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Advanced POWER Virtualization on IBM System p5 - Previous ...

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Virtual I/O Server 1<br />

Backed device:<br />

hdisk<br />

reserve_policy=no_reserve<br />

vscsi target<br />

device<br />

vtscsi0<br />

RDAC<br />

AIX client partiti<strong>on</strong><br />

LVM<br />

hdisk0<br />

rootvg<br />

Virtual I/O Server 2<br />

Backed device:<br />

hdisk<br />

reserve_policy=no_reserve<br />

vscsi target<br />

device<br />

vtscsi0<br />

RDAC<br />

Phy.adapter<br />

Phy.adapter<br />

Server SCSI adapter<br />

vhost0<br />

MPIO default PCM<br />

failover <strong>on</strong>ly<br />

Client SCSI adapter<br />

Client SCSI adapter<br />

vscsi0<br />

vscsi1<br />

Server SCSI adapter<br />

vhost0<br />

Phy.adapter<br />

Phy.adapter<br />

<str<strong>on</strong>g>POWER</str<strong>on</strong>g> Hypervisor<br />

<strong>IBM</strong> Totalstorage DS Familiy (FAStT)<br />

Figure 4-30 C<strong>on</strong>figurati<strong>on</strong> for multiple Virtual I/O Servers and <strong>IBM</strong> FAStT<br />

On both Virtual I/O Servers, you have to set the hdisk attribute reserve_policy to<br />

no. This attribute prevents the Virtual I/O Server setting a reservati<strong>on</strong> flag <strong>on</strong> the<br />

disk at the time of mapping. The MPIO comp<strong>on</strong>ent <strong>on</strong> the client partiti<strong>on</strong> will take<br />

the resp<strong>on</strong>sibility of managing the disk.<br />

On the client partiti<strong>on</strong> MPIO, using the default PCM is supported, which <strong>on</strong>ly<br />

allows a failover policy and no load balancing. Only <strong>on</strong>e path to the disks is<br />

active; the other path is used in the event that the active path fails, for example,<br />

when the Virtual I/O Server that serves the disk over the active path is rebooted.<br />

It is possible to choose the active path <strong>on</strong> the client side. Users may manually<br />

c<strong>on</strong>figure the active paths for clients, enabling you to spread the workload evenly<br />

across the Virtual I/O Server. For detailed c<strong>on</strong>figurati<strong>on</strong> steps, refer to 4.4,<br />

“Scenario 3: MPIO in the client with SAN” <strong>on</strong> page 218.<br />

Chapter 4. Setting up virtual I/O: advanced 247

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