Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers veritas filesystem and volume manager Post 12783 by Kelam_Magnus on Monday 7th of January 2002 01:34:41 PM
Old 01-07-2002
I had trouble with this in the beginning also.

Volume Manager has to do with managing the disks, raid, striping, plexes, etc....

Veritas Filesystem is just that. Anything that you need to do to manage the data on the disks. Such as mkfs, mount, online resizing and defragmenting. It also gives you control over I/O, caching, and allocation.

Remember:
VM is managing the disks.

Veritas Filesystem is managing the data on the disks.


Smilie
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How to start Veritas volume manager

? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: 98_1LE
1 Replies

2. Solaris

How to resize mirror volume in veritas volume manager 3.5 on Solaris 9 OE

Hi all, I have a problem with vxvm volume which is mirror with two disks. when i am try to increase file system, it is throwing an ERROR: can not allocate 5083938 blocks, ERROR: can not able to run vxassist on this volume. Please find a sutable solutions. Thanks and Regards B. Nageswar... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: nageswarb
0 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Regarding Veritas Volume manager

hy guys I am new at this thread , i have installed sf 5.0 and wanted to encapsulate root disk but when i get to optionn to enter private region i get this error: Enter desired private region length (default: 65536) 512 VxVM ERROR V-5-2-338 The encapsulation operation failed with the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: charneet
2 Replies

4. Solaris

veritas volume manager links

Hi all, Anybody know the URLs of veritas volume manager disk problems,volume problems,root disk problems ...etc. Please share the URL's. i really appreciate for cooperation. regards krishna (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: murthy76
4 Replies

5. Solaris

RAID manager or veritas volume manager

Can somebody kindly help me to determine which one i should choose to better manipulate OS volume. RAID manager or veritas volume manager? Any critical differences between those two? Thanks in advance. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: beginningDBA
5 Replies

6. Solaris

Veritas volume manager in solaris.

Can you please let me know the certification code for veritas volume manager in solaris ? Thanks in advance. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gowthamakanthan
2 Replies

7. Solaris

removing the filesystem from Veritas Volume Manager

Hi All, recently i had the project. Got 2 server, one is Mercury, and another is Procyon. two server was attached to EMC Box and use the Veritas Filesystem. My question is, 1. Is it possible first remove the filesystem(/u03,/u04) from Veritas in Procyon, no effect on the data? we still... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: SmartAntz
5 Replies

8. Solaris

Veritas volume manager resize

Hiii, Can any one sugge me best practices for resizing a veritas voulume with vxfs file system? I tried doing this vxassist -g stg shrinkto stgvol 209715200 VxVM vxassist ERROR V-5-1-7236 Shrinking a FSGEN or RAID5 usage type volume can result in loss of data. It is recommended... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: anwesh
1 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

VERITAS Volume Manager - mirror a disk/volume

I have a machine (5.10 Generic_142900-03 sun4u sparc SUNW,Sun-Fire-V210) that we are upgrading the storage and my task is to mirror what is already on the machine to the new disk. I have the disk, it is labeled and ready but I am not sure of the next steps to mirror the existing diskgroup and... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rookieuxixsa
1 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

How to extend a disk in veritas volume manager in veritas cluster?

Hi Experts, I wanted to extend a veritas file system which is running on veritas cluster and mounted on node2 system. #hastatus -sum -- System State Frozen A node1 running 0 A node2 running 0 -- Group State -- Group System Probed ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Skmanojkum
1 Replies
vxtrace(1M)															       vxtrace(1M)

NAME
vxtrace - trace operations on volumes SYNOPSIS
vxtrace [-aeEls ] [-b buffersize] [-c eventcount] [-d outputfile] [-f inputfile] [-g diskgroup] [-k buffersize] [-m millisec_delay] [-o objtype [,objtype]...] [-t timeout] [-w waitinterval] [name | device]... DESCRIPTION
The vxtrace utility prints kernel error or I/O trace event records on the standard output or writes them to a file in binary format. Binary trace records written to a file can be read back and formatted by vxtrace as well. If no arguments are specified, vxtrace reports either all error trace data or all I/O trace data on all virtual disk devices. With error trace data, it is possible to select all accumulated error trace data, to wait for new error trace data, or both (the default). Selection can be limited to a specific disk group, to specific types of Veritas Volume Manager (VxVM) kernel I/O objects, or to particular named objects or devices. Under heavy loads, the kernel may discard one or more records before they can be reported to vxtrace. Even though the contents of the records are lost, the kernel keeps track of the number of lost records and reports this to vxtrace. as a record. vxtrace displays this record indicating that records were lost. You can increase the size of the kernel buffer using the -k buffersize option to reduce the likelihood of the kernel discarding records. OPTIONS
-a Appends to the outputfile instead of truncating it. By default, the output file is truncated. -b buffersize Sets the size of the buffer used by vxtrace when it obtains trace records from the kernel, or from a file when the -f option is specified. The buffer size is specified as a standard Veritas Volume Manager length (see vxintro(1M)). The default buffer size is 8K. -c eventcount Accumulates at most eventcount events and then exits. The timeout and eventcount options can be used together. -d outputfile Writes (dumps) binary trace data to the specified output file. -e Selects new error trace data. The default is to select I/O trace data. -E Selects pre-existing error trace data. This can be combined with -e to get both pre-existing trace data and new trace data. -f inputfile Reads binary trace data from the specified input file, instead of from the Veritas Volume Manager kernel. -g diskgroup Selects objects from the specified disk group. The disk group can be specified either by disk group ID or by disk group name. With no name or device arguments, all appropriate objects in the disk group are selected. With the name argument, diskgroup specifies the disk group that contains the named configuration record. -k buffersize Sets the kernel I/O trace buffer size. The Veritas Volume Manager kernel allocates a private kernel space to buffer the I/O trace records for each vxtrace command. The default buffer size is 8K bytes. Some trace records may be discarded if the trace buffer is too small. This option can be used to set a larger or a smaller kernel trace buffer size. The buffer size is speci- fied as a standard Veritas Volume Manager length (see vxintro(1M)). Depending on the Veritas Volume Manager kernel configura- tion, usually only a maximum buffer size of 1 megabyte is granted. -l Long format. Prints all available fields for all tracing records, instead of a subset of the available fields. The default is to use the short format. -m millisec_delay Pauses vxtrace for the specified period to allow more records to accumulate. name | device If name or device are specified, Veritas Volume Manager kernel objects of the requested types are selected if they are associated with the configuration records or virtual disk devices indicated by those arguments. -o objtype [,objtype]... Selects object based on the objtype option arguments. Multiple types of objects can be specified with one or several -o options. The possible object selection types are: all | ALL Selects all possible virtual disk devices, kernel objects, and physical disks. dev | logical Selects virtual disk devices. disk | physical Selects Veritas Volume Manager physical disks. log Selects all log objects. logplex Selects RAID-5 log plexes. logsd Selects DRL (dirty region logging) or RAID-5 log subdisks. logvol Selects DRL or RAID-5 log volumes. m | mv | mirror Selects mirrored volume kernel objects. p | pl | plex Selects striped or concatenated plex kernel objects. rl | rlink Selects RLINK kernel objects. If an RVG (replicated volume group) is specified, all RLINKs associated with that RVG are selected. s | sd | subdisk Selects subdisk kernel objects. v | vol | volume Selects mirrored or RAID-5 volume kernel objects. -s Specifies using synchronous writes to the outputfile instead of asynchronous writes. Asynchronous writes is the default. -t timeout Accumulates trace data for at most timeout seconds, then exits. -w waitinterval If vxtrace waits for waitinterval seconds without receiving any new events, prints waiting... to allow scripts to wake up and process previously accumulated events. This is useful for processing errors. The waiting... message does not count as an event for the purposes of the -c option. ARGUMENTS
Arguments specify configuration record names, or physical or virtual disk device nodes (by device path). If no object types were selected with the -o option, only trace records corresponding to the indicated configuration records or devices are selected; otherwise, objects of the requested types are selected if they are associated in any way with the named configuration record or device. If a name argument does not match a regular configuration record, but does match a disk access record, the indicated physical disk is selected. Physical disks can also be selected by the disk media record name. By default, name arguments are searched for in the default disk group (defaultdg) unless a disk group is specified using the -g option. The disk group for any individual name argument can be overridden using the form: diskgroup/recordname Note: When reading trace data from a file with the -f option, association information is not available. EXAMPLES
To trace all physical disk I/Os, enter: vxtrace -o disk To trace virtual disk device I/Os to the device associated with volume testvol, use either of the commands: vxtrace -g testdg -o dev testvol vxtrace /dev/vx/dsk/testdg/testvol To trace all log subdisks associated with volume testvol, enter: vxtrace -g testdg -o logsd testvol To trace all log objects, enter: vxtrace -o log To accumulate ten seconds worth of trace data for disk04 and then format that data, use: vxtrace -t 10 -d /tmp/tracedata disk04 vxtrace -l -f /tmp/tracedata To read error trace data into a script for processing, using ten second pauses to generate mail messages, use the command: vxtrace -leE -w 10 | while read ... FILES
/dev/vx/trace SEE ALSO
vxintro(1M), vxstat(1M), vxtrace(7) VxVM 5.0.31.1 24 Mar 2008 vxtrace(1M)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:27 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy