Veritas Volume Manager

The Veritas Volume Manager (VVM or VxVM) is a proprietary logical volume manager from Veritas (which was part of Symantec until January 2016).

Veritas Volume Manager
Developer(s)Veritas
Operating systemWindows, Solaris, Linux
Typelogical volume manager
Licenseproprietary

Details

It is available for Windows, AIX, Solaris, Linux, and HP-UX. A modified version is bundled with HP-UX as its built-in volume manager. It offers volume management and Multipath I/O functionalities (when used with Veritas Dynamic Multi-Pathing feature). The Veritas Volume Manager Storage Administrator (VMSA) is a GUI manager.[1]

Versions

  • Veritas Volume Manager 7.4.1
    • Release date (Windows): February 2019[2]
  • Veritas Volume Manager 6.0
    • Release date (Windows): December 2011[3]
    • Release date (UNIX): December 2011[4]
  • Veritas Volume Manager 5.1
    • Release date (Windows): August 2008[3]
    • Release date (UNIX): December 2009[4]
  • Veritas Volume Manager 5.0
    • Release date (UNIX): August 2006[4]
    • Release date (Windows): January 2007[3]
  • Veritas Volume Manager 4.1
    • Release date (UNIX): April 2005[4]
    • Release date (Windows): June 2004[3]
  • Veritas Volume Manager 4.0
    • Release date: February 2004[4]
  • Veritas Volume Manager 3.5
    • Release date: September 2002[4]
  • Veritas Volume Manager 3.2
  • Veritas Volume Manager 3.1
    • Release date: August 2000[5]
  • Veritas Volume Manager 3.0

Microsoft once licensed a version of Veritas Volume Manager for Windows 2000, allowing operating systems to store and modify large amounts of data. Symantec acquired Veritas on July 2, 2005, and claimed Microsoft misused their intellectual property to develop functionalities in Windows Server 2003, later Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008, which competed with Veritas' Storage Foundation, according to Michael Schallop, the director of legal affairs at Symantec. A representative claims Microsoft bought all "intellectual property rights for all relevant technologies from Veritas in 2004".[6][7] The lawsuit was dropped in 2008; terms were not disclosed.

gollark: Also, there was some admittedly small-scale testing by some computer review company and SSDs could mostly go significantly beyond their endurance ratings and manage hundreds of terabytes written. But also did tend to fail suddenly and inexplicably instead of having a graceful failure.
gollark: Store the hashes of things, expect more computing power later.
gollark: I mean that most of these things (HDDs *and* SSDs) will either fail quickly or probably run for quite a while.
gollark: I know this, yes.
gollark: I "have" ""backups"".

See also

References

  1. https://docs.oracle.com/cd/E19896-01/875-3115-10/875-3115-10.pdf
  2. "Storage Foundation for Windows Release Details". Veritas. Retrieved 2019-03-19.
  3. "Storage Foundation for Windows Release Details". Symantec. Retrieved 2009-09-08.
  4. "Storage Foundation for UNIX/Linux Release Details". Symantec. Retrieved 2009-09-08.
  5. "Volume Manager Release Details". Symantec. Retrieved 2009-09-08.
  6. Joris Evers (2006-05-18). "Symantec sues Microsoft over storage tech". CNET News. Retrieved 2009-09-08.
  7. Antony Savvas (May 19, 2006). "Symantec sues Microsoft over the use of Volume Manager". ComputerWeekly.com. Retrieved 2007-05-22.
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