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тАО10-29-2002 12:37 PM
тАО10-29-2002 12:37 PM
Achieving high availability
Any experience, advice or warnings would be greatly appreciated.
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тАО10-29-2002 12:37 PM
тАО10-29-2002 12:37 PM
Re: Achieving high availability
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тАО10-29-2002 12:43 PM
тАО10-29-2002 12:43 PM
Re: Achieving high availability
The method is referred to as "Rolling Upgrades". For example, if you have a 2-node cluster, a database package and you are upgrading the version of Oracle, you would upgrade the Oracle application on the one server, then move the package over to the other node. Then you would upgrade Oracle on the other node and then move the package back, if desired. However, the 99.999% availability mentioned is not due to merely installing MCSG and creating a cluster. There are many hardware redundancy steps that are taken and also the type of hardware is taken into account. Mirroring the OS and data is also a factor, LAN redundancy, etc. 99.999% == $$$
Hope this helps
Chris
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тАО10-29-2002 12:55 PM
тАО10-29-2002 12:55 PM
Re: Achieving high availability
Service Guard is great for 99.995% but is pushing its limits for ORACLE with 99.999%. It takes my Service Guarded Oracle systems from 5 to 10 minutes to reform after a primary node failure. Obviously you're big up front cost will be a robust HW infrastructure - Cluster, redundant everything, LAN, Storage subsystem, etc. If you plan on doing online maintanance of OS and HW, check out Stratus products (stratus.com). These are fully redundant server with redundant everything running CPU's in lockstep - online maintenance of HW and OS and run native HP-UX. Whatever your solution, maintaining Oracle WILL require down time - much more that 5 minutes for activities like version upgrades. I have one Service Guard cluster with two N4000's that have been running for three years without a failover. But we schedule monthly maintenance to perform HW, OS, database, or any other type of maintenance that can be scheduled. Another selling point of Service Guard clustering - during scheduled maintenance, you can move packages (ORACLE) to the standby node (5-10 minutes down time) and perform maintenance on the primary node. When done, you can move Oracle back to its original node (another 5-10 minutes down time). Hope I have helped.
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тАО10-29-2002 12:56 PM
тАО10-29-2002 12:56 PM
Re: Achieving high availability
Very few application require no 'touching'; bugs are typically found quite often under unusual circumstances. You will almost certainly have to apply critical OS and database patches thus some planned downtime will be required.
If you can get the problem changed to no more than 5 minutes of unplanned downtime per year then that becomes a much more achievable target.
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тАО10-29-2002 01:05 PM
тАО10-29-2002 01:05 PM
Re: Achieving high availability
The next level of availability is 99.99 which is a down time of 50 min.
The next level of availbility is 99.95 which is a down time of 4.3 hours which you can achieve thhrough normal service guard implementations .
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тАО10-31-2002 05:18 AM
тАО10-31-2002 05:18 AM
Re: Achieving high availability
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тАО10-31-2002 07:24 AM
тАО10-31-2002 07:24 AM
Re: Achieving high availability
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тАО11-04-2002 07:56 AM
тАО11-04-2002 07:56 AM
Re: Achieving high availability
You may want to check out www.stratus.com
They do some Continuum Servers which are designed for specificly for high availability. They have systems that run HPUX, so no need to get new OS skills.
cheers,
John