Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions 7.3.1 HA and DR Solutions Guide for Microsoft SharePoint 2010 - Windows
- Introducing Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions for SharePoint 2010
- About clustering solutions with SFW HA
- About high availability
- How a high availability solution works
- About replication
- About disaster recovery
- What you can do with a disaster recovery solution
- Typical disaster recovery configuration
- About high availability support for SharePoint Server
- About the SharePoint Search service application
- Introducing the VCS agent for SharePoint Server 2010
- Configuration workflows for SharePoint Server 2010
- Reviewing the HA configuration
- Reviewing the disaster recovery configuration
- High availability (HA) configuration
- Disaster recovery configuration
- Notes and recommendations for cluster and application configuration
- Configuring the storage hardware and network
- Configuring the cluster using the Cluster Configuration Wizard
- Using the Solutions Configuration Center
- About the Solutions Configuration Center
- Starting the Solutions Configuration Center
- Options in the Solutions Configuration Center
- About launching wizards from the Solutions Configuration Center
- Remote and local access to Solutions wizards
- Solutions wizards and logs
- Workflows in the Solutions Configuration Center
- Installing and configuring SharePoint Server 2010 for high availability
- Configuring disaster recovery for SharePoint Server 2010
- Introducing the VCS agent for SharePoint Search Service Application
- About the VCS agent for SharePoint Search service application
- Configuring the SharePoint Search Service Application service group
- Prerequisites for configuring a service group for a SharePoint Search service application
- Installing and configuring SharePoint Server 2010
- Changing the index location of the Crawl and Query components
- Configuring a service group for a SharePoint Search service application manually
- Configuring the service group for a Search service application using the wizard
- Verifying the application service group
- Configuring a Search service application for disaster recovery
- Administering the SharePoint Search Service Application service group
- Troubleshooting
- Appendix A. Using Veritas AppProtect for vSphere
- About Just In Time Availability
- Prerequisites
- Setting up a plan
- Deleting a plan
- Managing a plan
- Viewing the history tab
- Limitations of Just In Time Availability
- Getting started with Just In Time Availability
- Supported operating systems and configurations
- Viewing the properties
- Log files
- Plan states
- Troubleshooting Just In Time Availability
Verifying the SharePoint cluster configuration
Failover simulation is an important part of configuration testing. To verify the configuration in the cluster, you can take the service groups offline, or manually stop the configured applications on the active cluster node.
You can also simulate a local cluster failover for the SQL Server databases configured in the SQL Server service group. Refer to the application-specific documentation for instructions.
Use Veritas Cluster Manager (Java Console) to perform all the service groups operations.
To take the service groups offline and bring them online
- In the Veritas Cluster Manager (Java Console), click the cluster in the configuration tree, click the Service Groups tab, and right-click the service group icon in the view panel.
Click Offline and then choose the local system.
In the dialog box, click Yes. The service group you selected is taken offline on the node.
If there is more than one service group, you must repeat this step until all the service groups are offline.
- Verify that the applications and services configured in the service groups are in the stopped state.
- To start all the stopped services, bring all the services groups online on the node.
To manually stop the configured applications and services
- To verify that the SharePoint applications and services are properly configured with VCS, manually stop these components either from the SharePoint Central Administration console or from the IIS Manager.
- From the IIS Manager, in the Connections pane on the left, select a configured Web site and then in the Actions pane on the right, click Stop. The status of the Web Site will show as stopped.
- In the Cluster Manager (Java Console) the corresponding service group resource state may temporarily show as faulted as the SharePoint agent attempts to start the stopped application.
- When the resource comes online, refresh the IIS Manager view to verify that the IIS site is in the started state.