Veritas 5.0.1 Installation Guide HP-UX 11i v3 (5900-2464, September 2012)

2. To use enclosure-based names, enter <y|n> when prompted by the vxinstall utility:
Do you want to use enclosure based names for all disks ? [y,n,q,?] (default: n)
For more information on the supported options, see vxinstall (1M).
NOTE: Disks use the traditional naming format, usually c#t#d#. Enclosure-based naming
enables disk devices to be named for enclosures rather than for the controllers through which
they are accessed. In a Storage Area Network (SAN) that uses Fibre Channel hubs or fabric
switches, information about the disk location provided by the operating system may not
correctly indicate the physical location of the disks. Enclosure-based naming enables VxVM
to access enclosures as separate physical entities. By configuring redundant copies of your
data on separate enclosures, you can safeguard your data against failure of one or more
enclosures.
3. To set up a system wide default disk group, enter <y|n> when prompted by the vxinstall
utility:
Do you want to setup a system wide default disk group ?
[y,n,q,?] (default: y)
If you know the name of the disk group to be used as the default disk group, enter y, and
type the name of the disk group at the following prompt, or else use the list option and
make a selection. Enter n if you do not want to define a default disk group.
NOTE: In releases prior to VxVM 4.1, the default disk group was rootdg (the root disk
group). For VxVM 3.5 to function, the rootdg disk group had to exist, and it had to contain
at least one disk. This is no longer required in VxVM 5.0.1. However, you can still create a
root disk group as a system wide default disk group. For operations that require a disk group,
the system wide default disk group is used if the VxVM command does not explicitly mention
the disk group with the -g option. The main advantage of creating a default disk group is
that VxVM commands default to the default disk group, and you do not need to use the -g
option.
4. Verify the default disk group that is created by entering the following command:
# vxdg defaultdg
For more information on the supported options, see vxdg (1M).
You cannot use the following names for the default disk group because they are reserved
words:
bootdg, defaultdg and nodg.
5. Define or change the name of the default disk group at a later time by entering the following
command:
# vxdctl defaultdg diskgroup
For more information on the supported options, see vxdctl (1M).
This completes the installation of VxVM. You can now use the vxdiskadm command and the VEA
GUI to create disk groups, and to populate disks.
Moving Disks Under VxVM Control
You can add and manage disks under VxVM by using the menu driven vxdiskadm utility.
To add and initialize disks, complete the following steps:
1. Detect new disks, by entering the following command:
# ioscan -fnC disk
For more information on the supported options, see ioscan (1M).
Setting Up VxVM 5.0.1 41