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davenport wrote: I think I know what you mean. Is he talking about something along the lines of round robin DNS with two servers? That would provide load balancing but no fault tolerance.
icroyal wrote: davenport wrote: I think I know what you mean. Is he talking about something along the lines of round robin DNS with two servers? That would provide load balancing but no fault tolerance. This has nothing to do with distributing/load balancing client traffic. Your cluster has its own DNS Host Record in which clients point to. The cluster service will then have the active node take care of the request. This has to do with replicating traffic across Direct Attached Storage (DAS) and having each cluster be able to use its own storage when it is active. Clusters typically require external shared storage to work. Personally, I have not heard of being able to do such a thing. I don't have much experience when it comes to clustering, however. I do know that with Server 2003 Enterprise Sp1 and with a MNS cluster, you can force the cluster to not require a 3rd node and have it use a file share instead. Perhaps there is some relevance. You can check out the doc at http://support.microsoft.com/kb/921181
blargoe wrote: He is talking about something called replication
icroyal wrote: This has to do with replicating traffic across Direct Attached Storage (DAS) and having each cluster be able to use its own storage when it is active.
Smallguy wrote: THnaks for the info unfortuantley he is talking about using 2 machines
icroyal wrote: blargoe wrote: He is talking about something called replication Yep. mostly. icroyal wrote: This has to do with replicating traffic across Direct Attached Storage (DAS) and having each cluster be able to use its own storage when it is active. Smallguy wrote: THnaks for the info unfortuantley he is talking about using 2 machines With the link I gave you, you should be able to accomplish what you need. Majority node set uses its own disks for information and for quorum data. By default, the minimum amount of nodes you need with Majority Node Set Clustering is 3. With the link I gave you, you can get a majority node set down to 2 nodes instead of 3. Now all you need to do is replicate the information between the 2 servers like I originally stated. This will allow you to have a 2-node cluster that uses its own disks, which is what you originally needed.
blargoe wrote: He must be thinking about majority node set then.
Smallguy wrote: even setting up a majority node cluster with the 2 boxes will not achieve what he wants...because one of the machines will have to store the data and if that machine fails for any reason you not getting fail over to work.
Smallguy wrote: I've done some research and then presented it ot my boss about replication software but he says the solution is on the web and requires no third-pary software or external storage and he found it a while ago but will not give up his source or has forgotten it (not sure which)
icroyal wrote: Smallguy wrote: even setting up a majority node cluster with the 2 boxes will not achieve what he wants...because one of the machines will have to store the data and if that machine fails for any reason you not getting fail over to work. Smallguy, I'm curious if you even read the link I provided you or what I have been posting. I have been telling you the entire time to use a Majority Node Set Cluster with the link I gave you which shows you how to run a 2-node MNS cluster while using a file share to any workstation/server which will allow you to fail over successfully. They will both have the same data because you should have replication software replicating data between the 2 cluster node's Direct Attached Storage (DAS).
Smallguy wrote: I kept mis-reading it....must be one of those weeks i guess
icroyal wrote: Smallguy wrote: I kept mis-reading it....must be one of those weeks i guess We all have those days. Gotta love those times when you read the same page in a book over and over and over and you realize after the 10th time reading it, you still have no idea what that page was about.
Smallguy wrote: icroyal wrote: Smallguy wrote: I kept mis-reading it....must be one of those weeks i guess We all have those days. Gotta love those times when you read the same page in a book over and over and over and you realize after the 10th time reading it, you still have no idea what that page was about. Yeah it was driving me bonkers...if this works i'll be a happy happy man. I kepy reding you can't do it with 2 nodes and was missing that the update allows u to do it with 2 nodes I eveen read a white paper *(must be outdated) saying u need 3 nodes i'll present it ot the boss monday and thank you for the resource....I've literally asked everywhere I can think of and you were the olny one woh found this....if u don;t mnid how did u find it?
icroyal wrote: Smallguy wrote: icroyal wrote: Smallguy wrote: I kept mis-reading it....must be one of those weeks i guess We all have those days. Gotta love those times when you read the same page in a book over and over and over and you realize after the 10th time reading it, you still have no idea what that page was about. Yeah it was driving me bonkers...if this works i'll be a happy happy man. I kepy reding you can't do it with 2 nodes and was missing that the update allows u to do it with 2 nodes I eveen read a white paper *(must be outdated) saying u need 3 nodes i'll present it ot the boss monday and thank you for the resource....I've literally asked everywhere I can think of and you were the olny one woh found this....if u don;t mnid how did u find it? We have a distribution list in our company where over a hundred engineers/senior engineers/architects discuss issues and help each other. One day they were talking about a similar issue and one of them showed a link.
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