Assign a mount point folder path to a drive

For Local VM (without MS Cluster installation)

1) Create an empty folder and rename it as user required on mount-point drive (such as J: drive)
2) In Disk Manager, right-click the partition or volume which you want to assign the mount-point folder path, and then click Change Drive Letter and Paths.
3) To assign a mount-point folder path, click Add. Click Mount in the following empty NTFS folder, then click Browse to locate to the empty folder which you created on step 1. (such as J:\AABHR), select it and click OK.

For VM with MS Cluster was installed

1) In Failover Cluster Manager, click Storage, on the right panel click Actions -> Storage -> Add a disk, select the disks which you want to assign the mount-point folder path, then click OK to add disks into Cluster.
2) Create an empty folder and rename it as user required on mount-point drive (such as J: drive)
3) In Disk Manager, right-click the partition or volume which you want to assign the mount-point folder path, and then click Change Drive Letter and Paths.
4) To assign a mount-point folder path, click Add. Click Mount in the following empty NTFS folder, then click Browse to locate to the empty folder which you created on step 2. (such as J:\AABHR), select it and click OK.


For Local

(https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/windows/it-pro/windows-server-2008-R2-and-2008/cc753321(v=ws.11))

Assigning a mount-point folder path to a drive

•Using the Windows interface

•Using a command line

To assign a mount-point folder path to a drive by using the Windows interface

1.In Disk Manager, right-click the partition or volume where you want to assign the mount-point folder path, and then click Change Drive Letter and Paths.

2.Do one of the following:

•To assign a mount-point folder path, click Add. Click Mount in the following empty NTFS folder, type the path to an empty folder on an NTFS volume, or click Browse to locate it.

•To remove the mount-point folder path, click it and then click Remove.

Additional considerations

•If you are administering a local or remote computer, you can browse NTFS folders on that computer.

•When assigning a mount-point folder path to a drive, use Event Viewer to check the system log for any Cluster service errors or warnings indicating mount point failures. These errors would be listed as ClusSvc in the Source column and Physical Disk Resource in the Category column.

To assign a mount-point folder path to a drive using a command line

1.Open a command prompt and type diskpart.

2.At the DISKPART prompt, type list volume. Make note of the volume number you want to assign the path to elsewhere.

3.At the DISKPART prompt, type select volume <volumenumber>. Select the simple volume volumenumber that you want to assign the path to.

4.At the DISKPART prompt, type assign [mount=<path>].

Value

Description

list volume

Displays a list of basic and dynamic volumes on all disks.

select volume

Selects the specified volume, where volumenumber is the volume number, and gives it focus. If no volume is specified, the select command lists the current volume with focus. You can specify the volume by number, drive letter, or mount-point folder path. On a basic disk, selecting a volume also gives the corresponding partition focus.

assign

Assigns a drive letter or mount-point folder path to the volume with focus. If no drive letter or mount-point folder path is specified, then the next available drive letter is assigned. If the drive letter or mount-point folder path is already in use, an error is generated.

Using the assign command, you can change the drive letter associated with a removable drive.

You cannot assign drive letters to boot volumes, or volumes that contain the paging file. In addition, you cannot assign a drive letter to an Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) partition, EFI system partition, or any GPT partition other than a basic data partition.

mount=path

Specifies an empty, existing NTFS folder where the mounted drive will reside.

For Cluster

(https://support.microsoft.com/en-hk/help/947021/how-to-configure-volume-mount-points-on-a-server-cluster-in-windows-se)

How to set up volume mount points on the clustered disks

Notes

•Follow these steps on the node on which the "Services and Applications" group is hosted.

•In these steps, volume N and volume Y already exist in the same "Cluster Service and Application" group.

•Volume N represents the volume that will host the mount point folder.
Volume Y represents the volume that is being mounted by the mount point. Volume Y does not require an assigned drive letter before you follow these steps.

•If you receive a “parameter is incorrect” error message when you access Disk Management on one of the nodes in your server cluster, exit Disk Management, start Failover Cluster Manager, navigate to Storage, and then put volume N into Maintenance Mode.

1.In the middle pane of the Disk Management console of the cluster node that owns both volumes N and Y, right-click volume Y, and then click Change Drive Letter and Paths.

2.Click Add, click Mount in the following empty NTFS folder, and then click Browse.

3.Click volume N, click New Folder, type a name for the new folder, and then click OK two times to return to the Server Manager console.

4.Open the Failover Cluster Management console.

5.Test the mount point on each node by moving the "Service and Application" group that holds both of the disk resources to each node. Make sure that the disks come online on each node and that the information in the volume that was mounted can be accessed through Windows Explorer or by using the command line and the “N:\mount point folder name” path.

转载于:https://blog.51cto.com/549687/2073804

评论
添加红包

请填写红包祝福语或标题

红包个数最小为10个

红包金额最低5元

当前余额3.43前往充值 >
需支付:10.00
成就一亿技术人!
领取后你会自动成为博主和红包主的粉丝 规则
hope_wisdom
发出的红包
实付
使用余额支付
点击重新获取
扫码支付
钱包余额 0

抵扣说明:

1.余额是钱包充值的虚拟货币,按照1:1的比例进行支付金额的抵扣。
2.余额无法直接购买下载,可以购买VIP、付费专栏及课程。

余额充值