In previous versions of Solaris Volume Manager, all of the disks that
you planned to share between hosts in the disk set had to be connected to
each host. They also had to have the exact same path, driver, and name on
each host. Specifically, a shared disk drive had to be seen by both hosts
in the same location (/dev/rdsk/c#t#d#
). In addition, the
shared disks had to use the same driver name (ssd
).
In the current Solaris OS release, systems that have different views of commonly accessible storage can nonconcurrently share access to a disk set. With the introduction of device ID support for disk sets, Solaris Volume Manager automatically tracks disk movement within named disk sets.
Device ID support for disk sets is not supported in a Sun Cluster environment.
When you upgrade to the latest Solaris OS, you need to take the disk set once in order to enable disk tracking. For more information on taking a disk set, see How to Take a Disk Set.
If the autotake feature is not enabled, you have to take each disk set manually. If this feature is enabled, this step is done automatically when the system is rebooted. For more information on the autotake feature, see Autotake Disk Sets.
This expanded device ID support also enables you to import disk sets, even disk sets that were created on different systems. For more information on importing disk sets, see Importing a Disk Set.