Veritas 5.0.1 Installation Guide HP-UX 11i v3 (5992-0031, September 2011)

New command, fstag, for file tagging
New command, fsppmk, for creating XML policies
Availability of the mntlock and mntunlock Mount Options
You can specify the mntlock option with the mount command to prevent a file system from
being unmounted by an application.
VxFS 5.0.1 on HP-UX 11i v3
For more information on features supported with VxFS 5.0.1 on HP-UX 11i v3, see Veritas File
System 5.0.1 Release Notes at http://docs.hp.com.
Architecture of VxFS
HP-UX supports various file systems. In order for the kernel to be able to access these different file
system types, there is a layer of indirection above them called Virtual File System (VFS).
Without the VFS layer, the kernel must know the specifics of each file system type and maintain
distinct code to handle each.
The VFS layer enables the kernel to possess a single set of routines that are common to all file
system types. Handling of the specifics of a file system type are passed down to the file system
specific modules. The following sections describe the VxFS file system specific structures.
The following are the VxFS on-disk structures:
Superblock
A superblock (SB) resides ~8k from the beginning of the storage and tracks the status of the
file system. It supports maps of free space and other resources (inodes, allocation units, and
so on).
Intent Log
VxFS reduces system failure recovery time by tracking file system activity in the VxFS intent
log. This feature records pending changes to the file system structure in a circular intent log.
The intent log recovery feature is not readily apparent to users or a system administrator,
except during a system failure. During system failure recovery, the VxFS fsck utility performs
an intent log replay, which scans the intent log, and nullifies or completes file system operations
that were active when the system failed. The file system can then be mounted without completing
a full structural check of the entire file system. Replaying the intent log may not completely
recover the damaged file system structure if there was a disk hardware failure. Hardware
problems may require a complete system check using the fsck utility provided with VxFS.
Allocation Unit
Allocation units are made up of a series of data blocks. Each allocation unit typically consists
of 32k contiguous blocks. Several contiguous data blocks make up an extent. The extents are
used for file data storage.
Extent Based Allocation
An extent is defined as one or more adjacent blocks of data within the file system. Extent based
allocation offers the following advantages:
Allows large I/Os for efficiency
Supports dynamic resizing of disk space
Storage Management for Oracle
For more information on Storage Management for Oracle, see the Veritas Storage Foundation for
Oracle Administrator's Guide at http://docs.hp.com.
Storage Management for Oracle 19