You can back up and restore the configuration data for
the system after preliminary tasks are completed.
You can maintain your configuration data for the system by completing the following tasks:
- Backing up the configuration data
- Restoring the configuration data
- Deleting unwanted backup configuration data files
Before you back up your configuration data, the following prerequisites
must be met:
Note: - The default object names for controllers, I/O groups, and managed disks (MDisks) do not restore
correctly if the ID of the object is different from what is recorded in the current configuration
data file.
- All other objects with default names are renamed during the restore process. The new names
appear in the format name_r where name is the name of the object in your system.
- Connections to iSCSI MDisks for migration purposes are not restored.
Before you restore your configuration data, the following prerequisites
must be met:
- The Security Administrator role is associated with your user name and password.
- You have a copy of your backup configuration files on a server that is accessible to the
system.
- You have a backup copy of your application data that is ready to load on your system after the
restore configuration operation is complete.
- You know the current license settings for your system.
- You did not remove any hardware since the last backup of your
configuration.
- No zoning changes were made on the Fibre Channel fabric that would prevent
communication between the
system and any storage
controllers that are present in the configuration.
- For configurations with more than one I/O group, if a new system is created
on which the configuration data is to be restored, the I/O groups for the other control enclosures
must be added.
- You have at least 3 USB flash drives if encryption was enabled on the system
when its configuration was backed up. The USB flash drives are used for generation of new keys as
part of the restore process or for manually restoring encryption if the system has less than 3 USB
ports.
Use the following steps to determine how to achieve an ideal T4 recovery:
- Open the appropriate svc.config.backup.xml (or svc.config.cron.xml) file with a suitable text
editor or browser and navigate to the node section of the file.
- For each node entry, make a note of the value of the following properties: IO_group_id, canister_id, enclosure_serial_number.
- Use the CLI sainfo lsservicenodes command and the data to determine which
node canisters previously belonged in
each I/O group.
Restoring the system configuration must be performed by one of the nodes previously in I/O
group zero. For example,
property name="IO_group_id" value="0" . The
remaining
enclosures must be added, as required, in the appropriate order based
on the previous
IO_group_id of its
node canisters.
Note: It is not currently possible to determine which canister within the identified
enclosure was previously used for cluster creation. Typically the restoration might be performed by
canister 1.
Before you begin, hardware recovery must be complete. The following hardware
must be operational: hosts,systemenclosures, internal
flash drives, and expansion enclosures (if applicable), the Ethernet network, the SAN fabric,
and any external storage systems (if applicable).