Storage Foundation and High Availability 8.0.1 Solutions Microsoft Clustering Solutions Guide for Microsoft SQL Server - Windows
- Introducing SFW solutions for a Microsoft cluster
- Planning for deploying SQL Server with SFW in a Microsoft cluster
- Workflows for deploying SQL Server with SFW in a Microsoft cluster
- Configuring SFW storage
- Tasks for configuring InfoScale Storage
- Planning for SFW cluster disk groups and volumes
- Considerations when creating disk groups and volumes for a campus cluster
- Considerations when creating volumes for a DR configuration using Volume Replicator replication
- Viewing the available disk storage
- Creating dynamic cluster disk groups
- Adding disks to campus cluster sites
- Creating dynamic volumes for high availability clusters
- Creating dynamic volumes for campus clusters
- Implementing a dynamic mirrored quorum resource
- Installing SQL Server and configuring resources
- Configuring disaster recovery
- Tasks for configuring the secondary site for disaster recovery for SQL Server
- Verifying the primary site configuration
- Creating a parallel environment for SQL Server on the secondary site
- Volume Replicator components overview
- Setting up security for Volume Replicator
- Creating resources for Volume Replicator
- Configuring Volume Replicator: Setting up an RDS
- Creating the RVG resource
- Setting the SQL server resource dependency on the RVG resource
- Normal Volume Replicator operations and recovery procedures
- Appendix A. Configure InfoScale Storage in an existing Microsoft Failover Cluster
The vxclus utility
Storage Foundation provides the vxclus command line utility to allow forcing a failover to the secondary site. The command vxclus enable creates an entry in the Registry that enables the cluster disk group to be brought online on a node with a minority of the disks. After you run vxclus enable, you can bring the disk group resource online in the Microsoft cluster. After the cluster disk group is brought online, the vxclus functionality is disabled.
Warning:
When bringing a cluster disk group online with a minority of cluster disks, make sure that a majority of the disk group disks are not online on any other cluster node before (and after) bringing online the disk group. If a majority of disk group disks are online on another node, data corruption can occur.
For more information on the vxclus utility, see the Storage Foundation Administrator's Guide. The vxclus utility also provides support for booting from a SAN, but you must have a hardware storage array that supports the capability.