Yeah it’s interesting that they aren’t created automatically.
It could have something to do with issues it causes. Especially if you are using SRM \ SRA within an NFS VMWare environment.
Chris
From: Toasters toasters-bounces@teaparty.net On Behalf Of André M. Clark Sent: 30 April 2021 14:20 To: Scott M Gelb scottgelb@yahoo.com; Parisi, Justin justin.parisi@netapp.com; Scott M Gelb via Toasters toasters@teaparty.net; John Stoffel john@stoffel.org Subject: Re:
[EXTERNAL]
One thing that I have always thought about with SVM root vol protection is, if it is an operational recommendation, why aren’t they automatically created in a System Manager workflow when a NAS SVM is created? Things to make you say, Hmmmmmmmn
From: Scott M Gelb via Toasters toasters@teaparty.netmailto:toasters@teaparty.net Reply: Scott M Gelb scottgelb@yahoo.commailto:scottgelb@yahoo.com Date: April 28, 2021 at 16:46:47 To: Parisi, Justin justin.parisi@netapp.commailto:justin.parisi@netapp.com, John Stoffel john@stoffel.orgmailto:john@stoffel.org Cc: toasters@teaparty.netmailto:toasters@teaparty.net toasters@teaparty.netmailto:toasters@teaparty.net Subject:
I have used both DP and LS over the years and am back to using LS more often for reasons Justin wrote, and also for an NAE/NVE workaround where DP make-vsroot had some hoops to jump through to re-create the mirrors after a failover test. LS mirror promote and recreate after had no issues with NAE/NVE in my testing. In all the years doing this, I've never had to recover svm root, but to follow best practices for NAS, still implement them. I don't create mirrors on all nodes and use 1-2 copies depending on cluster size.
An interesting test in mirror activation, is that the mirror picks up the existing SVM junctions regardless of the state of SVM root mirror. For example:
1) An SVM has 4 junction paths 2) SVM root mirror LS or DP to protect SVM root 3) unmount 3 of the junction paths leaving 1 junction path 4) failover to the root mirror (promote LS or break/make-vsroot DP) 5) SVM root running on the failed over volume has the 1 junction path, not the 4 that existed at the time of the mirror... there was no real failure, and the procedure with the SVM running keeps the current state. If a real disaster, I would expect recovery to what was in the mirror, but have never had to recover svm root.
An RFE on my wish list is to have the SVM root virtualized in the RDB, then we don't need to manage, replicate or ever move SVM root. I know this isn't an easy task and would use mroot/vol0, and cause more cluster traffic, but still would welcome seeing a change to do this if feasible. Not a show stopper or requirement, nor high priority.
On Wednesday, April 28, 2021, 11:24:12 AM PDT, John Stoffel <john@stoffel.orgmailto:john@stoffel.org> wrote:
Justin> Another pretty major difference between LS and DP methods; Justin> DP method requires manual intervention when a failover/restore is needed.
This is fine in my case, because I'm really trying to protect against a shipping failure, though it's tempting to do more to protect against root volume failures as well. Though I've honestly never had one, nor had a netapp fail so badly in 22+ years of using them that I lost data from hardware failures.
Closest I came was on a F740 (I think) using the DEC StorageWorks canisters and shelves. I had a two disk failure in an aggregate. One disk you could hear scrapping the heads on the platter, the other was a controller board failure. Since I had nothing to lose, I took the good controller board off the head crash drive and put it onto the other disk. System came up and found the data and started rebuilding. Whew! Raid-DP is a good thing today for sure.
Justin> LS Mirrors are running in parallel and incoming reads/access Justin> requests (other than NFSv4) hit the LS mirrors rather than the Justin> source volume, so if one fails, you don’t have to do anything Justin> right away; you’d just need to resolve the issue at some Justin> point, but no interruption to service.
That's a decent reason to use them.
Justin> LS mirrors can also have a schedule to run to avoid needing to Justin> update them regularly. And, if you need to write to the SVM Justin> root for some reason, you’d need to access the .admin path in Justin> the vsroot; LS mirrors are readonly (like DP mirrors).
The default for 9.3 seems to be 1 hour, but I bumped it to every 5 minutes, because I have Netbackup backups which use snapshots and 'vol clone ...' to mount Oracle volumes for backups. I had to hack my backuppolicy.sh script to put in a 'sleep 305' to make it work properly.
Trying to make it work generically with 'snapmirror update-ls-set <vserver>:<source>' wasn't working for some reason, so the quick hack of a sleep got me working.
But I am thinking of dropping the LS mirrors and just going with DP mirrors of all my rootvols instead, just because of this issue.
But let's do a survey, how many people on here are using LS mirrors of your rootvols on your clusters? I certainly wasn't across multiple clusters.
Jhn
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