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Oracle Solaris Cluster System Administration Guide Oracle Solaris Cluster 4.0 |
1. Introduction to Administering Oracle Solaris Cluster
Overview of Administering Oracle Solaris Cluster
Oracle Solaris OS Feature Restrictions
Preparing to Administer the Cluster
Documenting an Oracle Solaris Cluster Hardware Configuration
Beginning to Administer the Cluster
Logging Into the Cluster Remotely
How to Connect Securely to Cluster Consoles
How to Access the Cluster Configuration Utilities
How to Display Oracle Solaris Cluster Release and Version Information
How to Display Configured Resource Types, Resource Groups, and Resources
How to Check the Status of Cluster Components
How to Check the Status of the Public Network
How to View the Cluster Configuration
How to Validate a Basic Cluster Configuration
How to Check the Global Mount Points
How to View the Contents of Oracle Solaris Cluster Command Logs
2. Oracle Solaris Cluster and RBAC
3. Shutting Down and Booting a Cluster
4. Data Replication Approaches
5. Administering Global Devices, Disk-Path Monitoring, and Cluster File Systems
7. Administering Cluster Interconnects and Public Networks
10. Configuring Control of CPU Usage
This section describes how to prepare to administer your cluster.
Document the hardware aspects that are unique to your site as your Oracle Solaris Cluster configuration is scaled. To reduce administration, refer to your hardware documentation when you change or upgrade the cluster. Labeling cables and connections between the various cluster components can also make administration easier.
Reduce the time required by a third-party service provider when servicing your cluster by keeping records of your original cluster configuration, and subsequent changes.
You can use either a dedicated workstation or a workstation connected through a management network as the administrative console, to administer the active cluster.
The administrative console is not a cluster node. The administrative console is used for remote access to the cluster nodes, either over the public network or through a network-based terminal concentrator.
Oracle Solaris Cluster does not require a dedicated administrative console, but using a console provides the following benefits:
Enables centralized cluster management by grouping console and management tools on the same machine
Provides potentially quicker problem resolution by Enterprise Services or your service provider
Back up your cluster on a regular basis. Even though Oracle Solaris Cluster software provides a highly available environment, with mirrored copies of data on the storage devices, Oracle Solaris Cluster software is not a replacement for regular backups. An Oracle Solaris Cluster configuration can survive multiple failures, but does not protect against user or program error, or catastrophic failure. Therefore, you must have a backup procedure in place to protect against data loss.
The following information should be included as part of your backup.
All file system partitions
All database data if you are running DBMS data services
Disk partition information for all cluster disks