InfoScale™ 9.0 Cluster Server Administrator's Guide - Windows
- Section I. Clustering concepts and terminology
- Introducing Cluster Server
- About Cluster Server
- About cluster control guidelines
- About the physical components of VCS
- Logical components of VCS
- Types of service groups
- Agent classifications
- About cluster control, communications, and membership
- About security services
- About cluster topologies
- VCS configuration concepts
- Introducing Cluster Server
- Section II. Administration - Putting VCS to work
- About the VCS user privilege model
- Getting started with VCS
- Administering the cluster from the command line
- About administering VCS from the command line
- Stopping the VCS engine and related processes
- About managing VCS configuration files
- About managing VCS users from the command line
- About querying VCS
- About administering service groups
- Modifying service group attributes
- About administering resources
- About administering resource types
- About administering clusters
- Configuring resources and applications in VCS
- About configuring resources and applications
- About Virtual Business Services
- About Intelligent Resource Monitoring (IMF)
- About fast failover
- How VCS monitors storage components
- About storage configuration
- About configuring network resources
- About configuring file shares
- About configuring IIS sites
- About configuring services
- Before you configure a service using the GenericService agent
- About configuring processes
- About configuring Microsoft Message Queuing (MSMQ)
- About configuring the infrastructure and support agents
- About configuring applications using the Application Configuration Wizard
- Adding resources to a service group
- About application monitoring on single-node clusters
- Configuring the service group in a non-shared storage environment
- About the VCS Application Manager utility
- About testing resource failover using virtual fire drills
- Modifying the cluster configuration
- Section III. Administration - Beyond the basics
- Controlling VCS behavior
- VCS behavior on resource faults
- About controlling VCS behavior at the service group level
- Customized behavior diagrams
- VCS behavior for resources that support the intentional offline functionality
- About controlling VCS behavior at the resource level
- Service group workload management
- Sample configurations depicting workload management
- The role of service group dependencies
- VCS event notification
- VCS event triggers
- List of event triggers
- Controlling VCS behavior
- Section IV. Cluster configurations for disaster recovery
- Connecting clusters–Creating global clusters
- VCS global clusters: The building blocks
- About global cluster management
- About serialization - The Authority attribute
- Prerequisites for global clusters
- Setting up a global cluster
- Configuring replication resources in VCS
- About IPv6 support with global clusters
- About cluster faults
- About setting up a disaster recovery fire drill
- Test scenario for a multi-tiered environment
- Administering global clusters from Cluster Manager (Java console)
- Administering global clusters from the command line
- About global querying in a global cluster setup
- Administering clusters in global cluster setup
- Setting up replicated data clusters
- Connecting clusters–Creating global clusters
- Section V. Troubleshooting and performance
- VCS performance considerations
- How cluster components affect performance
- How cluster operations affect performance
- VCS performance consideration when a system panics
- VCS agent statistics
- Troubleshooting and recovery for VCS
- VCS message logging
- Handling network failure
- Troubleshooting VCS startup
- Troubleshooting service groups
- Troubleshooting and recovery for global clusters
- VCS utilities
- VCS performance considerations
- Section VI. Appendixes
- Appendix A. VCS user privileges—administration matrices
- Appendix B. Cluster and system states
- Appendix C. VCS attributes
- Appendix D. Configuring LLT over UDP
- Appendix E. Handling concurrency violation in any-to-any configurations
- Appendix F. Accessibility and VCS
- Appendix G. InfoScale event logging
EO-compliant logging for Cluster Server
InfoScale provides options to enable compliance with the U.S. Presidential Executive Order (EO) 14028 (issued on May 12, 2021) with regards to event logging. The VCS_ENABLE_PUBSEC_LOG environment variable controls the EO-compliant logging for the Cluster Server (VCS) processes.
In case of a fresh InfoScale installation, EO-compliant logging is disabled by default. After the installation is complete, you can enable EO-compliant logging for VCS by setting VCS_ENABLE_PUBSEC_LOG to 1.
When VCS_ENABLE_PUBSEC_LOG is enabled, each VCS log statement is prefixed with the following additional information:
Timestamp in the YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS.mmm+UTC format
Host name in the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) format
Additionally, if EO-compliant logging is enabled, the log entries follow the key=value format.
When EO-compliant logging is disabled (default), VCS log messages appear like this:
2024/10/17 23:41:15 VCS INFO V-16-1-50135 User (VCSWIN\Domain Admins):ADMINISTRATOR@VCSWIN fired command: hagrp -modify ... -add NICSG SystemList punr740-17-v3 1 from ::1
However, when EO-compliant logging is enabled, VCS log messages appear like this:
Timestamp: "2024-06-11T02:35:39.800-08:00", Hostname: "punr740-17-v053.vcswin.com", Component: "VCS", Severity: "INFO", UMI: "V-16-1-10201", Message: "hacf -dump completed successfully, received message on channel 2"