Using Serviceguard Extension for RAC, 10th Edition, April 2013
# mkdir /dev/vg_rac
2. Create a control file named group in the directory /dev/vg_rac, as follows:
# mknod /dev/vg_rac/group c 64 0xhh0000
The major number is always 64, and the hexadecimal minor number has the form
0xhh0000
where hh must be unique to the volume group you are creating. Use the next hexadecimal
number that is available on your system, after the volume groups that are already configured.
Use the following command to display a list of existing volume groups:
# ls -l /dev/*/group
3. Use the pvcreate command on one of the device files associated with the LUN to define the
LUN to LVM as a physical volume.
# pvcreate -f /dev/rdsk/c0t15d0
It is only necessary to do this with one of the device file names for the LUN. The -f option is
only necessary if the physical volume was previously used in some other volume group.
4. Use the following to create the volume group with the two links:
# vgcreate /dev/vg_rac /dev/dsk/c0t15d0 /dev/dsk/c1t3d0
LVM will now recognize the I/O channel represented by/dev/dsk/c0t15d0 as the primary link
to the disk. If the primary link fails, LVM will automatically switch to the alternate I/O channel
represented by /dev/dsk/c1t3d0. Use the vgextend command to add additional disks to the
volume group, specifying the appropriate physical volume name for each PV link.
Repeat the entire procedure for each distinct volume group you wish to create. For ease of system
administration, you may wish to use different volume groups to separate logs from data and control
files.
NOTE: The default maximum number of volume groups in HP-UX version 2.0 is 10. If you intend
to create enough new volume groups that the total exceeds 10, you must increase the maxvgs
system parameter and then reboot the system. Use the kctune utility to change kernel parameter
area, then choose Configurable Parameters, maxvgs appears on the list.
Creating Logical Volumes for RAC on Disk Arrays
After you create volume groups and add PV links to them, you define logical volumes for data,
logs, and control files. The following are some examples:
# lvcreate -n ops1log1.log -L 4 /dev/vg_rac
# lvcreate -n opsctl1.ctl -L 4 /dev/vg_rac
# lvcreate -n system.dbf -L 28 /dev/vg_rac
# lvcreate -n opsdata1.dbf -L 1000 /dev/vg_rac
Oracle Demo Database Files
The following set of files is required for the Oracle demo database that can be created during the
installation process.
Table 1 Required Oracle File Names for Demo Database
Oracle File
Size (MB)*
Raw Logical Volume Path NameLV Size
(MB)
Logical Volume Name
110/dev/vg_rac/ropsctl1.ctl118opsctl1.ctl
110/dev/vg_rac/ropsctl2.ctl118opsctl2.ctl
110/dev/vg_rac/ropsctl3.ctl118opsctl3.ctl
120/dev/vg_rac/rops1log1.log128ops1log1.log
46 Serviceguard Configuration for Oracle 10gR2, 11gR1, or 11gR2 RAC