HP XP P9500 Storage User Manual
Page 257
![background image](/manuals/398571/257/background.png)
9
.
On the control domain, execute the ldm add-vdisk command to assign
the virtual disk backends to the guest domain.
For example, to assign the virtual disk backends vol1 and vol2 exported
from the service domain ldg1 to the guest domain ldg2, execute the
command as follows:
# ldm add-vdisk vdisk1 vol1@ldg1-vds0 ldg2
# ldm add-vdisk vdisk2 vol2@ldg1-vds0 ldg2
10
.
On the control domain, execute the ldm bind command to bind (connect)
the resource of the guest domain ldg2.
For example, to bind (connect) the resource of the guest domain ldg2,
execute the command as follows:
# ldm bind ldg2
11
.
On the control domain, execute the ldm start command to start the
guest domain.
For example, to start the guest domain ldg2, execute the command as
follows:
# ldm start ldg2
The following figure shows a configuration example after HDLM is removed.
Figure 3-33 Configuration Example (After Removal)
#
A virtual disk backend is a location where virtual disk data is stored. A
disk, disk slice, file, or volume (such as ZFS, SVM, and VxVM) can be
used for the backend.
In this configuration example, /dev/dsk/c2t50060E8010027A82d0s2 and /
dev/dsk/c2t50060E8010027A82d1s2 are sd or ssd devices.
Creating an HDLM Environment
3-191
Hitachi Dynamic Link Manager User Guide for Solaris
®