Understanding Veritas Volume Manager 75

Hot-relocation

association. However, in such a case, you can use the vxplex snapback command with the -f(force) option to perform the snapback.

Note: This restriction only applies to traditional snapshots. It does not apply to instant snapshots.

Any operation that changes the layout of a replica volume can mark the FastResync change map for that snapshot “dirty” and require a full resynchronization during snapback. Operations that cause this include subdisk split, subdisk move, and online relayout of the replica. It is safe to perform these operations after the snapshot is completed. For more information, see the vxvol (1M), vxassist (1M), and vxplex (1M) manual pages.

Hot-relocation

Note: You need a full license to use this feature.

Hot-relocationis a feature that allows a system to react automatically to I/O failures on redundant objects (mirrored or RAID-5 volumes) in VxVM and restore redundancy and access to those objects. VxVM detects I/O failures on objects and relocates the affected subdisks. The subdisks are relocated to disks designated as spare disks and/or free space within the disk group. VxVM then reconstructs the objects that existed before the failure and makes them accessible again.

When a partial disk failure occurs (that is, a failure affecting only some subdisks on a disk), redundant data on the failed portion of the disk is relocated. Existing volumes on the unaffected portions of the disk remain accessible. For further details, see Administering hot-relocation on page 379.

Volume sets

Note: You need a full license to use this feature.

Volume sets are an enhancement to VxVM that allow several volumes to be represented by a single logical object. All I/O from and to the underlying volumes is directed via the I/O interfaces of the volume set. The volume set feature supports the multi-volume enhancement to Veritas File System (VxFS). This feature allows file systems to make best use of the different performance