Identifying disks to use as coordinator disks, Checking shared disks for i/o fencing, 95 checking shared disks for i/o fencing – Symantec Veritas 5 User Manual

Page 95: Identifying disks to use as coordinator, Disks

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4

Scan all disk drives and their attributes, update the VxVM device list, and
reconfigure DMP with the new devices. Type:

#

vxdisk scandisks

See the Veritas Volume Manager documentation for details on how to add
and configure disks.

5

To initialize the disks as VxVM disks, use one of the following methods:

Use the interactive vxdiskadm utility to initialize the disks as VxVM disks.

For more information see the Veritas Volume Managers Administrator’s
Guide
.

Use the

vxdisksetup

command to initialize a disk as a VxVM disk.

vxdisksetup -i device_name

The example specifies the CDS format:

#

vxdisksetup -i sdr

Repeat this command for each disk you intend to use as a coordinator
disk.

Identifying disks to use as coordinator disks

After you add and initialize disks, identify disks to use as coordinator disks.

To identify the coordinator disks

1

List the disks on each node.

For example, execute the following commands to list the disks:

#

vxdisk list

2

Pick three SCSI-3 PR compliant shared disks as coordinator disks.

Checking shared disks for I/O fencing

Make sure that the shared storage you set up while preparing to configure VCS
meets the I/O fencing requirements. You can test the shared disks using the
vxfentsthdw utility. The two nodes must have

ssh

(default) or

rsh

communication.

To confirm whether a disk (or LUN) supports SCSI-3 persistent reservations, two
nodes must simultaneously have access to the same disks. Because a shared disk
is likely to have a different name on each node, check the serial number to verify
the identity of the disk. Use the

vxfenadm

command with the

-i

option. This

95

Configuring VCS clusters for data integrity

Preparing to configure disk-based I/O fencing

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