- Volume management overview
- VxVM feature overview
- VxVM and LVM comparison
- VxVM and LVM coexistence
- VxVM resources
- Disk group concepts
- Volume concepts
- Plex concepts
- Disk media concepts
- Subdisk concepts
- Simple volume layouts
- Concatenated volume layouts
- Striped volume layouts
- RAID 5 volume layouts
- Mirrored volume layouts
- Object database concepts
- Storing objects on physical disks
- Importing objects and disk groups
- Accessing volumes via the object database
- Managing objects via vxconfigd
- VxVM/LVM conceptual comparison
- VxVM/LVM command comparison
- VxVM hardware and software requirements
- VxVM versions
- VxVM software bundles
- Installing, listing, and verifying VxVM
- Installing and enabling VxVM via Ignite-UX
- Enabling VxVM via vxinstall
- Modifying the PATH variable for VxVM
- Verifying VxVM daemons
- Managing the vxsvc daemon
- Launching the vea GUI client
- Securing the vea GUI client
- Viewing the disk configuration
- Viewing the disk group configuration
- Initializing a disk group
- Adding a disk to a disk group
- Removing a disk from a disk group
- Destroying a disk group
- Destroying a disk
- Upgrading a disk group
- Creating a volume
- Selecting disks
- Selecting a layout
- Creating a file system volume
- Creating a swap volume
- Creating a dump volume
- Viewing volumes
- Resizing volumes
- Resizing file system volumes
- Resizing swap and dump volumes
- Removing a volume
- Mirroring advantages
- DRL log plex advantages
- Creating, adding, and removing mirrors
- Creating, adding, and removing DRLs
- Configuring the volume read policy
- Specifying a mirrored volume’s plex locations
- Monitoring and managing mirroring tasks
- Configuring mirroring defaults
- Striping advantages
- RAID 5 advantages
- RAID 5 log plex advantages
- Creating striped volumes
- Creating RAID 5 volumes
- Adding and removing RAID 5 log plexes
- Changing stripe and RAID 5 attributes
- Changing stripe and RAID 5 layouts
- Monitor and manage relayout task
- mirror-concat volume concepts
- mirror-stripe volume concepts
- concat-mirror volume concepts
- stripe-mirror volume concepts
- Recovering non-layered volumes after a disk crash
- Recovering layered volumes after a disk crash
- Creating layered and non-layered volumes
- Converting between layered and non-layered volumes
- Renaming disks, subdisks, volumes, and plexes
- Moving subdisks within a disk group
- Moving plexes within a disk group
- Moving disks between disk groups
- Moving disk groups between hosts
- Renaming disk groups
- Importing disk groups in a Serviceguard cluster
- Best practices to avoid data loss
- Hot relocation concepts
- Configuring spare and nohotuse disks
- Unrelocating relocated subdisks after disk replacement
- Assigning a new spare disk after disk replacement
- Recognizing failed disks via syslog and EMS
- Recognizing failed disks via vxdisk
- Recognizing failed disks via vxprint
- Verifying disks via diskinfo and dd
- Reattaching a disk after transient disk failure
- Replacing a failed disk, when at least one disk in the disk group survives
- Replacing a failed disk, when no disks in a disk group survive
- Recovering mirrored volumes with surviving plexes
Recovering mirrored volumes without surviving plexes
- LVM to VxVM migration paths
- LVM to VxVM migration limitations
- Converting unused physical volumes into VxVM disks
- Converting LVM volume groups into VxVM disk groups
- Unconverting converted disk groups
- PA-RISC VxVM boot disk structure
- Integrity VxVM boot disk structure
- Cold installing a VxVM boot disk
- Copying an LVM boot disk to a VxVM boot disk
- Destroying an LVM boot disk
- Mirroring a VxVM boot disk
- Verifying a VxVM boot disk
- Backing up a VxVM boot disk
- Replacing a failed VxVM boot disk mirror
- Removing a VxVM boot disk mirror
- Restoring an LVM boot disk
- Arrays and LUNs
- Array concepts
- LUN concepts
- RAID concepts
- RAID 0, RAID 1, and RAID 1+0 concepts
- RAID 3, RAID 5, and RAID 5DP concepts
- RAID levels and VxVM
- Configuring a LUN as a VxVM disk
- Extending a LUN
- SAN concepts
- Enclosure concepts
- Enclosure-based name concepts
- Enabling enclosure-based names
- Viewing enclosure-based names
- Customizing enclosure-based names
- Using enclosure-based names
- Active/passive DMP concepts
- Active/active DMP concepts
- DDL and DMP node concepts
- ASL concepts
- Installing and viewing ASLs
- Activating and deactivating
- ASLs Initiating DMP path discovery
- Viewing DMP paths
- Disabling DMP paths
- Choosing paths on A/A arrays
- Monitoring DMP activity
- HP-UX 11i v3 mass storage stack concepts
- HP-UX 11i v3 DSF concepts
- Enabling VxVM disk device names
- Reverting back to cxtxdx VxVM device names
- HP-UX 11i v3 nMP concepts
- Enabling HP-UX nMP
- Reverting back to VxVM DMP
- Legacy vs. Agile View hardware addresses
- Legacy parallel SCSI hardware addresses
- Legacy FC hardware addresses
- Legacy DSF names
- Viewing legacy hardware addresses and DSFs
- Agile View SCSI hardware addresses
- Agile View FC lunpath hardware addresses
- Agile View FC LUN hardware addresses
- Agile View persistent DSFs
- Viewing Agile View hardware addresses and DSFs
- Viewing an HBA’s lunpaths via Agile View
- Viewing a LUN’s lunpaths via Agile View
- Viewing a LUN’s WWID and LUN ID via Agile View
- Viewing a LUN’s WWID and lunpaths via Agile View
- Selecting a path load balancing policy
- Monitoring HBA, LUN, and lunpath usage
- Monitoring HB, LUN, and lunpath health
- Enabling and disabling LUNs and lunpaths
This hands-on course covers the configuration and administration of Veritas Volume Manager (VxVM) for HP-UX. Covering basic procedures to advanced configuration and recovery topics, the course is 50 percent lecture and 50 percent hands-on.
For why?
HP-UX system administrators, systems engineers, and technical support representatives responsible for systems that use the Veritas Volume Manager.
Specifications:
- HP-UX System and Network Administration I & II (H3064S & H3065S) or
- Equivalent HP-UX administration experience
At the conclusion of this course, you should be able to:
- Install the VxVM software
- Manage DMP and nMP multipathed LUNs
- Configure, extend, reduce, deport, import, and destroy disk groups
- Configure, extend, reduce, move, and destroy volumes
- Manage mirrored volumes
- Manage striped and RAID 5 volumes
- Manage layered volumes
- Manage VxVM boot disks
- Convert LVM volume groups to VxVM disk groups
- Replace and recover failed disks, volumes, and plexes
W cenę szkolenia wliczony jest:
- Autoryzowany certyfikat producenta
- Autoryzowane materiały szkoleniowe w formie elektronicznej bądź papierowej
- Materiały szkoleniowe, notatnik, długopis
- Kawa, herbata, słodki poczęstunek
- Obiad
Firma NT GROUP Sp. z o.o. jest Autoryzowanym partnerem firmy HPE
Zachęcamy firmy do uzyskania możliwości dofinansowania na szkolenia oferowane przez naszą firmę. W obecnej chwili istnieją dwa sposoby dzięki którym możesz uzyskać dofinansowanie.
- Szkolenia dofinansowane do 80% z funduszy europejskich - Baza Usług Rozwojowych (BUR). Dofinansowanie dostępne jest dla wszystkich firm zatrudniających średniorocznie do 250 pracowników (maksymalnie średnie przedsiębiorstwo)
- Szkolenia dofinansowane z Krajowego Funduszu Szkoleniowego - dofinansowanie do 100%. Niezależnie od wielkości przedsiębiorstwa oraz kapitału.
Nasi pracownicy pomogą uzyskać dla Twojej firmy dofinansowanie. To naprawdę nie jest trudne. Jeżeli masz pytania napisz lub zadzwoń do nas.
Zapraszamy!
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