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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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HYPER-V(4)						   BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual 						HYPER-V(4)

NAME
hv_kvp -- Hyper-V Key Value Pair Driver SYNOPSIS
To compile this driver into the kernel, place the following lines in the system kernel configuration file: device hyperv DESCRIPTION
The hv_kvp driver provides the ability to store, retrieve, modify and delete key value pairs for FreeBSD guest partitions running on Hyper-V. Hyper-V allows administrators to store custom metadata in the form of key value pairs inside the FreeBSD guest partition. Administrators can use Windows Powershell scripts to add, read, modify and delete such key value pairs. The driver is bare bones and merely forwards requests to its counterpart user mode daemon, hv_kvp_daemon(8). The daemon maintains pools of key value pairs and does the actual metadata management. The same driver and daemon combination are also used to set and get IP addresses from a FreeBSD guest. The set functionality is particularly useful when the FreeBSD guest is assigned a static IP address and is failed over from one Hyper-V host to another. After failover, Hyper-V uses the set IP functionality to automatically update the FreeBSD guest's IP address to its original static value. On the other hand, the get IP functionality is used to update the guest IP address in the Hyper-V management console window. SEE ALSO
hv_ata_pci_disengage(4), hv_netvsc(4), hv_storvsc(4), hv_utils(4), hv_vmbus(4), hv_kvp_daemon(8) HISTORY
Support for hv_kvp first appeared in FreeBSD 10.0. The driver was developed through a joint effort between Citrix Incorporated, Microsoft Corporation and Network Appliance Incorporated. AUTHORS
FreeBSD support for hv_kvp was first added by Microsoft BSD Integration Services Team <bsdic@microsoft.com>. BSD
September 10, 2013 BSD
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