Oracle® Application Server Installation Guide 10g (10.1.4.0.1) for Solaris Operating System (x86) and Solaris Operating System (x86-64) B32091-01 |
|
Previous |
Next |
This chapter describes how to install Oracle Application Server in OracleAS Disaster Recovery configurations. OracleAS Disaster Recovery is one of the high availability environments supported by Oracle Application Server.
This chapter contains the following sections:
Section 10.2, "Setting up the OracleAS Disaster Recovery Environment"
Section 10.3, "Installing Oracle Application Server in an OracleAS Disaster Recovery Environment"
Section 10.5, "Patching OracleAS Guard Release 10.1.2.0.0 with Release 10.1.2.0.2"
Use the OracleAS Disaster Recovery environment when you want to have two physically separate sites in your environment. One site is the production site, and the other site is the standby site. The production site is active, while the standby site is passive; the standby site becomes active when the production site goes down.
OracleAS Disaster Recovery supports a number of basic topologies for the configuration of the Infrastructure and middle tier on production and standby sites. OracleAS Disaster Recovery supports these basic topologies:
Symmetrical topologies -- strict mirror of the production site with collocated Oracle Identity Management and OracleAS Metadata Repository Infrastructure
Asymmetrical topologies -- simple asymmetric standby topology with collocated Oracle Identity Management and OracleAS Metadata Repository Infrastructure
Separate OracleAS Metadata Repository for OracleAS Portal with collocated Oracle Identity Management and OracleAS Metadata Repository Infrastructure (the Departmental Topology)
Distributed Application OracleAS metadata Repositories with Non collocated Oracle Identity Management and OracleAS Metadata Repository Infrastructure
In a symmetric topology, each node in the standby site corresponds to a node in the production site. This includes the nodes running both OracleAS Infrastructure and middle tiers. In an asymmetric topology, the number of instances required on the standby site are fewer than the number on the production site and the number of instances required on the standby site must be the minimum set of instances required to run your site in the event of a switchover or failover operation.
As a small variation to this environment, you can set up the OracleAS Infrastructure on the production site in an OracleAS Cold Failover Cluster environment. See Section 10.2.4, "If You Want to Use OracleAS Cold Failover Cluster on the Production Site" for details.
For these supported topologies, OracleAS Guard will be installed in every Oracle home on every system that is part of your production and standby topology configured for the OracleAS Disaster Recovery solution.
OracleAS Guard can be installed as a standalone install kit located on OracleAS Companion CD #2. See Section 10.4, "Installing the OracleAS 10g (10.1.2.0.2) Standalone Install of OracleAS Guard into Oracle Homes" for more information about when this standalone kit should be installed.
Figure 10-1 shows an example symmetric OracleAS Disaster Recovery environment. Each site has two nodes running middle tiers and a node running OracleAS Infrastructure.
For OracleAS Disaster Recovery to work, data between the production and standby sites must be synchronized so that failover can happen very quickly. Configuration changes done at the production site must be synchronized with the standby site.
You need to synchronize two types of data. The synchronization method depends on the type of data:
Use Oracle Data Guard to synchronize data in the OracleAS Metadata Repository databases on the production and standby sites. You can configure Oracle Data Guard to perform the synchronization.
Use the backup and recovery scripts to synchronize data outside of the database (such as data stored in configuration files).
See the Oracle Application Server High Availability Guide for details on how to use Oracle Data Guard and the backup and recovery scripts.
Figure 10-1 OracleAS Disaster Recovery Environment
Before you can install Oracle Application Server in an OracleAS Disaster Recovery environment, you have to perform these steps:
Section 10.2.1, "Ensure Nodes Are Identical at the Operating System Level"
Section 10.2.3, "Set Up Identical Hostnames on Both Production and Standby Sites"
Section 10.2.4, "If You Want to Use OracleAS Cold Failover Cluster on the Production Site"
Ensure that the nodes are identical with respect to the following items:
The nodes are running the same version of the operating system.
The nodes have the same operating system patches and packages.
You can install Oracle Application Server in the same directory path on all nodes.
The same component must use the same port number on the production and standby sites. For example, if Oracle HTTP Server is using port 80 on the production site, it must also use port 80 on the standby site. To ensure this is the case, create a staticports.ini
file for use during installation. This file enables you to specify port numbers for each component. See Section 2.7.3, "Using Custom Port Numbers (the "Static Ports" Feature)" for details.
The names of the corresponding nodes on the production and standby sites must be identical, so that when you synchronize data between the sites, you do not have to edit the data to fix the hostnames.
For the Infrastructure Nodes
For the node running the infrastructure, set up a virtual name. To do this, specify an alias for the node in the /etc/hosts
file.
For example, on the infrastructure node on the production site, the following line in the hosts
file sets the alias to asinfra
:
138.1.2.111 prodinfra asinfra
On the standby site, the following line sets the node's alias to asinfra
.
213.2.2.110 standbyinfra asinfra
When you install OracleAS Infrastructure on the production and standby sites, you specify this alias (asinfra
) in the Specify Virtual Hostname screen. The configuration data will then contain this alias for the infrastructure nodes.
For the Middle-Tier Nodes
For the nodes running the middle tiers, you cannot set up aliases like you did for the infrastructure nodes because the installer does not display the Specify Virtual Hostname screen for middle-tier installations. When installing middle tiers, the installer determines the hostname automatically by calling the gethostname() function. You want to be sure that for each middle-tier node on the production site, the corresponding node on the standby site returns the same hostname.
To do this, set up a local, or internal, hostname, which could be different from the public, or external, hostname. You can change the names of the nodes on the standby site to match the names of the corresponding nodes on the production site, or you can change the names of the nodes on both production and standby sites to be the same. This depends on other applications that you might be running on the nodes, and whether changing the node name will affect those applications.
Verifying that the Nodes Resolve the Hostnames Correctly
After making the changes and restarting the nodes, check that the nodes resolve the hostnames properly by running the following commands:
On the production site of a OracleAS Disaster Recovery system, you can set up the OracleAS Infrastructure to run in a OracleAS Cold Failover Cluster configuration. In this case, you have two nodes in a hardware cluster, and you install the OracleAS Infrastructure on a shared disk. See Chapter 8, "Installing in High Availability Environments: OracleAS Cold Failover Cluster" for details.
Figure 10-2 Infrastructure in an OracleAS Cold Failover Cluster Configuration
To set up OracleAS Cold Failover Cluster in this environment, use the virtual IP address (instead of the physical IP address) for asinfra.asha on the production site. The following example assumes 138.1.2.120 is the virtual IP address.
asmid1.asha IN A 138.1.2.333
asmid2.asha IN A 138.1.2.444
asinfra.asha IN A 138.1.2.120 this is a virtual IP address
remote_infra.asha IN A 213.2.2.110
On the standby site, you still use the physical IP address for asinfra.asha, but the remote_infra.asha uses the virtual IP address.
asmid1.asha IN A 213.2.2.330 asmid2.asha IN A 213.2.2.331 asinfra.asha IN A 213.2.2.110 physical IP address remote_infra.asha IN A 138.1.2.120 virtual IP address
Install Oracle Application Server as follows:
Note: For all of the installations, be sure to use staticports.ini to specify port numbers for the components. See Section 10.2.2, "Set Up staticports.ini File". |
Install OracleAS Infrastructure on the production site.
Install OracleAS Infrastructure on the standby site.
Start the OracleAS Infrastructure in each site before installing the middle tiers for that site.
Install middle tiers on the production site.
Install middle tiers on the standby site.
The installation steps are similar to that for OracleAS Cold Failover Cluster. See Section 8.3, "Installing an OracleAS Cold Failover Cluster (Infrastructure) Configuration" for the screen sequence. Note the following points:
You can install any type of middle tier that is compatible with Oracle Application Server 10g (10.1.4.0.1). See the Oracle Application Server Upgrade and Compatibility Guide for more information.
To install a middle tier, see the Oracle Application Server Installation Guide for the release.
Note the following points:
When the installer prompts you to register with Oracle Internet Directory, and asks you for the Oracle Internet Directory hostname, enter the alias of the node running OracleAS Infrastructure (for example, asinfra.oracle.com).
OracleAS 10g (10.1.2.0.2) standalone install of OracleAS Guard is located on Companion CD Disk 2. This standalone install of OracleAS Guard can be installed in the following environments:
In its own home in the case when you are cloning an instance or topology to a new standby system (see the section on standby site cloning in Oracle Application Server High Availability Guide for more information).
Oracle database server home for an OracleAS Metadata Repository configuration created using OracleAS Metadata Repository Creation Assistant.
OracleAS Disaster Recovery full site upgrade from OracleAS 10g (9.0.4) to OracleAS 10g (10.1.2.0.2) (see the chapter on OracleAS Disaster Recovery site upgrade procedure in Oracle Application Server High Availability Guide for more information).
OracleAS Guard patch upgrade from OracleAS 10g (10.1.2.0.0) to OracleAS 10g (10.1.2.0.2) (see Section 10.5, "Patching OracleAS Guard Release 10.1.2.0.0 with Release 10.1.2.0.2" for more information).
If this is an upgrade installation of OracleAS Guard, make a copy of your dsa.conf
configuration file to save your current settings for your OracleAS Guard environment. After running the OracleAS 10g (10.1.2.0.2) standalone install kit of OracleAS Guard, you can restore your saved dsa.conf
configuration file with your settings to continue using the same settings for the upgraded OracleAS Guard environment.
To run the OracleAS 10g (10.1.2.0.2) standalone install kit of OracleAS Guard, run the kit in the following directory path:
On UNIX systems:
/Disk2/asg/install/runInstaller
Choose the type of install that you want. Choose Typical for most installations. Choose Custom or Reinstall for upgrading from an older release of OracleAS Guard to the current release.
Enter the ias_admin
account password to continue the installation.
If you already have an OracleAS Disaster Recovery environment set up using OracleAS Guard Release 10.1.2.0.0, you can patch OracleAS Guard in your environment to take advantage of new features and support for the topologies described in Section 10.1, "OracleAS Disaster Recovery: Introduction". To patch your OracleAS Disaster Recovery environment, follow these basic steps:
Install the OracleAS 10g (10.1.2.0.2) standalone install of OracleAS Guard into each Oracle home on the production and standby sites.
If multiple Oracle homes exist on the same system, ensure that different ports are configured for each of the OracleAS Guard servers in this configuration file.
Because this is an upgrade installation of OracleAS Guard, make a copy of your dsa.conf
configuration file to save your current settings for your OracleAS Guard environment. After running the OracleAS 10g (10.1.2.0.2) standalone install kit of OracleAS Guard, you can restore your saved dsa.conf
configuration file with your settings to continue using the same settings for the upgraded OracleAS Guard environment.
On UNIX systems:
<ORACLE_HOME>/dsa/dsa.conf
Start the OracleAS Guard server in all OracleAS 10.1.2.0.0 Oracle homes on both production and standby sites using the following opmnctl command:
On UNIX systems:
<ORACLE_HOME>/opmn/bin/opmnctl startall <ORACLE_HOME>/opmn/bin/opmnctl startproc ias-component=DSA
For information on how to manage your OracleAS Disaster Recovery environment, such as setting up Oracle Data Guard and configuring the OracleAS Metadata Repository database, see the Oracle Application Server High Availability Guide.