Storage Foundation and High Availability Solutions 8.0.1 HA and DR Solutions Guide for Enterprise Vault - Windows
- Introducing SFW HA for EV
- How VCS monitors storage components
- Configuring high availability for Enterprise Vault with InfoScale Enterprise
- Reviewing the HA configuration
- Reviewing the disaster recovery configuration
- Disaster recovery configuration
- Notes and recommendations for cluster and application configuration
- Configuring cluster disk groups and volumes for Enterprise Vault
- Using the Solutions Configuration Center
- Installing and configuring Enterprise Vault for failover
- Configuring the Enterprise Vault service group
Active-Passive configuration
In a typical example of a high availability cluster, you create a virtual Enterprise Vault server in an Active-Passive configuration. The active node of the cluster hosts the virtual server. The second node is a dedicated redundant server able to take over and host the virtual server in the event of a failure on the active node.
The following figure illustrates a typical Active-Passive configuration.
Enterprise Vault Server is installed on both Node1 and Node2 and configured as a virtual server with a virtual IP address. Shared volumes are configured on shared storage for the following:
MSMQ data
Registry replication data
Various EV services data (Indexing service, Shopping service, Vault store partitions, PST holding folders, etc.)
Veritas recommends as a best practice to configure SQL Server for high availability before configuring Enterprise Vault. You will specify the SQL virtual server name during EV configuration.
Configuring SQL Server for high availability is covered in the SQL Server solutions guides.