Managing Serviceguard 12th Edition, March 2006
Planning and Documenting an HA Cluster
Hardware Planning
Chapter 4 141
NOTE When a boot/root disk is configured with a low-priority address on a
shared SCSI bus, a system panic can occur if there is a timeout on
accessing the boot/root device. This can happen in a cluster when many
nodes and many disks are configured on the same bus.
The correct approach is to assign SCSI addresses in such a way that the
interface cards on cluster nodes have the highest priority SCSI
addresses, followed by any boot/root disks that are on the shared bus,
followed by all other disks on the shared bus.
Disk I/O Information
This part of the worksheet lets you indicate where disk device adapters
are installed. Enter the following items on the worksheet for each disk
connected to each disk device adapter on the node:
Bus Type
Indicate the type of bus. Supported busses are Fibre
Channel and SCSI.
Slot Number
Indicate the slot number in which the interface card is
inserted in the backplane of the computer.
Address
Enter the bus hardware path number, which will be
seen on the system later when you use ioscan to
display hardware.
Disk Device File
Enter the disk device file name. To display the name
use the ioscan -fnC disk command.
Information from this section of the worksheet is used in creating the
mirrored disk configuration using Logical Volume Manager. In addition,
it is useful to gather as much information as possible about your disk
configuration. You can obtain information about available disks by using
the following commands:
• diskinfo
• ioscan -fnC disk
• lssf /dev/*dsk/c*
• bdf
• mount
• swapinfo
• vgdisplay -v