During the installation of Oracle ACFS and Oracle ADVM with Oracle Grid Infrastructure on AIX, several system security classes (authorizations) are created for Oracle ACFS and Oracle ADVM operations. These authorizations enable the following operations:
Configuration of Oracle ACFS and Oracle ADVM devices
Removal of Oracle ACFS and Oracle ADVM devices
Definition of Oracle ACFS and Oracle ADVM devices
These authorizations are collected in a role (oracle_devmgmt) which is assigned by default to the Oracle Grid Infrastructure user and Oracle ASM administrator. You can run the lsrole or rolelist command after installation to see this new role. These commands can be run at any time to ensure that the user has the proper authorization to manage Oracle ACFS and Oracle ADVM.
For example, run the following as the Oracle ASM administrator:
$ rolelist -e oracle_devmgmt
After the initial installation on an AIX operating system, the shell from which the root script was run will not inherit the new role. If the role is not present for the user, then the swrole command must be run before performing Oracle ACFS or Oracle ADVM operations.
For example, run the following as the Oracle ASM administrator:
$ swrole oracle_devmgmt
Alternatively, you can open a new shell to perform Oracle ACFS or Oracle ADVM operations.
During the removal of Oracle Grid Infrastructure, the oracle_devmgmt role and its associated authorizations are deleted from the system.
See Also:
Oracle Grid Infrastructure on AIX, refer to Oracle Grid Infrastructure Installation Guide for AIX Based Systems for more information about installingNote:
If a disk group is dismounted with the force option on AIX, any Oracle ADVM volumes device files that were on that disk group remain on the system. These files are removed when the disk group is remounted.Table 13-11 contains a summary of the Oracle ACFS commands for the AIX operating system. The commands in Table 13-11 have been extended with additional options to support Oracle ACFS on AIX.
Table 13-11 Summary of Oracle ACFS commands for AIX
| Command | Description |
|---|---|
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Checks and repairs an Oracle ACFS file system on AIX. |
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Creates an Oracle ACFS file system on AIX. |
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Mounts an Oracle ACFS file system on AIX. |
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Dismounts an Oracle ACFS file system on AIX. |
Checks and repairs an Oracle ACFS file system on the AIX operating system.
fsck -V acfs [-n|-y] [-o options] volume_deviceTable 13-12 contains the options available with the AIX fsck command.
Table 13-12 Options for the AIX fsck command
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
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Specifies an Oracle ADVM volume on AIX. |
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Answers no to any prompts. |
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Answers yes to any prompts. |
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Specifies that options follow (a, f, v). Options are preceded with the
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Specifies the primary Oracle ADVM volume device. |
fsck checks and repairs an existing Oracle ACFS. This command can only be run on a dismounted file system. root privileges are required to run fsck. The Oracle ACFS driver must be loaded for fsck to work.
By default, fsck only checks for and reports any errors. The -a flag must be specified to instruct fsck to fix errors in the file system.
In a few cases, fsck prompts for questions before proceeding to check a file system. These cases include:
If fsck detects that another fsck is in progress on the file system
If fsck detects that the Oracle ACFS driver is not loaded
If the file system does not appear to be Oracle ACFS
In checking mode, fsck also prompts if there are transaction logs that have not been processed completely due to an incomplete shutdown. To run in a non-interactive mode, include either the -y or -n options to answer yes or no to any questions.
fsck creates working files before it checks a file system. These working files are created in /usr/tmp if space is available. /tmp is used if /usr/tmp does not exist. If insufficient space is available in the tmp directory, fsck attempts to write to the current working directory. The files that fsck creates are roughly the size of the file system being checked divided by 32K. At most two such files are allocated. For example, a 2 GB file system being checked causes fsck to generate one or two 64K working files in the /usr/tmp directory. These files are deleted after fsck has finished.
In the event that fsck finds a file or directory in the file system for which it cannot determine its name or intended location (possibly due to a corruption in its parent directory), it places this object in the /lost+found directory when fsck is run in fix mode. For security reasons only the root user on Linux can read files in /lost+found. If the administrator can later determine the original name and location of the file based on its contents, the file can be moved or copied into its intended location.
The file names in the /lost+found directory are in the following formats:
parent.id.file.id.time-in-sec-since-1970 parent.id.dir.id.time-in-sec-since-1970
The id fields are the internal Oracle ACFS numeric identifiers for each file and directory in the file system.
You can use acfsutil info id id mount_point to attempt to determine the directory associated with parent.id. This directory is assumed to be where the deleted object originated. For information about acfsutil info, see "acfsutil info file".
If the parent directory is not known, the parent id field is set to UNKNOWN.
Note:
It is not possible to see the contents of the/lost+found directory from a snapshot.The following example shows how to check and repair an Oracle ACFS file system.
Creates an Oracle ACFS file system on the AIX operating system.
mkfs -V acfs -o h /dev/nullmkfs -V acfs [-v name ] [-s size][-o options] volume_devicemkfs -V acfs -o h /dev/null displays usage text and exits.
Table 13-13 contains the options available with the AIX mkfs command.
Table 13-13 Options for the AIX mkfs command
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
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Specifies the type of file system on AIX. |
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Specifies the name for the file system. A name can be a maximum of 64 characters. |
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Specifies the size of the file system in 512-byte units or in units of |
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Specifies that options follow (b, f, h, v). Options are preceded with the
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Specifies an Oracle ADVM device file that is to be formatted. |
mkfs is used to create the on disk structure needed for Oracle ACFS file system to be mounted. The mkfs command is the traditional UNIX command used to build a file system. After mkfs runs successfully, the USAGE column in the V$ASM_VOLUME view displays ACFS. root privilege is not required. The ownership of the volume device file dictates who can run this command. The minimum file system size is 200 MB. The Oracle ACFS driver must be loaded for mkfs to work.
Before creating an Oracle ACFS file system, first determine which Oracle ADVM volume devices are available. You can use the ASMCMD volinfo command to display information about the volumes and volume devices.
ASMCMD [+] > volinfo -a
...
Volume Name: VOLUME1
Volume Device: /dev/asm/volume1-123
State: ENABLED
...
See "volinfo".
Next create an Oracle ACFS file system on the volume device file.
Mounts an Oracle ACFS file system on the AIX operating system.
mount -V acfs -o h /dev/null /xxxmount -v acfs [-o options] volume_device mount_pointmount -V acfs -o h /dev/null /xxx displays usage text and exits.
Table 13-14 contains the options available with the mount command.
Table 13-14 Options for the AIX mount command
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
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Specifies the type of file system on AIX. |
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Specifies that options follow. Options are preceded with the The following options are available:
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Specifies an Oracle ADVM volume device file that has been formatted by |
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Specifies the directory where the file system is mounted. This directory must exist before you run the |
mount attaches a file system to the Oracle ACFS hierarchy at the mount point that is the name of a directory. The mount happens on the node where the mount command was issued. The mount command returns an error if the file system is not in a dismounted state on this node.
It is not always possible to return the cause of a mount failure to the mount command. When this happens Oracle ACFS writes the cause of the failure to the system console and associated system log file.
After mount runs successfully, the MOUNTPATH field in the V$ASM_VOLUME view displays the directory name on which the file system is now mounted.
An Oracle ACFS file system should only be mounted on one mount point. The same mount point name should be used on all cluster members.
root privilege is required to run mount.
The first example shows how to mount volume1-123 on the mount point /u01/app/acfsmounts/myacfs. The second example shows how to mount all the registered Oracle ACFS file systems. The dummy names (none) have been entered as placeholders for the device and directory as these arguments are required, but not used, when the all option is specified.
Dismounts an Oracle ACFS file system on the AIX operating system.
umount [mount_point | volume_device]umountall -F acfsunmountall -F acfs dismounts all Oracle ACFS file systems.
Table 13-15 contains the options available with the umount command.
Table 13-15 Options for the AIX umount command
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
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Specifies the directory where the file system is mounted. Valid only with |
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Specifies the Oracle ADVM volume device name associated with the file system. Valid only with |
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Specifies the type of file system on AIX. |
umount and umountall detach an Oracle ACFS from the file system hierarchy on the current node. If a file system is busy, umount and umountall fail.
root privileges are required to run the umount and umountall commands.
The following examples show how to dismount an Oracle ACFS file system. The first example specifies the mount point of the file system to dismount. The second example specifies the volume device associated with the file system to dismount. The third example dismounts all Oracle ACFS file systems.