vserver create
Create a Vserver
Availability: This command is available to cluster administrators at the admin privilege level.
Description
The vserver create
command creates a Vserver.
Parameters
-vserver <vserver>
- Vserver-
This specifies the name of the Vserver that is to be created. Use a fully qualified domain name (FQDN) - for example, "data.example.com" - for the Vserver to ensure unique Vserver names across cluster leagues.
Maximum number of characters supported is 47, and 41 for a Vserver with subtype "sync-source". "all" is a reserved name and must not be used as a Vserver name. [-subtype <vserver subtype>]
- Vserver Subtype-
This specifies the subtype of the Vserver being created. Possible values are:
-
default - For default data Vservers
-
dp-destination - For Data Protection destination Vservers
-
sync-source - For MetroCluster source Vservers
-
sync-destination - For MetroCluster destination Vservers
-
[-rootvolume <volume name>]
- Root Volume-
This parameter optionally specifies the name of the Vserver's root volume, which is created when the Vserver is created. The default name is
svm_root
. The size of the Vserver's root volume is 1GB [-aggregate <aggregate name>]
- Aggregate-
This parameter optionally specifies the storage aggregate that holds the Vserver's root volume. Selection of the aggregate is based on the Vserver setup algorithm.
-
Creating a root volume on the SnapLock aggregate is not supported.
-
Creating a root volume of sync-source Vserver on the unmirrored aggregate is not supported.
-
[-rootvolume-security-style <security style>]
- Root Volume Security Style-
This parameter optionally specifies the security style for the Vserver's root volume. Possible values include
unix
(for UNIX mode bits),ntfs
(for CIFS ACLs), andmixed
(for mixed NFS and CIFS access). The default value isunix
. Regardless of the security style, both NFS and CIFS clients can read from and write to the root volume. [-language <Language code>]
- Default Volume Language Code-
This optionally specifies the default language encoding setting for the Vserver and its volumes. The recommended format is to append
.UTF-8
for the language encoding values. For example, for theen_US
language, the recommended format isen_US.UTF-8
. The default setting isC.UTF-8
. [-snapshot-policy <snapshot policy>]
- Snapshot Policy-
This optionally specifies the Snapshot policy for new volumes created on the Vserver. If no value is specified, the default Snapshot policy is used. You can use the
-snapshot-policy
parameter on the volume create or volume modify commands to set the Snapshot policy on a specific volume, regardless of its Vserver's Snapshot policy setting. [-comment <text>]
- Comment-
This optionally specifies a comment for the Vserver.
[-quota-policy <text>]
- Quota Policy-
This optionally specifies a quota policy for the Vserver.
[-caching-policy <text>]
- Caching Policy Name-
This optionally specifies the caching policy to apply to the Vserver. A caching policy defines how the system caches this volume's data in Flash Cache modules. If a caching policy is not assigned to this Vserver, the system uses the default cluster-wide policy. The available caching policies are:
-
none - Does not cache any user data or metadata blocks.
-
auto - Read caches all metadata and randomly read user data blocks, and write caches all randomly overwritten user data blocks.
-
meta - Read caches only metadata blocks.
-
random_read - Read caches all metadata and randomly read user data blocks.
-
random_read_write - Read caches all metadata, randomly read and randomly written user data blocks.
-
all_read - Read caches all metadata, randomly read, and sequentially read user data blocks.
-
all_read_random_write - Read caches all metadata, randomly read, sequentially read, and randomly written user data.
-
all - Read caches all data blocks read and written. It does not do any write caching.
Default caching-policy is auto.
-
[-ipspace <IPspace>]
- IPspace Name-
This optionally specifies the IPspace the Vserver will be assigned to. If left unspecified, the Vserver will be assigned to the default IPspace.
[-foreground {true|false}]
- Foreground Process-
This parameter optionally specifies whether the Vserver create operation can be executed in the background. If nothing is specified, by default the Vserver create operation is executed in the foreground.
[-is-space-reporting-logical {true|false}]
- Logical Space Reporting-
This optionally specifies whether to report space logically on residing volumes. When space is reported logically, ONTAP reports the volume space such that all the physical space saved by the storage efficiency features are also reported as used. This parameter is not supported on FlexGroups.
[-is-space-enforcement-logical {true|false}]
- Logical Space Enforcement-
This optionally specifies whether to perform logical space accounting on residing volumes. When space is enforced logically, ONTAP enforces volume settings such that all the physical space saved by the storage efficiency features will be calculated as used. This parameter is not supported on FlexGroups.
Examples
The following example creates a Vserver named vs0.example.com
in the IPspace ipspace123. The Vserver's root volume is named root_vs0
and is located on aggregate aggr0
. The Vserver uses NIS for network information, a file for name mapping information, and the language is U.S. English:
cluster1::> vserver create -vserver vs0.example.com -ipspace ipspace123 -rootvolume root_vs0 -aggregate aggr0 -language en_US.UTF-8 -rootvolume-security-style mixed
The following example creates a Vserver named vs1
using default values. The default name for the Vserver's root volume is svm_root
and the Vserver is located on an aggregate selected on the basis of the Vserver setup algorithm. The default root volume's security style is set to unix
.
cluster1::> vserver create -vserver vs1 cluster1::> vserver show -vserver vs1 -fields rootvolume, rootvolume-security-style, aggregate vserver rootvolume aggregate rootvolume-security-style ------- ---------- --------- ------------------------- vs1 svm_root aggr1 unix