Veritas InfoScale™ 8.0.2 Disaster Recovery Implementation Guide - AIX
- Section I. Introducing Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions for disaster recovery
- About supported disaster recovery scenarios
- About campus cluster configuration
- About replicated data clusters
- About global clusters
- VCS global clusters: The building blocks
- About global cluster management
- About serialization - The Authority attribute
- Planning for disaster recovery
- About supported disaster recovery scenarios
- Section II. Implementing campus clusters
- Setting up campus clusters for VCS and SFHA
- About setting up a campus cluster configuration
- About running a fire drill in a campus cluster
- About setting up a campus cluster configuration
- Setting up campus clusters for SFCFSHA, SFRAC
- Setting up campus clusters for VCS and SFHA
- Section III. Implementing replicated data clusters
- Configuring a replicated data cluster using VVR
- Configuring a replicated data cluster using third-party replication
- Section IV. Implementing global clusters
- Configuring global clusters for VCS and SFHA
- Setting up VVR replication
- Creating a Replicated Data Set
- Creating a Primary RVG of an RDS
- Adding a Secondary to an RDS
- Changing the replication settings for a Secondary
- Synchronizing the Secondary and starting replication
- Starting replication when the data volumes are zero initialized
- Configuring clusters for global cluster setup
- Configuring service groups for global cluster setup
- Configuring a global cluster with Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability or Storage Foundation for Oracle RAC
- Configuring a global cluster with Volume Replicator and Storage Foundation Cluster File System High Availability or Storage Foundation for Oracle RAC
- Setting up replication on the primary site using VVR
- Setting up replication on the secondary site using VVR
- Configuring Cluster Server to replicate the database volume using VVR
- Configuring global clusters for VCS and SFHA
- Section V. Implementing disaster recovery configurations in virtualized environments
- Section VI. Reference
Sample fire drill service group configuration
The sample configuration in this section describes a fire drill service group configuration on the secondary site. The configuration uses VVR for replicating data between the sites.
The sample service group describes the following configuration:
Two Storage Foundation for Oracle RAC clusters, comprising two nodes each, hosted at different geographical locations.
A single Oracle database that is stored on CFS.
The database is managed by the VCS agent for Oracle.
The agent starts, stops, and monitors the database.
The database uses the Oracle UDP IPC for database cache fusion.
A common IP address is used by Oracle Clusterware and database cache fusion. The private IP address is managed by the PrivNIC agent for high availability.
One virtual IP address must be configured under the ClusterService group on each site for inter-cluster communication.
The Oracle Cluster Registry (OCR) and voting disk are stored on CFS.
Volume Replicator (VVR) is used to replicate data between the sites.
The shared volumes replicated across the sites are configured under the RVG group.
The replication link used by VVR for communicating log information between sites are configured under the rlogowner group. This is a failover group, and remains online from the cvm master node. The PreOnline trigger for the RVGLogOwner agent should be enabled.
Please see the section "CVM master node needs to assume the logowner role for VCS managed VVR resources" in the Cluster Server Bundled Agents Reference Guide for more info.
The database group is configured as a global group by specifying the clusters on the primary and secondary sites as values for the ClusterList group attribute.
The fire drill service group oradb_grp_fd creates a snapshot of the replicated data on the secondary site and starts the database using the snapshot. An offline local dependency is set between the fire drill service group and the application service group to make sure a fire drill does not block an application failover in case a disaster strikes the primary site.
Figure: Service group configuration for fire drill illustrates the configuration.