170Creating and administering disk groups

Creating a disk group

flags: online ready private autoconfig autoimport imported

diskid: 963504891.1070.bass

dgname: newdg

dgid: 963504895.1075.bass

hostid: bass

info: privoffset=128

Displaying free space in a disk group

Before you add volumes and file systems to your system, make sure you have enough free disk space to meet your needs.

To display free space in the system, use the following command:

#vxdg free

The following is example output:

GROUP DISK

DEVICE

TAG

OFFSET

LENGTH

FLAGS

mydg

mydg01

c0t10d0

c0t10d0

0

4444228

-

mydg

mydg02

c0t11d0

c0t11d0

0

4443310

-

newdg newdg01

c0t12d0

c0t12d0

0

4443310

-

newdg newdg02

c0t13d0

c0t13d0

0

4443310

-

oradg oradg01

c0t14d0

c0t14d0

0

4443310

-

To display free space for a disk group, use the following command:

#vxdg -g diskgroup free

where -gdiskgroup optionally specifies a disk group.

For example, to display the free space in the disk group, mydg, use the following command:

#vxdg -g mydg free

The following example output shows the amount of free space in sectors:

DISK

DEVICE

TAG

OFFSET

LENGTH

FLAGS

mydg01

c0t10d0

c0t10d0

0

4444228

-

mydg02

c0t11d0

c0t11d0

0

4443310

-

Creating a disk group

Data related to a particular set of applications or a particular group of users may need to be made accessible on another system. Examples of this are:

A system has failed and its data needs to be moved to other systems.

The work load must be balanced across a number of systems.

Disks must be placed in one or more disk groups before VxVM can use the disks for volumes. It is important that you locate data related to particular applications or users on an identifiable set of disks. When you need to move these disks, this allows you to move only the application or user data that should be moved.