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10-23-2006 12:04 AM
10-23-2006 12:04 AM
I am soon going to evolve into an h24/365 production environment, with HP-UX 11.11 and Serviceguard.
We are now allowed some hours in the night to performance maintenance and package switching between the nodes.
I am asking if someone knows of a course (or manual or book ) specifically covering the problems of administering ever-active HP-UX clusters.
Best regards,
Marco
Solved! Go to Solution.
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10-23-2006 12:12 AM
10-23-2006 12:12 AM
Re: H/24 support
See this page (especially the document list at the bottom):
http://h20293.www2.hp.com/portal/swdepot/displayProductInfo.do?productNumber=B8679BA:B3936-90026
PCS
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10-23-2006 12:21 AM
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10-23-2006 11:16 PM
10-23-2006 11:16 PM
Re: H/24 support
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10-23-2006 11:28 PM
10-23-2006 11:28 PM
Re: H/24 support
Marco
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10-23-2006 11:35 PM
10-23-2006 11:35 PM
SolutionWith Serviceguard properly installed and configured, you set up all the applications to run on either node.
When patching is required on one node, use the command line to fail all packages over to the other node of the cluster.
Now you have a node that can be rebooted as many times as needed to get the patches installed.
Note that ServiceGuard is a High availability environment. This means there are still single points of failure that can cause problems. If you can't afford any downtime you need a fault tolerant environment at multiple locations.
I would look into the SG Metro or Continental Cluster products for this type of situation.
SEP
Owner of ISN Corporation
http://isnamerica.com
http://hpuxconsulting.com
Sponsor: http://hpux.ws
Twitter: http://twitter.com/hpuxlinux
Founder http://newdatacloud.com
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10-23-2006 11:51 PM
10-23-2006 11:51 PM
Re: H/24 support
I do not think there is a specific manual for that, experience is the most important factor, having service guard well configure, having all the redundand hardware that you need, server wise, network wise and datacenter infraestructure wise.
We do not do much if we have service guard running, and in the middle of the night there is a black out and the UPS is not able to handle 5 hours black outs, you need a power generator for that UPS, you need redundancy in your routers and switches, dedicated lines, redundand power supplies, network cards, memory, etc, etc and the list goes on and on.
There is always going to be the time that you are going to have a tech that does not really know what he is doing at nights ( one of those that will panic if he/she sees a red line on one of the drives in the Virtual Array and call the CEO at 3:00 in the morning - I had one of those techs before )
Having procedures documented, having those techs using sudo to get access to root privileges is a good idea, having well prepare tech on call just in case something out of wack happen is also good idea so the junior tech can call him in case of emergency.
Having a contract with HP to support hardware and software is a really good idea too.
Well I can keep on talking about this, like I said before experince will do.
Regards,
Jaime.
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10-24-2006 12:02 AM
10-24-2006 12:02 AM
Re: H/24 support
We now perform patch installing (and/or node switching at a SG package level) between 1am and 7am. Therefore, I am worried by the shrinking of this free ( but not comfortable and not paid until now ) window. Sudo is not an option for the unpredictable and we have managed to have zero problems on the predictable. We're less naive than it seemed to people who recommended SG in the earlier answers. Root password sharing is the biggest problem in such an environment. I am thought to be available 9 to midnight but that's wishful thinking.
A book would persuade executives more than the words of a sysadmin, who is mocked by their typical question: "why are you making all those difficulties if nothing has happened so far ?". Some way, you're prisoner of your good past behaviour. At the same time you'll be blamed when something goes wrong.
Responsibility without power, not uncommon I believe.
Marco
PS:
I am soon going to close the thread if nobody brings his own 'rules' coming from EXPERIENCE as someone suggested.
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10-24-2006 04:16 AM
10-24-2006 04:16 AM
Re: H/24 support
I was looking to see if this book was for sale, and it's, it talks about HA in an easy way to read it, I do not know if you already have it, it's not going to teach you configuration or anything like that in detail, but it will give you some very good tips:
Clusters for High Availability: A Primer of HP Solutions, 2/e
Regards,
Jaime.
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10-26-2006 12:01 AM
10-26-2006 12:01 AM
Re: H/24 support
I believe it is still a situation open to many individual choices, in a trade-off between security and response to failures.
I'd like not to read an answer like "Read the Manuals" on the forums, as if it was something worth the time of typing it. We can read the forum, therefore we can read the manuals.
Marco