崬城衞 发表于 2015-4-9 18:59:39

VCAP5-DCA Objective 1.3 – Configure and Manage Complex Multipathing and PSA Plug

  http://virtuallyhyper.com/2012/10/vcap5-dca-objective-1-3-configure-and-manage-complex-multipathing-and-psa-plug-ins/
http://virtuallyhyper.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/vsphere_storage.png
Explain the Pluggable Storage Architecture (PSA) layout
From this VMware KB 1011375:
  Pluggable Storage Architecture (PSA)
  To manage storage multipathing, ESX/ESXi uses a special VMkernel layer, Pluggable Storage Architecture (PSA). The PSA is an open modular framework that coordinates the simultaneous operation of multiple multipathing plugins (MPPs). PSA is a collection of VMkernel APIs that allow third party hardware vendors to insert code directly into the ESX storage I/O path. This allows 3rd party software developers to design their own load balancing techniques and failover mechanisms for particular storage array. The PSA coordinates the operation of the NMP and any additional 3rd party MPP
From the vSphere Storage ESXi 5.0:
http://virtuallyhyper.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/vsphere_storage.png
The PSA is made up of many other technologies, like SATP,NMP, PSP, and MPP. Actually from the same guide, here is good picture:
http://virtuallyhyper.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/PSA_Architecture.png
And more information from the same guide:
  Managing Multiple Paths
To manage storage multipathing, ESXi uses a collection of Storage APIs, also called the Pluggable Storage Architecture (PSA). The PSA is an open, modular framework that coordinates the simultaneous operation of multiple multipathing plug-ins (MPPs). The PSA allows 3rd party software developers to design their own load balancing techniques and failover mechanisms for particular storage array, and insert their code directly into the ESXi storage I/O path.
  Topics discussing path management use the following acronyms
http://virtuallyhyper.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/multipathing_acronyms.png
  The VMkernel multipathing plug-in that ESXi provides by default is the VMware Native Multipathing PlugIn (NMP). The NMP is an extensible module that manages sub plug-ins. There are two types of NMP sub plugins, Storage Array Type Plug-Ins (SATPs), and Path Selection Plug-Ins (PSPs). SATPs and PSPs can be built-in and provided by VMware, or can be provided by a third party.
  If more multipathing functionality is required, a third party can also provide an MPP to run in addition to, or as a replacement for, the default NMP.
  When coordinating the VMware NMP and any installed third-party MPPs, the PSA performs the following tasks:


[*]Loads and unloads multipathing plug-ins.
[*]Hides virtual machine specifics from a particular plug-in.
[*]Routes I/O requests for a specific logical device to the MPP managing that device.
[*]Handles I/O queueing to the logical devices.
[*]Implements logical device bandwidth sharing between virtual machines.
[*]Handles I/O queueing to the physical storage HBAs.
[*]Handles physical path discovery and removal.
[*]Provides logical device and physical path I/O statistics.
  As the Pluggable Storage Architecture illustration shows, multiple third-party MPPs can run in parallel with the VMware NMP. When installed, the third-party MPPs replace the behavior of the NMP and take complete control of the path failover and the load-balancing operations for specified storage devices.
There is also an excellent blog written by Cormac Hogan on how IO is handled by PSP, check it out in “Path failure and related SATP/PSP behaviour”
Install and Configure PSA plug-ins
From vSphere Storage ESXi 5.0:
  To list VMware SATPs, run the following command:




~ # esxcli storage nmp satp list
Name               Default PSP    Description
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
VMW_SATP_ALUA      VMW_PSP_MRU    Supports non-specific arrays that use the ALUA protocol
VMW_SATP_MSA         VMW_PSP_MRU    Placeholder (plugin not loaded)
VMW_SATP_DEFAULT_APVMW_PSP_MRU    Placeholder (plugin not loaded)
VMW_SATP_SVC         VMW_PSP_FIXEDPlaceholder (plugin not loaded)
VMW_SATP_EQL         VMW_PSP_FIXEDPlaceholder (plugin not loaded)
VMW_SATP_INV         VMW_PSP_FIXEDPlaceholder (plugin not loaded)
VMW_SATP_EVA         VMW_PSP_FIXEDPlaceholder (plugin not loaded)
VMW_SATP_ALUA_CX   VMW_PSP_FIXEDPlaceholder (plugin not loaded)
VMW_SATP_SYMM      VMW_PSP_FIXEDPlaceholder (plugin not loaded)
VMW_SATP_CX          VMW_PSP_MRU    Placeholder (plugin not loaded)
VMW_SATP_LSI         VMW_PSP_MRU    Placeholder (plugin not loaded)
VMW_SATP_DEFAULT_AAVMW_PSP_FIXEDSupports non-specific active/active arrays
VMW_SATP_LOCAL       VMW_PSP_FIXEDSupports direct attached devices   To list multipathing modules, run the following command:




~ # esxcli storage core plugin list
Plugin namePlugin class
-----------------------
NMP          MP   Example: Defining an NMP SATP Rule
The following sample command assigns the VMW_SATP_INV plug-in to manage storage arrays with vendor string NewVend and model string NewMod.




# esxcli storage nmp satp rule add -V NewVend -M NewMod -s VMW_SATP_INV From “vSphere Command-Line Interface Concepts and Examples ESXi 5.0”
Add a new SATP




esxclistorage nmp satp rule add --satp VMW_SATP_DEFAULT_AA --vendor="ABC" --model="^120* Change the SATP for a device/LUN:




esxcli storage nmp satp generic deviceconfig set -c VMW_SATP_ALUA_CX -d naa.xxx Change the default PSP for an SATP:




# esxcli storage nmp satp set --default-psp VMW_PSP_FIXED --satp VMW_SATP_ALUA_CX List all the plugins:




~ # esxcli storage core plugin registration list
Module Name          Plugin Name          Plugin ClassDependencies                   Full Path
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
mask_path_plugin   MASK_PATH            MP
nmp                  NMP                  MP
vmw_satp_symm      VMW_SATP_SYMM      SATP
vmw_satp_svc         VMW_SATP_SVC         SATP
vmw_satp_msa         VMW_SATP_MSA         SATP
vmw_satp_lsi         VMW_SATP_LSI         SATP
vmw_satp_inv         VMW_SATP_INV         SATP          vmw_satp_lib_cx
vmw_satp_eva         VMW_SATP_EVA         SATP
vmw_satp_eql         VMW_SATP_EQL         SATP
vmw_satp_cx          VMW_SATP_CX          SATP          vmw_satp_lib_cx
vmw_satp_alua_cx   VMW_SATP_ALUA_CX   SATP          vmw_satp_alua,vmw_satp_lib_cx
vmw_satp_lib_cx      None               SATP
vmw_satp_alua      VMW_SATP_ALUA      SATP
vmw_satp_default_apVMW_SATP_DEFAULT_APSATP
vmw_satp_default_aaVMW_SATP_DEFAULT_AASATP
vmw_satp_local       VMW_SATP_LOCAL       SATP
vmw_psp_lib          None               PSP
vmw_psp_mru          VMW_PSP_MRU          PSP         vmw_psp_lib
vmw_psp_rr         VMW_PSP_RR         PSP         vmw_psp_lib
vmw_psp_fixed      VMW_PSP_FIXED      PSP         vmw_psp_lib
vmw_vaaip_emc      None               VAAI
vmw_vaaip_mask       VMW_VAAIP_MASK       VAAI
vmw_vaaip_symm       VMW_VAAIP_SYMM       VAAI          vmw_vaaip_emc
vmw_vaaip_netapp   VMW_VAAIP_NETAPP   VAAI
vmw_vaaip_lhn      VMW_VAAIP_LHN      VAAI
vmw_vaaip_hds      VMW_VAAIP_HDS      VAAI
vmw_vaaip_eql      VMW_VAAIP_EQL      VAAI
vmw_vaaip_cx         VMW_VAAIP_CX         VAAI          vmw_vaaip_emc,vmw_satp_lib_cx
vaai_filter          VAAI_FILTER          Filter List all the devices claimed by NMP:




~ # esxcli storage nmp device list
naa.600144f0928c010000004fc511ec0001
   Device Display Name: OI iSCSI Disk (naa.600144f0928c010000004fc511ec0001)
   Storage Array Type: VMW_SATP_ALUA
   Storage Array Type Device Config: {implicit_support=on;explicit_support=off; explicit_allow=on;alua_followover=on;{TPG_id=0,TPG_state=AO}}
   Path Selection Policy: VMW_PSP_MRU
   Path Selection Policy Device Config: Current Path=vmhba33:C0:T0:L0
   Path Selection Policy Device Custom Config:
   Working Paths: vmhba33:C0:T0:L0 List all the PSPs:




~ # esxcli storage nmp psp list
Name         Description
----------------------------------------------
VMW_PSP_MRU    Most Recently Used Path Selection
VMW_PSP_RR   Round Robin Path Selection
VMW_PSP_FIXEDFixed Path Selection Change PSP for device/LUN:




esxcli storage nmp device set -d naa.xx -P VMW_PSP_MRU Understand different multipathing policy functionalities
From the vSphere Storage ESXi 5.0 :
  By default, the VMware NMP supports the following PSPs:
  VMW_PSP_MRU The host selects the path that it used most recently. When the path becomes unavailable, the host selects an alternative path. The host does not revert back
to the original path when that path becomes available again. There is no preferred path setting with the MRU policy. MRU is the default policy for most active-passive storage devices.
  Displayed in the vSphere Client as the Most Recently Used (VMware) path selection policy.
  VMW_PSP_FIXED The host uses the designated preferred path, if it has been configured. Otherwise, it selects the first working path discovered at system boot time. If you want the host to use a particular preferred path, specify it manually. Fixed is the default policy for most active-active storage devices.
  NOTE If the host uses a default preferred path and the path’s status turns to Dead, a new path is selected as preferred. However, if you explicitly designate the preferred path, it will remain preferred even when it becomes inaccessible.
  Displayed in the vSphere Client as the Fixed (VMware) path selection policy.
  VMW_PSP_RR The host uses an automatic path selection algorithm rotating through all active paths when connecting to active-passive arrays, or through all available paths when connecting to active-active arrays. RR is the default for a number of arrays and can be used with both active-active and active-passive arrays to implement load balancing across paths for different LUNs.
  Displayed in the vSphere Client as the Round Robin (VMware) path selection policy
Perform command line configuration of multipathing options
From vSphere Command-Line Interface Concepts and Examples ESXi 5.0 :
  List all devices with their corresponding paths, state of the path, adapter type, and other information:




esxcli storage core path list   Limit the display to only a specified path or device:




esxcli storage core path list --path vmhba32:C0:T1:L0
esxcli storage core path list --device naa.xxx   List detailed information for the paths for the device specified with –device:




esxcli storage core path list -d naa.xxx   Set the state of a LUN path to off:




esxcli storage core path set --state off --path vmhba32:C0:T1:L0   Set the path state to active again:




esxcli storage core path set --state active --path vmhba32:C0:T1:L0   Set the path policy using esxcli:




esxcli storage nmp device set --device naa.xxx --psp VMW_PSP_RR   If you specified the VMW_PSP_FIXED policy, you must make sure the preferred path is set
correctly. Check which path is the preferred path for a device:




esxcli storage nmp psp fixed deviceconfig get --device naa.xxx   Change the preferred path:




esxcli storage nmp psp fixed deviceconfig set --device naa.xxx --path vmhba3:C0:T5:L3   To view and manipulate round robin path selection settings with ESXCLI
Retrieve path selection settings for a device that is using the roundrobin PSP




esxcli storage nmp psp roundrobin deviceconfig get --device naa.xxx   Set the path selection. You can specify when the path should change, and whether unoptimized paths should be included.
  Use –bytes or –iops to specify when the path should change, as in the following examples:
  Set the device specified by –device to switch to the next path each time 12345 bytes have been sent along the current path.




esxcli storage nmp psp roundrobin deviceconfig set --type "bytes" -B 12345 --device naa.xxx   Set the device specified by –device to switch after 4200 I/O operations have been performed on a path.




esxclistorage nmp psp roundrobin deviceconfig set --type=iops --iops 4200 --device naa.xxx Change a multipath policy
From above:
  Set the path policy using esxcli:




esxcli storage nmp device set --device naa.xxx --psp VMW_PSP_RR Configure Software iSCSI port binding
From vSphere Command-Line Interface Concepts and Examples ESXi 5.0:
Create a virtual Switch and enable jumbo frames on it:




~ # esxcli network vswitch standard add -v vSwitch1
~ # esxcli network vswitch standard set -m 9000 -v vSwitch1 Create a PortGroup that will be used for iSCSI:




~ # esxcli network vswitch standard portgroup add -p iSCSI1 -v vSwitch1 Add a vmkernel interface to our iSCSI PortGroup




esxcli network ip interface add -i vmk4 -p iSCSI1
esxcli network ip interface ipv4 set -i vmk4 -I 1.1.1.2 -N 255.255.255.0 -t static Enable software iSCSI




esxcli iscsi software set --enabled=true Check the status:




esxcli iscsi software get Check whether a network portal, that is, a bound port, exists for iSCSI traffic.




esxcli iscsi adapter list Bind the vmkernel interface to the sw-iSCSI vmhba:




esxcli iscsi networkportal add -n vmk4 -A vmhba3# With dynamic discovery, all storage targets associated with a host name orIP address are discovered.You run the following command.




esxcli iscsi adapter discovery sendtarget add --address='ip/dns[:port]' --adapter=vmhba3# After setup is complete, perform rediscovery and rescan all storage devices




esxcli iscsi adapter discovery rediscover
esxcli storage core adapter rescan --adapter=vmhba36
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