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Operating Systems Solaris Sharing a physical disk with an LDOM Post 303042253 by hicksd8 on Thursday 19th of December 2019 04:16:14 PM
Old 12-19-2019
One thing for sure is that only one of the nodes (Solaris 11 Global or Solaris 10 LDOM) can have control of the volume. In any situation, having two operating systems writing to a volume simultaneously is a recipe for instant filesystem corruption. One operating system must control file opening, locking, etc. Even in a cluster scenario using dual tailed storage, a major function of the cluster suite is to control which node has exclusive control of the volume and effect disciplined failover when necessary.

Therefore, like any two nodes, one option is to mount the volume on one node, configure a NFS share on that node, and mount the volume using a NFS client from the second node. The first node then controls ALL activity on the volume.
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VIOMB(4)						   BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual 						  VIOMB(4)

NAME
viomb -- VirtIO memory ballooning driver SYNOPSIS
virtio* at pci? dev ? function ? viomb* at virtio? DESCRIPTION
virtio(4) defines an interface for efficient, standard, and extensible I/O between the hypervisor and the virtual machine. The viomb driver supports the virtio-compliant memory ballooning device. Memory ballooning works as follows: 1. The host operator requests a guest to return some amount of memory to the host (via e.g. Qemu monitor balloon command). 2. The hypervisor sends the request via VirtIO memory ballooning device. 3. The guest viomb driver requests allocation of that amount of physical memory from the NetBSD memory management system. 4. The viomb device tells the hypervisor the guest physical memory address of the allocated memory via VirtIO memory ballooning device. The sysctl node hw.viomb.npages shows the requested number of memory pages to return to the hypervisor, while hw.viomb.actual shows the actual number of memory pages that are already returned to the hypervisor. SEE ALSO
virtio(4), sysctl(8) Rusty Russell, IBM Corporation, Virtio PCI Card Specification, http://ozlabs.org/~rusty/virtio-spec/. HISTORY
The viomb device driver appeared in NetBSD 6.0. BUGS
The userland interface should be same as the Xen ballooning device. BSD
November 26, 2011 BSD
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