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Oracle Solaris Cluster Data Service for Oracle Web Tier Guide     Oracle Solaris Cluster 4.0
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Document Information

Preface

1.  Installing and Configuring HA for Oracle Web Tier

Planning the Installation and Configuration

Overview of the Installation and Configuration Process for HA for Oracle Web Tier

Installing and Configuring Oracle Web Tier Software

How to Install and Configure the Oracle Web Tier Software and Resources

Installing the HA for Oracle Web Tier Package

How to Install the HA for Oracle Web Tier Package

Registering and Configuring HA for Oracle Web Tier Components

How to Register and Configure HA for Oracle Web Tier

How to Verify Data Service Installation and Configuration

Tuning the HA for Oracle Web Tier Fault Monitors

Operations by the HA for Oracle Web Tier Fault Monitors

Operations by the Oracle Process Management and Notification Server Fault Monitor

Operations by the Oracle HTTP Server Fault Monitor

Actions in Response to Faults

Upgrading the HA for Oracle Web Tier Resource Types

Information for Registering the New Resource Type Version

Information for Migrating Existing Instances of the Resource Type

A.  HA for Oracle Web Tier Extension Properties

Index

Tuning the HA for Oracle Web Tier Fault Monitors

The HA for Oracle Web Tier fault monitors are contained in the resources whose resource types are ORCL.ohs and ORCL.opmn.

System properties and extension properties of the resource control the behavior of the fault monitor. The default values of these properties determine the default behavior of the fault monitor. The default behavior should be suitable for most Oracle Solaris Cluster installations. Therefore, you should tune the HA for Oracle Web Tier fault monitors only if you need to modify this default behavior.

Tuning the HA for Oracle Web Tier fault monitors involves the following tasks:

Information about the HA for Oracle Web Tier fault monitor that you need to perform these tasks is provided in the subsections that follow.

Tune the HA for Oracle Web Tier fault monitor when you register and configure HA for Oracle Web Tier or after initial configuration. For more information, see Registering and Configuring HA for Oracle Web Tier Components.

Updates to the probe_timeout, start_timeout, stop_timeout, and thorough_probe_interval properties result in comparable updates in the opmn.xml file.

For detailed information, see Tuning Fault Monitors for Oracle Solaris Cluster Data Services in Oracle Solaris Cluster Data Services Planning and Administration Guide.

Operations by the HA for Oracle Web Tier Fault Monitors

The two resource types, ORCL.ohs and ORCL.opmn, contain separate fault probes that query the health of the Oracle HTTP Server and Oracle Process Management and Notification Server components, respectively.

Operations by the Oracle Process Management and Notification Server Fault Monitor

The ORCL.opmn fault probe for the Oracle Process Management and Notification Server component performs the following steps:

Operations by the Oracle HTTP Server Fault Monitor

Because the Oracle HTTP Server component is under the control of Oracle Process Management and Notification Server component, the ORCL.opmn fault probe obtains the status of the Oracle HTTP Server component from the Oracle Process Management and Notification Server component. This is done in two stages:

If the fault probe is successful, the resource status is set to OK and the probe returns with an exit code of 0. If the fault probe fails, the resource status is set to FAULTED and the probe returns with an exit code of 100, causing the resource to attempt to restart.


Note - If the Oracle HTTP Server component is used as a load-balancer through the mod_wl_ohs plugin, then the Oracle Process Management and Notification Server component can declare that the Oracle HTTP Server component is DOWN if none of the load-balancing targets are available. In these circumstances, the fault probe for the Oracle HTTP Server component attempts to restart the service. You can avoid such behavior by creating a dependency between the load-balancer resource and the target resources.


Actions in Response to Faults

Based on the history of failures, a failure can cause either a local restart or a failover of the data service. For detailed information, see Tuning Fault Monitors for Oracle Solaris Cluster Data Services in Oracle Solaris Cluster Data Services Planning and Administration Guide.