify that the node is still a member of the group and that the group is an VxVM device group.
Device group type VxVM indicates a VxVM disk device group.
phys-suncluster-1% scconf -pv | grep '(global-galileo)' (global-galileo) Device group type: VxVM (global-galileo) Device group failback enabled: no (global-galileo) Device group node list: phys-suncluster-1, phys-suncluster-2 (global-galileo) Diskset name: global-galileo phys-suncluster-1% |
Become superuser on a current cluster member node.
Execute the scsetup(1M) command.
# scsetup |
The Main Menu is displayed.
To reconfigure a disk device group, type 4 (Device groups and volumes).
To remove the node from the VxVM disk device group, type 5 (Remove a node from a VxVM device group).
Follow the prompts to remove the cluster node from the disk device group. You will be asked for information about the following:
VxVM device group
Node name
Verify that the node has been removed from the VxVM disk device group(s).
# scconf -p | grep Device |
This example shows removal of the node named phys-schost-1 from the dg1 VxVM disk device group.
[Determine the VxVM disk device group for the node:] # scconf -p | grep Device Device group name: dg1 Device group type: VxVM Device group failback enabled: no Device group node list: phys-schost-1, phys-schost-2 Device group diskset name: dg1 [Become superuser and execute the scsetup utility:] # scsetup Select Device groups and volumes>Remove a node from a VxVM device group. Answer the questions when prompted. You will need the following information. You Will Need: Example: VxVM device group name dg1 node names phys-schost-1 [Verify that the scconf command executed properly:] scconf -r -D name=dg1,nodelist=phys-schost-1 Command completed successfully. Quit the scsetup Device Groups Menu and Main Menu. [Verify that the node was removed:] # scconf -p | grep Device Device group name: dg1 Device group type: VxVM Device group failback enabled: no Device group node list: phys-schost-2 Device group diskset name: dg1 |
Use this procedure to remove a cluster node from the list of potential primaries of a VERITAS Volume Manager (VxVM) disk device group (disk group).
Use this procedure to remove a cluster node from the list of potential primaries of a raw disk device group.
Become superuser on a node in the cluster other than the node to remove.
Identify the disk device groups that are connected to the node being removed.
Look for the node name in the Device group node list entry.
# scconf -pvv | grep Devicenodename | grep |
Determine which disk device groups identified in Step 2 are raw disk device groups.
Raw disk device groups are of the Disk or Local_Disk device group type.
# scconf -pvv | grep group type |
Disable the localonly property of each Local_Disk raw disk device group.
# scconf -c -D name=rawdisk-device-group,localonly=false |
See the scconf_dg_rawdisk(1M) man page for more information about the localonly property.
Verify that you have disabled the localonly property of all raw disk device groups that are connected to the node being removed.
The Disk device group type indicates that the localonly property is disabled for that raw disk device group.
# scconf -pvv | grep group type |
Remove the node from all raw disk device groups identified in Step 3.
You must complete this step for each raw disk device group that is connected to the node being removed.
# scconf -r -D name=rawdisk-device-group,nodelist=nodename |
This example shows how to remove a node (phys-schost-2) from a raw disk device group. All commands are run from another node of the cluster (phys-schost-1).
[Identify the disk device groups connected to the node being removed:] phys-schost-1# scconf -pvv | grep phys-schost-2 | grep Device group node list (dsk/d4) Device group node list: phys-schost-2 (dsk/d2) Device group node list: phys-schost-1, phys-schost-2 (dsk/d1) Device group node list: phys-schost-1, phys-schost-2 [Identify the are raw disk device groups:] phys-schost-1# scconf -pvv | grep group type (dsk/d4) Device group type: Local_Disk (dsk/d8) Device group type: Local_Disk [Disable the localonly flag for each local disk on the node:] phys-schost-1# scconf -c -D name=dsk/d4,localonly=false [Verify that the localonly flag is disabled:] phys-schost-1# scconf -pvv | grep group type (dsk/d4) Device group type: Disk (dsk/d8) Device group type: Local_Disk [Remove the node from all raw disk device groups:] phys-schost-1# scconf -r -D name=dsk/d4,nodelist=phys-schost-2 phys-schost-1# scconf -r -D name=dsk/d2,nodelist=phys-schost-2 phys-schost-1# scconf -r -D name=dsk/d1,nodelist=phys-schost-2 |
The method for establishing the primary ownership of a disk device group is based on the setting of an ownership preference attribute called preferenced. If the attribute is not set, the primary owner of an otherwise unowned disk device group is the first node that attempts to access a disk in that group. However, if this attribute is set, you must specify the preferred order in which nodes attempt to establish ownership.
If you disable the preferenced attribute, then the failback attribute is also automatically disabled. However, if you attempt to enable or re-enable the preferenced attribute, you have the choice of enabling or disabling the failback attribute.
If the preferenced attribute is either enabled or re-enabled, you are required to re-establish the order of nodes in the primary ownership preference list.
This procedure uses scsetup(1M) to set or unset the preferenced attribute and the failback attribute for Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager or VxVM disk device groups.
To run this procedure, you need the name of the disk device group for which you are changing attribute values.
Become superuser on any node of the cluster.
Run the scsetup(1M) utility
The Main Menu is displayed.
# scsetup |
To work with disk device groups, type 4 (Device groups and volumes).
The Device Groups Menu is displayed.
To change key properties of a device group, type 6 (Change key properties of a VxVM or Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager device group).
The Change Key Properties Menu is displayed
To change a device group property, type 1 (Change the preferenced and/or failback properties).
Follow the instructions to set the preferenced and failback options for a device group.
Verify that the disk device group attributes have been changed.
Look for the device group information displayed by the following command.
# scconf -p |
The following example shows the scconf command generated by scsetup when it sets the attribute values for a disk device group (dg-schost-1).
# scconf -c -D name=dg-schost-1,nodelist=phys-schost-1:phys-schost-2,\ preferenced=true,failback=enabled,numsecondaries=1 # scconf -p | grep Device Device group name: dg-schost-1 Device group type: SDS Device group failback enabled: yes Device group node list: phys-schost-1, phys-schost-2 Device group ordered node list: yes Device group desired number of secondaries: 1 Device group diskset name: dg-schost-1 |
The default number of secondary nodes for a device group is set to one. This setting specifies the number of nodes within a device group that can become primary owner of the group if the primary node fails. The desired number of secondaries value can be set to any integer between one and the number of non-primary provider nodes in the device group.
If the numsecondaries property is changed, secondary nodes are added or removed from the device group if the change causes a mismatch between the actual number of secondaries and the desired number.
This procedure uses scsetup(1M) to set or unset the numsecondaries property for Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager or VxVM disk device groups. Refer to scconf_dg_rawdisk(1M), scconf_dg_sds(1M), scconf_dg_svm (1M) and scconf_dg_vxvm(1M) for information about disk device group options when configuring any device group.
Become superuser on any node of the cluster.
Run the scsetup utility.
# scsetup |
The Main Menu is displayed.
To work with disk device groups, type 4 (Device groups and volumes).
The Device Groups Menu is displayed.
To change key properties of a device group, type 6 (Change key properties of a device group).
The Change Key Properties Menu is displayed.
To change the desired number of secondaries, type 2 (Change the numsecondaries property).
Follow the instructions and type the desired number of secondaries to be configured for the disk device group. After an appropriate value has been entered, the corresponding scconf command is executed, a log is printed, and the user returns to the previous menu.
Verify that the disk device group attribute has been changed.
Look for the device group information that is displayed by the following command.
# scconf -p |
The following example shows the scconf command that is generated by scsetup when it configures the desired number of secondaries for a device group (dg-schost-1). This example assumes that the disk group and volume were created previously.
# scconf -c -D name=phys-host-1,nodelist=phys-schost-1:phys-schost-2,phys-schost-3\ preferenced=true,failback=enabled,numsecondaries=1 # scconf -p | grep Device Device group name: dg-schost-1 Device group type: SDS/SVM Device group failback enabled: yes Device group node list: phys-schost-1, phys-scost-2, phys-schost-3 Device group ordered node list: yes Device group desired number of secondaries: 1 Device group diskset name: dg-schost-1 |
The following example shows use of a null string value to configure the default number of secondaries. The device group will be configured to use the default value, even if the default value changes.
# scconf -c -D name=diskgrp1, nodelist=host1:host2:host3, preferenced=false,failback=enabled,numsecondaries= # scconf -p | grep Device Device group name: dg-schost-1 Device group type: SDS/SVM Device group failback enabled: yes Device group node list: phys-schost-1, phost-2, phys-schost-3 Device group ordered node list: yes Device group desired number of secondaries: 1 Device group diskset name: dg-schost-1 |
You do not need to be superuser to list the configuration.
There are three ways you can list disk device group configuration information.
Use scstat(1M) to list the disk device group configuration.
% scstat -D |
Use scconf(1M) to list the disk device group configuration.
% scconf -p |
Using the scstat -D command displays the following information.
-- Device Group Servers -- Device Group Primary Secondary ------------ ------- --------- Device group servers: schost-2 - - Device group servers: schost-1 phys-schost-2 phys-schost-3 Device group servers: schost-3 - - -- Device Group Status -- Device Group Status ------------ ------ Device group status: schost-2 Offline Device group status: schost-1 Online Device group status: schost-3 Offline |
When using the scconf command, look for the information listed under device groups.
# scconf -p ... Device group name: dg-schost-1 Device group type: SDS/SVM Device group failback enabled: yes Device group node list: phys-schost-2, phys-schost-3 Device group diskset name: dg-schost-1 |
This procedure can also be used to start (bring online) an inactive device group.
You can also bring an inactive device group online, or switch the primary for a device group, by using the SunPlex Manager GUI. See the SunPlex Manager online help for more information.
Become superuser on any node of the cluster.
Use scswitch(1M) to switch the disk device group primary.
# scswitch -z -D disk-device-group -h node |
Performs the switch.
Specifies the device group to switch.
Specifies the name of the node to switch to. This node become the new primary.
Verify that the disk device group has been switched to the new primary.
If the disk device group is properly registered, information for the new disk device group displays when using the following command.
# scstat -D |
The following example shows how to switch the primary for a disk device group and verify the change.
# scswitch -z -D dg-schost-1 -h phys-schost-1 # scstat -D -- Device Group Servers -- Device Group Primary Secondary ------------ ------- --------- Device group servers: dg1 phys-schost-1 phys-schost-2 -- Device Group Status -- Device Group Status ------------ ------ Device group status: dg1 Online |
Putting a device group in maintenance state prevents that device group from automatically being brought online whenever one of its devices is accessed. You should put a device group in maintenance state when completing repair procedures that require that all I/O activity be acquiesced until completion of the repair. Putting a device group in maintenance state also helps prevent data lost by ensuring that a disk device group is not brought online on one node while the diskset or disk group is being repaired on another node.
Before a device group can be placed in maintenance state, all access to its devices must be stopped, and all dependent file systems must be unmounted.
Place the device group in maintenance state.
# scswitch -m -D disk-device-group |
If the repair procedure being performed requires ownership of a diskset or disk group, manually import that diskset or disk group.
For Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager:
# metaset -C take -f -s diskset |
If you are taking ownership of a Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager diskset, the metaset -C take command must be used when the device group is in maintenance state. Using metaset -t will bring the device group online as part of taking ownership. If you are importing a VxVM disk group, the -t flag must be used when importing the disk group. This prevents the disk group from automatically being imported if this node is rebooted.
For VERITAS Volume Manager:
# vxdg -t import disk-group-name |
Complete whatever repair procedure you need to perform.
Release ownership of the diskset or disk group.
Before taking the disk device group out of maintenance state, you must release ownership of the diskset or disk group. Failure to do so may result in data loss.
For Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager:
# metaset -C release -s diskset |
For VERITAS Volume Manager:
# vxdg deport disk-group-name |
Bring the disk device group online.
# scswitch -z -D disk-device-group -h node |
This example shows how to put disk device group dg-schost-1 into maintenance state, and remove the disk device group from maintenance state.
[Place the disk device group in maintenance state.] # scswitch -m -D dg-schost-1 [If needed, manually import the diskset or disk group.] For Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager: # metaset -C take -f -s dg-schost-1 For VERITAS Volume Manager: # vxdg -t import dg1 [Complete all necessary repair procedures.] [Release ownership.] For Solstice DiskSuite/Solaris Volume Manager: # metaset -C release -s dg-schost-1 For VERITAS Volume Manager: # vxdg deport dg1 [Bring the disk device group online.] # scswitch -z -D dg-schost-1 -h phys-schost-1 |