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CentOS High Availability

You're reading from   CentOS High Availability Leverage the power of high availability clusters on CentOS Linux, the enterprise-class, open source operating system

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785282485
Length 174 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with High Availability FREE CHAPTER 2. Meet the Cluster Stack on CentOS 3. Cluster Stack Software on CentOS 6 4. Resource Manager on CentOS 6 5. Playing with Cluster Nodes on CentOS 6 6. Fencing on CentOS 6 7. Testing Failover on CentOS 6 8. Two-node Cluster Considerations on CentOS 6 9. Cluster Stack Software on CentOS 7 10. Resource Manager on CentOS 7 11. Playing with Cluster Nodes on CentOS 7 12. STONITH on CentOS 7 13. Testing Failover on CentOS 7 14. Two-node Cluster Considerations on CentOS 7 Index

Hardware failure

If your cluster node experiences a CPU, RAM, or motherboard failure, it is an unrecoverable failure and the cluster node will go offline. The cluster fencing mechanism will try to fence the problematic cluster node anyway, making sure it is not accessing the cluster's shared storage, which could lead to cluster data corruption. If your cluster node experiences disk failure, it should not affect the cluster node operation due to RAID disk redundancy, which enables normal cluster operation.

The cluster from the following example is configured to provide a webserver cluster service that includes a cluster IP address and an Apache webserver instance. The webserver cluster service is running on the node-1 cluster node. In the following screenshot, you can see the current state of the cluster:

Hardware failure

You can proceed to simulate hardware failure on the part of the node-1 cluster node. This can be done by cutting off the power to the cluster node.

Once the cluster node is powered off...

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