Adding a Direct Volume
Enabling the Volume
CLI Storage-Management Guide 8-27
For example, the following command shows VPU 1, with CPU and memory details:
bstnA6k(gbl-ns-vol[medarcv~/rcrds])# show vpu 1 detailed
Switch: bstnA6k
----------------------------------------------------------------------
VPU 1
-----
Physical Processor: 3.1 (1% CPU, 8% MEM)
State: Normal; maximum instances
Share credits: 4 shares used (252 credits remain of total 256)
Direct share credits: 3 direct shares used (4093 credits remain of total 4096)
Volume credits: 2 volumes used (62 credits remain of total 64)
File credits: 4.0M files reserved (380M credits remain of total 384M)
Namespace Domain Volume State
--------- ------ ------ -----
medco 2 /vol Enabled
wwmed 1 /acct Enabled
2 Namespaces 2 Volumes
bstnA6k(gbl-ns-vol[medarcv~/rcrds])# ...
Enabling the Volume
The final step in configuring a direct volume is to enable it. From gbl-ns-vol mode,
use the
enable command to enable the current volume:
enable
Direct volumes have no metadata; they only attach to directories on back-end filers.
The enable process invokes no imports, so it is much faster than an enable in a
managed volume (described in the next chapter). Use
show namespace [status] to
monitor the progress of the enable: the volume is enabled when all of its shares have a
status of “Online: Direct” (or simply “Online” in the
show namespace status output).
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