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04-04-2006 01:10 AM
04-04-2006 01:10 AM
for a 7x24 oracle11i ERP, how do i justify service guard.
any links, info,docs, white/black papers please
Thanks
Solved! Go to Solution.
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04-04-2006 01:30 AM
04-04-2006 01:30 AM
Re: Service guard Justification
The costs of the downtime are then weighed against the cost of setting up service guard. You may be able to find documents that can give you some guidance on assessing your downtime costs but I personally don't know of any.
Pete
Pete
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04-04-2006 01:40 AM
04-04-2006 01:40 AM
Re: Service guard Justification
If not, then it's worth it's weight in gold.
Downtime = lost $
My 2 cents,
Jeff
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04-04-2006 01:45 AM
04-04-2006 01:45 AM
SolutionIt all boils down to how you interpret Highly Available (non-cluster but redundant server) and High Availability (SG Cluster) and what scenarios each implementation protects.
I've had clients that opt for the former (Highly Available configuration) for their critical systems instead of a cluster. What I do provide is a backup/failover (turnkey almost) scheme wherein recoverability and failoverability can be done within minutes -- basically close to what a cluster can do. A SAN environment makes this a lot easy since these days you can have everything (including your boot/swap disks) on the SAN. This also makes it cost effective since your failover environment can also be used for test, staging, development, etc. instead of just lying idle.
Of course if you've deep pockets - opt for a cluster.
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04-04-2006 03:36 AM
04-04-2006 03:36 AM
Re: Service guard Justification
ServiceGuard provides higher availability and less points of failure than a single machine.
In a single machine setup if the power supply or boot disk or any critical component of the machine fails the application stops working and is not up.
With SG, the application fails over to another machine and work continues.
SEP
Owner of ISN Corporation
http://isnamerica.com
http://hpuxconsulting.com
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Founder http://newdatacloud.com
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04-04-2006 03:09 PM
04-04-2006 03:09 PM
Re: Service guard Justification
Bill Hassell, sysadmin
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04-04-2006 04:28 PM
04-04-2006 04:28 PM
Re: Service guard Justification
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04-05-2006 01:35 AM
04-05-2006 01:35 AM
Re: Service guard Justification
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04-05-2006 01:58 AM
04-05-2006 01:58 AM
Re: Service guard Justification
And this is what I meant by "highly available" -- making sure server critical components are redundant -- like storage, network , HBAs, etc. Coupled with a turnkey standby/failover system - you'll get close to a seamless failover without a cluster.
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04-05-2006 02:34 AM
04-05-2006 02:34 AM
Re: Service guard Justification
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04-05-2006 02:42 AM
04-05-2006 02:42 AM
Re: Service guard Justification
These days, I advice clients to use a Cluster solution:
1. IF they have an absolute need for it
2. Have capable Admins() on their rolls
3. As a multi-site Failover solution along with mirrored storage.
(3) is particularly the primary justification in my book for cluster implementtion these days since single server failures are becoming pretty rare these days anyway. But even (3) can be implemented via a recipe I would call "Poor Man's Failover or CLustering"... with still acceptable downtime/lag in application availability for certain applications.