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Operating Systems AIX hacmp and disaster recovery question Post 302346015 by bakunin on Thursday 20th of August 2009 07:56:23 PM
Old 08-20-2009
As far as i know SRDF is only a data replication facility, not a failover mechanism.

A (HA-)cluster makes *systems* highly available, specifically IP interfaces and applications. Usually data are *not* made highly available by cluster means, because data are shared between cluster nodes. Data are made highly available by mirroring, RAID-5, etc., but not by cluster means.

This means that data replication is something not in the scope of HACMP in first place and therefore not suitable for somehow substituting cluster facilities.

Having said this: how about building a "semi-automatic failover" solution in script, which does the following:

- monitor the clusters application IP to be online
- once it is not online any more:
- - roll forward the replication to the latest possible point in time, then
- - mount the (hopefully complete) data on your spare system
- - start the application on the spare system
- - initialize an unused interface with the clusters IP address
- - start serving the app via that IP interface.

There will be all kind of details to cover, which even might make this solution impossible - synchronisation problems, a procedure for taking back the app once the original cluster systems come back online, etc.. Still it is worth a try to explore if such a setup might be possible. It is kind of a "clustering for the real poor", so to say.

I hope this helps.

bakunin
 

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CLUSTER(1)						      General Commands Manual							CLUSTER(1)

NAME
cluster - find clusters in a graph and augment the graph with this information. SYNOPSIS
cluster [-v?] [ -Ck ] [ -ck ] [ -o outfile ] [ files ] DESCRIPTION
cluster takes as input a graph in DOT format, finds node clusters and augments the graph with this information. The clusters are specified by the "cluster" attribute attached to nodes; cluster values are non-negative integers. cluster attempts to maximize the modularity of the clustering. If the edge attribute "weight" is defined, this will be used in computing the clustering. OPTIONS
The following options are supported: -Ck specifies a targeted number of clusters that should be generated. The specified number k is only a suggestion and may not be real- isable. If k == 0, the default, the number of clusters that approximately optimizes the modularity is returned. -ck specifies clustering method. If k == 0, the default, the modularity will be used. If k == 1 modularity quality will be used. -ooutfile Specifies that output should go into the file outfile. By default, stdout is used. -v Verbose mode. EXAMPLES
Applying cluster to the following graph, graph { 1--2 [weight=10.] 2--3 [weight=1] 3--4 [weight=10.] 4--5 [weight=10] 5--6 [weight=10] 3--6 [weight=0.1] 4--6 [weight=10.] } gives graph { node [cluster="-1"]; 1 [cluster=1]; 2 [cluster=1]; 3 [cluster=2]; 4 [cluster=2]; 5 [cluster=2]; 6 [cluster=2]; 1 -- 2 [weight="10."]; 2 -- 3 [weight=1]; 3 -- 4 [weight="10."]; 4 -- 5 [weight=10]; 5 -- 6 [weight=10]; 3 -- 6 [weight="0.1"]; 4 -- 6 [weight="10."]; } AUTHOR
Yifan Hu <yifanhu@research.att.com> SEE ALSO
gvmap(1) Blondel, V.D., Guillaume, J.L., Lambiotte, R., Lefebvre, E.: Fast unfolding of communities in large networks. Journal of Statistical Mechanics: Theory and Experiment (2008), P10008. 3 March 2011 CLUSTER(1)
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