This section describes the major tasks for configuring
and managing HBMM.
How to Define an HBMM Policy
The SET SHADOW/POLICY=HBMM command is used to define HBMM policies. You can define multiple
policies for your environment. The following examples show how to
define two policies, a DEFAULT policy and POLICY_1, a named policy.
To define the policy named DEFAULT:
$ SET SHADOW/POLICY=HBMM=(MASTER_LIST=*)/NAME=DEFAULT
In this example, a DEFAULT policy is created for
the cluster. The use of the asterisk wildcard
(*) means that any system can host a master bitmap. The omission of
the keyword COUNT=n means that up to six systems
(the default value and the current maximum supported) can host a master
bitmap. The DEFAULT policy is inherited at mount time by shadow sets
that have not been assigned a named policy.
The following example defines a named policy (POLICY_1),
specifies the systems that are eligible to host a master bitmap, limits
to two the number of systems to host a master bitmap, and specifies
a higher threshold (default is 1,000,000 blocks) to be reached before
clearing the bitmap.
In OpenVMS Version 8.4, if you are using
the DISMOUNT keyword, you can have up to 12 HBMM master bitmaps. For
DISMOUNT keyword examples, see the “Examples of Multiuse and Dismount”.
For the complete DCL syntax of the SET
SHADOW/POLICY=HBMM command, see the HP OpenVMS
DCL Dictionary.
How to Assign an HBMM Policy to a Shadow Set
You can assign a policy, named or unnamed, to
a shadow set. To assign an existing named policy, use the following
command:
$ SET SHADOW DSAn:/POLICY=HBMM=policy-name
To assign an unnamed policy to a shadow set, use
the same command, but in place of the policy name, specify the attributes
of the policy you want to use. For example:
$ SET SHADOW DSA1:/POLICY=HBMM=(MASTER_LIST=(NODE1, NODE2, NODE3), COUNT=2)
In this example, the default bitmap reset value
of 1,000,000 blocks takes effect because the RESET_THRESHOLD keyword
is omitted.
How to Activate HBMM on a Shadow Set
HBMM is automatically activated on a shadow set
under the following conditions:
An HBMM policy exists
for a given shadow set, which is mounted on one or more systems defined
in the master list.
An HBMM policy is created
for a mounted shadow set and at least one system that has it mounted
is defined in the master list.
You can also activate HBMM using the SET SHADOW/ENABLE=HBMM command, provided a policy exists
and the shadow set is mounted on a system defined in the master list
of the shadow set policy, and the count has not been exceeded.
How to Disable HBMM on a Shadow Set
To disable HBMM on a shadow set, use the following
command:
$ SET SHADOW DSAn:/DISABLE=HBMM
Reasons for disabling HBMM on a shadow set include:
To change the policy assigned
to it.
To delete the policy assigned
to it.
To mount the shadow set
on a system that does not support HBMM. You must disable HBMM first
and then dismount it from all the HBMM-capable systems on which it
is mounted before you can mount it on a system that does not support
HBMM.
HBMM remains disabled until you either re-enable
it or define a new policy for the shadow set.
How to Remove a Policy Assignment from a Shadow Set
Before removing a policy assignment from a shadow
set, HBMM must be disabled, if active. You can remove a policy assignment
from a shadow set by entering the following command:
$ SET SHADOW DSAn:/POLICY=HBMM/DELETE
This command removes any policy set for this shadow
set, making the shadow set eligible for the DEFAULT policy. If a DEFAULT
policy exists, it is assigned the next time the shadow set is eligible
for a policy, for example, at the end of a merge or when you issue
the SET SHADOW/ENABLE=HBMM command.
How to Change a Policy Assignment of a Shadow Set
To change a policy assigned to a shadow set, you
must first disable HBMM, as described in “How to Disable HBMM on a Shadow Set”, and
then assign another policy to the shadow set. To apply a different
policy, specify the policy name or specify the policy attributes (thereby
creating an “unnamed” policy), as described in “How to Assign an HBMM Policy to a Shadow Set”. Specifying
a new policy (or policy attributes) for a shadow set replaces the
previous policy. The use of the command shown in “How to Remove a Policy Assignment from a Shadow Set” is
not required when you are changing the policy assignment.
How to Delete a Named Policy from the Cluster
You can delete a named policy with the /DELETE
qualifier, as shown in the following example:
$ SET SHADOW /POLICY=HBMM/NAME=policy-name/DELETE
This command deletes the specified policy, which
takes effect across the cluster. It does not delete the policy from
any shadow set to which it is already assigned.
NOTE: You cannot delete the NODEFAULT policy.
How to Apply a Changed DEFAULT Policy
The DEFAULT policy can be changed at any time.
However, if a previous definition of the DEFAULT policy is assigned
to a shadow set, a subsequent change to the definition of the DEFAULT
policy is not retroactively applied to that shadow set. In this regard,
the DEFAULT policy behaves just like any other named policy.
This section shows how to apply a changed DEFAULT
policy.
Initially, the following DEFAULT policy is assigned
to DSA20 when it is mounted, as shown by the following example:
$ SET SHADOW/POLICY=HBMM=(MASTER=(NODE1,NODE2,NODE3),COUNT=2)/NAME=DEFAULT
$ MOUNT/SYSTEM DSA20:/SHADOW=($1$DGA20,$1$DGA21) VOL_20
Subsequently, the DEFAULT policy is redefined
by the following command. This redefined policy allows any node in
the cluster to be eligible for an HBMM master bitmap:
$ SET SHADOW/POLICY=HBMM=(MASTER=*,COUNT=2)/NAME=DEFAULT
You can apply the redefined DEFAULT policy to
DSA20 using the following commands:
$ SET SHADOW DSA20:/DISABLE=HBMM
$ SET SHADOW DSA20:/POLICY=HBMM/DELETE
$ SET SHADOW DSA20:/ENABLE=HBMM
NOTE: you must explicitly delete the HBMM policy assigned
to DSA20 in order for DSA20 to become eligible for the current DEFAULT
policy. This step is required because, when HBMM is disabled on DSA20,
the policy (MASTER=(NODE1,NODE2,NODE3),COUNT=2) remains assigned to
DSA20.
An alternative way to apply the updated DEFAULT
policy to DSA20 is to take advantage of the fact that the DEFAULT
policy is a named policy. This method requires only two commands,
as shown:
$ SET SHADOW DSA20:/DISABLE=HBMM
$ SET SHADOW DSA20:/POLICY=HBMM=DEFAULT
How to Display Policies
You can display policies using the SHOW
SHADOW command. You can display:
The policy assigned to
a specified shadow set
The definition of a named
policy
All shadow sets in a cluster
with policy assignments, together with the definition of each policy
All named policies and
their definitions that exist on a cluster
Displaying the Policy of
a Specific Shadow Set
To display the policy assigned to a specific shadow
set, issue the following command:
$ SHOW SHADOW DSAn:/POLICY=HBMM
An example of the resulting output:
$ SHOW SHADOW DSA999:/POLICY=HBMM
HBMM Policy for device _DSA999:
HBMM Reset Threshold: 1000000
HBMM Master lists:
Up to any 2 of the nodes: NODE1,NODE2,NODE3
Any 1 of the nodes: NODE4,NODE5
Up to any 2 of the nodes: NODE6,NODE7,NODE8
Displaying the Definition
of a Named Policy
To display the definition of a named policy, issue
the following command:
$ SHOW SHADOW/POLICY=HBMM/NAME=policy-name
The following display shows the definition of
the PEAKS_ISLAND policy:
$ SHOW SHADOW/POLICY=HBMM/NAME=PEAKS_ISLAND
HBMM Policy PEAKS_ISLAND
HBMM Reset Threshold: 750000
HBMM Master lists:
Up to any 2 of the nodes: NODE1,NODE2,NODE3
Any 1 of the nodes: NODE4,NODE5
Up to any 2 of the nodes: NODE6,NODE7,NODE8
Displaying All Shadow Sets
with Policy Assignments
To display all shadow sets in a cluster with policy
assignments, along with the definition of each policy, use the following
command:
$ SHOW SHADOW/POLICY=HBMM
The following display results from this command:
$ SHOW SHADOW/POLICY=HBMM
HBMM Policy for device _DSA12:
HBMM Reset Threshold: 1000000
HBMM Master lists:
Up to any 2 of the nodes: NODE1,NODE2
HBMM bitmaps are active on NODE1,NODE2
Modified blocks since bitmap creation: 254
HBMM Policy for device _DSA30:
HBMM Reset Threshold: 1000000
HBMM Master lists:
Up to any 2 of the nodes: FLURRY,FREEZE,HOTTUB
HBMM Policy for device _DSA99:
HBMM Reset Threshold: 1000000
HBMM Master lists:
Up to any 2 of the nodes: NODE1,NODE2,NODE3
Any 1 of the nodes: NODE4,NODE5
Up to any 2 of the nodes: NODE6,NODE7,NODE8
HBMM Policy for device _DSA999:
HBMM Reset Threshold: 1000000
HBMM Master lists:
Up to any 2 of the nodes: NODE1,NODE2,NODE3
Any 1 of the nodes: NODE4,NODE5
Up to any 2 of the nodes: NODE6,NODE7,NODE8
Displaying All Named Policies
on a Cluster
To display the named policies that exist on a
cluster, along with their definitions, issue the following command:
$ SHOW SHADOW/POLICY=HBMM/NAME
The named policies are displayed in the order
in which they were created. The following display results from this
command:
$ SHOW SHADOW/POLICY=HBMM/NAME
HBMM Policy DEFAULT
HBMM Reset Threshold: 1000000
HBMM Master lists:
Up to any 6 nodes in the cluster
HBMM Policy PEAKS_ISLAND
HBMM Reset Threshold: 1000000
HBMM Master lists:
Up to any 2 of the nodes: NODE1,NODE2,NODE3
Any 1 of the nodes: NODE4,NODE5
Up to any 2 of the nodes: NODE6,NODE7,NODE8
HBMM Policy POLICY_1
HBMM Reset Threshold: 1000000
HBMM Master lists:
Up to any 2 of the nodes: NODE1,NODE2,NODE3
Any 1 of the nodes: NODE4,NODE5
HBMM Policy ICE_HOTELS
HBMM Reset Threshold: 1000000
HBMM Master lists:
Up to any 2 of the nodes: QUEBEC,ICELND,SWEDEN
Any 1 of the nodes: ALASKA,GRNLND
How to Display the Merge Status of Shadow Sets
You can check the merge status of each shadow
set member by issuing the SHOW SHADOW/MERGE DSAn command. The /MERGE qualifier returns one
of the following messages:
Merge is not required.
Merge is pending.
Merge is in progress on
node file-name.
An example of the display produced by the SHOW SHADOW/MERGE DSAn command:
$ SHOW SHADOW/MERGE
Device Volume Name Status
_DSA1010 FOOBAR Merging (10%)
If a copy operation (instead of the merge operation)
is currently active, the display shows the percentage of the merge
that has completed and the percentage of the copy that has completed
with the designation “Copy Active,” as follows:
$ SHOW SHADOW/MERGE
Device Volume Name Status
_DSA1010 FOOBAR Merging (23%), Copy Active (77%) on CSGF1
How to Prevent Merge Operations on a System
You can prevent merge operations on a system in
two ways:
Set SHADOW_MAX_COPY to
zero.
Set the priority for merge
and copy operations to zero for every shadow set mounted on the system
using the SET SHADOW/PRIORITY=0 DSAn command for each shadow set.
Considerations for Multiple-Site OpenVMS Cluster Systems
Only systems that have an HBMM master bitmap for
a particular shadow set are able to perform HBMM recovery on that
shadow set. If a merge recovery is required on a shadow set and no
systems in the cluster have an HBMM master bitmap for that shadow
set, a full merge is performed.
Therefore, to minimize the need to perform a full
merge, you must use policies that maintain at least one HBMM master
bitmap at each site in a multiple-site OpenVMS Cluster system. The
ability to specify multiple master lists in an HBMM policy is designed
for this purpose. You must specify a separate MASTER_LIST for each
site.
For example, consider a three-site OpenVMS Cluster
system with 12 cluster members:
Site 1: Member systems
NYN1, NYN2, NYN3, and NYN4
Site 2: Member systems
CTN1, CTN2, CTN3, and CTN4
Site 3: Member systems
NJN1, NJN2, NJN3, and NJN4
The following definition of a DEFAULT policy provides
up to two HBMM master bitmaps at each site:
Specifically, this policy requests master bitmaps
at any two of the systems in the first master list, any two of the
systems in the second master list, and any two of the systems in the
third master list.
Note that you cannot accomplish this type of distribution
by listing the systems in a particular order within a single MASTER_LIST.
This is because the order in which the systems are specified in a
master list does not affect the order in which the systems are considered
when HBMM master bitmaps are created. If an event occurs that requires
the creation of an HBMM master bitmap, the bitmap is created in a
random order by systems that have the shadow set mounted. In the following
example, the likelihood of system NYN1 getting a master bitmap is
the same for either POLICY_A or POLICY_B:
$ SET SHADOW/NAME=POLICY_A/POLICY=HBMM=( -
_$ (MASTER_LIST=(NYN1,CTN1,NJN1,NYN2,CTN2,NJN2),COUNT=3) )
$ SET SHADOW/NAME=POLICY_B/POLICY=HBMM=( -
_$ (MASTER_LIST=(NJN2,CTN2,NYN2,NJN1,CTN1,NYN1),COUNT=3) )