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Oracle Solaris Cluster Data Service for WebLogic Server Guide     Oracle Solaris Cluster
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Document Information

Preface

1.  Installing and Configuring Solaris Cluster HA for Oracle WebLogic Server

Oracle Solaris Cluster HA for Oracle WebLogic Server Overview

Overview of the Installation and Configuration Process for Oracle Solaris Cluster HA for Oracle WebLogic Server

Planning the Oracle Solaris Cluster HA for Oracle WebLogic Server Installation and Configuration

Configuration Restrictions

Configuration Requirements

Standard Data Service Configurations

Oracle WebLogic Server Configured as a Failover Resource

Simple Configuration

Configuration 1

Configuration 2

Configuration 3

Oracle WebLogic Server Configured as a Multi-Master Resource

Preparing the Nodes and Disks

How to Prepare the Nodes for a Failover Configuration

How to Prepare the Nodes for a Multi-Master Configuration

Installing and Configuring the Oracle WebLogic Server Application

How to Install Oracle WebLogic Server

Installing a Database

Installing a Web Server

Verifying the Oracle WebLogic Server Installation and Configuration

How to Verify the Oracle WebLogic Server Installation and Configuration for Failover Services

How to Verify the Oracle WebLogic Server Installation and Configuration for Multi-Master Services

Installing the HA for WebLogic Server Packages

How to Install the HA for WebLogic Server Packages

Registering and Configuring the Oracle Solaris Cluster HA for Oracle WebLogic Server

Setting Oracle Solaris Cluster HA for Oracle WebLogic Server Extension Properties

How to Register and Configure the Oracle Solaris Cluster HA for Oracle WebLogic Server as a Web Proxy Server

How to Register and Configure Oracle Solaris Cluster HA for Oracle WebLogic Server as a Failover Data Service

How to Register and Configure Oracle Solaris Cluster HA for Oracle WebLogic Server as a Multi-Master Data Service

Setting Up the Oracle WebLogic Server for HAStoragePlus Configuration

How to Set Up the Oracle WebLogic Server on Non-Global Zones for HAStoragePlus Configuration

How to Set Up the Oracle WebLogic Server on Zone Clusters for HAStoragePlus Configuration

Verifying the Oracle Solaris Cluster HA for Oracle WebLogic Server Installation and Configuration

How to Verify the Oracle Solaris Cluster HA for Oracle WebLogic Server Installation and Configuration for Failover Services

How to Verify the Oracle Solaris Cluster HA for Oracle WebLogic Server Installation and Configuration in a Multi-Master Configuration

Alternate Oracle Solaris Cluster HA for Oracle WebLogic Server Configurations

Creating a Simple Oracle WebLogic Server Resource

Creating a Resource With a Server Name Argument

Creating a Resource That Shuts Down Smoothly

Creating a Resource That Probes the Database

Creating a Resource That Monitors URIs

Using a Non-Clustered Managed Server Instance as a Proxy Server

Operation of the Oracle Solaris Cluster HA for Oracle WebLogic Server Fault Monitor

Probing Algorithm and Functionality

START Method

STOP Method

A.  HA for WebLogic Server Extension Properties

Index

Operation of the Oracle Solaris Cluster HA for Oracle WebLogic Server Fault Monitor

This section describes the Oracle Solaris Cluster HA for Oracle WebLogic Server Fault Monitor.

Probing Algorithm and Functionality

The Fault Monitor detects failures and takes action. If the monitor detects a failure in a Oracle WebLogic Server, it first restarts the Oracle WebLogic Server. If the Oracle WebLogic Server fails a certain number of times (configurable by the administrator) within a certain time window (configurable by the administrator), the resource group containing the Oracle WebLogic Server is failed over to another surviving cluster node and restarted.

The Fault Monitor method, by default, probes the server URL set in the extension property Server_url. The probe connects to the hostname and the port and then sends an HTTP GET request on the URL. If the connection fails, it is considered a complete failure and the resource group containing the Oracle WebLogic Server is restarted or failed over to another surviving cluster node and restarted. If the connection succeeds, but the HTTP response code is 500 (internal server error), it is also considered a complete failure and the resource group is restarted or failed over. All other HTTP response codes are considered a success.

If the monitor_uri_list extension property is set, the probe method connects to the URIs mentioned in the list and takes action if a failure occurs. The probe sends an HTTP GET on the specified URI or URIs.


Note - The Monitor_Uri_List extension property supports HTTP requests only. It does not support HTTPS requests.


If a complete failure (URL or URI probe) of the Oracle WebLogic Server instance is detected by the probe, and if a database probe script is specified in the extension property db_probe_script, the probe method will probe the database before taking any action on the Oracle WebLogic Server resource. If the database probe script returns success (database is up), action is taken on the Oracle WebLogic Server resource. If the database probe script returns a failure (database is down), the Oracle WebLogic Server probe will not take any action (restart or failover) until the database is up.

START Method

Before starting the Oracle WebLogic Server that is configured in the resource, the Oracle WebLogic Server configuration and the resource extension properties are validated. If the db_probe_script extension property is set, the database is probed by running the script that is set in the extension property. If the database is up, the Oracle WebLogic Server is started by running the START script that is configured in the extension property Start_script under pmf. If the database is not up, the START method returns success and lets the probe method handle the starting of the Oracle WebLogic Server. The probe method waits until the database is up to start the Oracle WebLogic Server, as explained in Probing Algorithm and Functionality.

After starting the START script under pmf, the START method waits until the Oracle WebLogic Server is in RUNNING mode before declaring the START method successful. While waiting for the Oracle WebLogic Server to start, the probe method tries to connect to the server to check if it is up. Some messages are displayed on the console during startup. The message “Failed to connect to host logical-host-1 and port 7001: Connection refused” will continue to be displayed until the Oracle WebLogic Server starts completely. After the Oracle WebLogic Server is in the RUNNING mode, the START method sets the status to “Started Successfully.”

Oracle WebLogic Server console messages are stored at /var/cluster/logs/hawls/wls-resource-name on the cluster node where the resource is started. You can check this log file for startup messages of Oracle WebLogic Server instances.

STOP Method

The STOP method stops the Oracle WebLogic Server that is configured in the resource. By default, the STOP method kills the Oracle WebLogic Server by sending a SIGKILL to the Oracle WebLogic Server process. If the smooth_shutdown extension property is set to TRUE, the STOP method tries to bring down the Oracle WebLogic Server instance by running the following command:

java weblogic.Admin -url hostname:port -username $WLS_USER 
-password $WLS_PW SHUTDOWN

If this command fails, the Oracle WebLogic Server is shut down by using SIGKILL. Even if the command succeeds, the STOP method sends SIGKILL to ensure that the Oracle WebLogic Server process is stopped.

If the smooth_shutdown extension property is set to TRUE, ensure that the boot.properties file with valid user name and password is present in the DOMAIN directory. The Oracle WebLogic Server variables, WLS_USER and WLS_PW do not need to be set in the START script for smooth shutdown. This waiver applies only to Oracle WebLogic Server 8.1 or later versions.