Please enter search query.
Search <book_title>...
Virtual Business Service-Availability User's Guide
Last Published:
2019-02-01
Product(s):
InfoScale & Storage Foundation (7.4.1)
Platform: AIX,Linux,Solaris,Windows
- Overview of Virtual Business Services
- Virtualization support in Virtual Business Services
- Supported operating systems for Virtual Business Services
- Installing and configuring Virtual Business Services
- Configuring a virtual business service
- Creating virtual business services
- Editing virtual business services
- Configuring dependencies for a virtual business service
- Managing Microsoft Failover Clustering from VBS
- Virtual Business Services operations
- Starting and stopping Virtual Business Services
- Tracking VBS operations
- Logs of a virtual business service
- Virtual Business Services security
- Fault management in Virtual Business Services
- Disaster recovery in Virtual Business Services
- Upgrading Virtual Business Services
- Appendix A. Command reference
- Appendix B. Troubleshooting and recovery
- Appendix C. Known issues and limitations
- Known issues and limitations
- Known issues and limitations
Types of faults handled
Virtual Business Services fault management handles application failures as well as node failures. When a node crashes, VCS detects the failure, which is propagated to the virtual business service. Fault management treats all service groups that were running on the node as FAULTED. VCS detects faults provided at lease one node is left running in the cluster.
Intentional shutdown of a node or VCS daemon (HAD) is not treated as a node fault. Virtual Business Services fault management takes no action in this case.
When a cluster node goes into EXITED state, Virtual Business Services fault management treats the outage as planned downtime and takes no action.