Cluster Server 8.0 Implementation Guide for Microsoft SQL Server - Windows
- Section I. Introducing Veritas InfoScale solutions for application high availability
- Understanding the InfoScale solutions for application high availability
- About the VCS agents for SQL Server
- How VCS monitors storage components
- How application availability is achieved in a physical environment
- How is application availability achieved in a VMware virtual environment
- Managing storage and installing the VCS agents
- Installing SQL Server
- Understanding the InfoScale solutions for application high availability
- Section II. Configuring SQL Server in a physical environment
- Overview
- Configuring the VCS cluster
- Configuring the SQL Server service group
- Configuring a SQL Server service group using the wizard
- Making SQL Server user-defined databases highly available
- Verifying the service group configuration
- Administering a SQL Server service group
- Configuring an MSDTC service group
- Configuring the standalone SQL Server
- Configuring an Active/Active cluster
- Configuring a disaster recovery setup
- Section III. Configuring SQL Server in a VMware environment
- Configuring application monitoring using the Veritas High Availability solution
- Administering application monitoring
- Administering application monitoring using the Veritas High Availability tab
- Administering application availability using Veritas High Availability dashboard
- Understanding the dashboard work area
- Section IV. Appendixes
- Appendix A. Troubleshooting
- Error and warning messages from VCS agent for SQL Server
- Troubleshooting application monitoring configuration issues
- Troubleshooting Veritas High Availability view issues
- Appendix B. Using the virtual MMC viewer
- Appendix A. Troubleshooting
Typical VCS cluster configuration in a virtual environment
A typical VCS cluster configuration in a VMware virtual environment involves two or more virtual machines. The virtual machine on which the application is active, accesses a non-shared VMware VMDK or RDM disk that resides on a VMware datastore.
The virtual machines involved in the VCS cluster configuration may belong to a single ESX host or could reside on separate ESX hosts. If the virtual machines reside on separate ESX hosts, the datastore on which the VMware VMDK or RDM disks (on which the application data is stored) reside must be accessible to each of these ESX hosts.
The application binaries are installed on the virtual machines and the data files are installed on the VMware disk drive. The VCS agents monitor the application components and services, and the storage and network components that the application uses.
During a failover, the VCS storage agents (MountV-VMNSDg-VMwareDisks in case of SFW storage, Mount-NativeDisks-VMwareDisks in case of LDM storage) move the VMware disks to the new system. The VCS network agents bring the network components online, and the application-specific agents then start the application services on the new system.
In a site recovery environment, Veritas High Availability solution additionally provides script files for the following tasks. These files are invoked when the SRM recovery plan is executed.
Set up communication between the vCenter Server and the SRM Server at the recovery site and the virtual machines at the protected site.
Assign a SiteID to both the sites.
Specify attribute values for the application components at the respective site.
Retrieve the application status in the SRM recovery report, after the virtual machine is started at the recovery site.