Table 1-9, Failover ring, Overview – Dell PowerVault 775N (Rackmount NAS Appliance) User Manual

Page 18

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Table 1-9. Example of a Four-Node Multiway Failover Configuration

Cluster Resource Group Failover Order in the Preferred Owners List

A

Node 1

B

Node 2

C

Node 3

D

Node 4

E

Node 5

F

Node 6

Failover Ring

Failover ring is an active/active failover policy where all running applications migrate from the failed node to the next

preassigned cluster node in the Preferred Owners List in Cluster Administrator. If the failing node is the last node in the list,

the failed node's resources failover to the first node in the list.

While this type of failover solution provides high resource availability to users, you must ensure that the cluster node next in

line for failover has ample resources available to handle the additional workload of the failed node.

Figure 1-6

shows an example of a failover ring configuration.

Figure 1-6. Example of a Four-Node Failover Ring Configuration

Overview

Table 1-10

provides an overview of the failover policies implemented with Windows Storage Server 2003, Enterprise Edition.

Table 1-10. Windows Storage Server 2003, Enterprise Edition Failover Policies

Failover

Policy

Description

Advantage

Disadvantage(s)

N + I

One or more servers provides

backup for multiple servers in

the cluster.

Highest resource

availability.

May not handle more than one backup server

failure

May not fully utilize all of the servers

Failover

pair

Applications can failover

between the two nodes in the

cluster.

Easy to plan the

server capacity of

each node.

Half of the server resources are idle.

Multiway Running applications migrate

to multiple nodes in the

Application load

balancing.

Must ensure that the failover cluster nodes have ample

resources available to handle the additional workload.

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