Serviceguard NFS Toolkit A.11.11.06, A.11.23.05 and A.11.31.05 Administrator's Guide HP-UX 11i v1, v2, and v3
Table Of Contents
- Serviceguard NFS Toolkit A.11.11.06, A.11.23.05 and A.11.31.05 Administrator's Guide
- Table of Contents
- 1 Overview of Serviceguard NFS
- Limitations of Serviceguard NFS
- Overview of Serviceguard NFS Toolkit A.11.31.05 with Serviceguard A.11.18 (or later) and Veritas Cluster File System Support
- Overview of the Serviceguard NFS Modular Package
- Overview of the NFS File Lock Migration Feature
- Overview of NFSv4 File Lock Migration Feature
- Overview of Serviceguard NFS with Serviceguard A.11.17 Support
- Integrating Support for Cluster File Systems into Serviceguard NFS Toolkit
- Overview of Cluster File Systems in Serviceguard NFS Toolkit
- Limitations and Issues with the current CFS implementation
- Supported Configurations
- How the Control and Monitor Scripts Work
- 2 Installing and Configuring Serviceguard NFS Legacy Package
- Installing Serviceguard NFS Legacy Package
- Before Creating a Serviceguard NFS Legacy Package
- Configuring a Serviceguard NFS Legacy Package
- Copying the Template Files
- Editing the Control Script (nfs.cntl)
- Editing the NFS Control Script (hanfs.sh)
- Editing the File Lock Migration Script (nfs.flm)
- Editing the NFS Monitor Script (nfs.mon)
- Editing the Package Configuration File (nfs.conf)
- Configuring Server-to-Server Cross-Mounts (Optional)
- Creating the Cluster Configuration File and Bringing Up the Cluster
- Configuring Serviceguard NFS Legacy Package over CFS Packages
- 3 Installing and Configuring Serviceguard NFS Modular Package
- Installing Serviceguard NFS Modular Package
- Before Creating a Serviceguard NFS Modular Package
- Configuring a Serviceguard NFS Modular Package
- Configuring Serviceguard NFS Modular Package over CFS Packages
- 4 Migration of Serviceguard NFS Legacy Package to Serviceguard NFS Modular Package
- 5 Sample Configurations for Legacy Package
- Example One - Three-Server Mutual Takeover
- Example Two - One Adoptive Node for Two Packages with File Lock Migration
- Cluster Configuration File for Adoptive Node for Two Packages with File Lock Migration
- Package Configuration File for pkg01
- NFS Control Scripts for pkg01
- NFS File Lock Migration and Monitor Scripts for pkg01
- Package Configuration File for pkg02
- NFS Control Scripts for pkg02
- NFS File Lock Migration and Monitor Scripts for pkg02
- Example Three - Three-Server Cascading Failover
- Example Four - Two Servers with NFS Cross-Mounts
- 6 Sample Configurations for Modular Package
- Index
The external script invokes another script called nfs1_xmnt. This script NFS-mounts the file
system exported by the package pkg01. If you configured the file system in the /etc/fstab
file, the package might not be active yet when the servers tried to mount the file system at system
boot. By configuring the external script to NFS-mount the file system, you ensure that the package
is active before the mount command is invoked.
The first line in the start_command function of the external script, executes the nfs1_xmnt
script locally on host thyme (the primary node for pkg01). The second line, beginning with
remsh, executes the nfs1_xmnt script remotely on host basil.
If pkg01 fails to come up, or if the remsh to host basil fails, the file system will not be mounted,
and no error will be returned. The only way to be sure the file system was mounted successfully
is to run the nfs1_xmnt script manually on both host thyme and host basil.
The only user-configurable values in the nfs1_xmnt script are the SNFS[n] and CNFS[n]
variables. These specify the server location of the file system and the client mount point for the
file system. The following line is the from the nfs1_xmnt script in this example configuration:
SNFS[0]="nfs1:/hanfs/nfsu011"; CNFS[0]="/nfs/nfsu011"
In the SNFS[0] variable, nfs1 is the name that maps to the relocatable IP address of pkg01. It
must be configured in the name service the host is using (DNS, NIS, or the /etc/hosts file). If
you do not want to configure a name for the package, you can just specify the IP address in the
SNFS[0] variable, as follows:
SNFS[0]="15.13.114.243:/hanfs/nfsu011";
CNFS[0]=:/nfs/nfsu011"
The client mount point, specified in the CNFS[0] variable, must be different from the location
of the file system on the server (SNFS[0]).
Package Configuration File for pkg02
This section shows the package configuration file (nfs2.conf) for the package pkg02 in this
sample configuration. The comments available in the generated configuration file are not displayed
in this sample.
package_name pkg02
package_type failover
failover_policy configured_node
failback_policy manual
node_name basil
node_name thyme
auto_run yes
local_lan_failover_allowed yes
node_fail_fast_enabled no
service_name nfs2.monitor
service_fail_fast_enabled no
service_halt_timeout 300
vgchange_cmd "vgchange -a e" # Default
cvm_activation_cmd "vxdg -g \$DiskGroup set activation=exclusivewrite"
vg nfsu02
fs_name /dev/nfsu02/lvol1
fs_directory /hanfs/nfsu021
fs_mount_opt "-o rw"
Example Four - Two Servers with NFS Cross-Mounts 109