Wednesday, December 28, 2011

High Availability with Failover Clusters

Before moving on to the next chapter on my virtualization lab series, I think this might be a good opportunity to review some of the clustering options available today. I will use Windows Server Failover Clustering with Hyper-V because in today's world the trend is to combine Virtualization with High Availability (HA).

There are many ways to implement these solutions and the basic design concepts presented here can be adjusted to other virtualization platforms. Some of them will actually not guarantee a fault-tolerant solution, but most of them can be used in specific scenarios (even if only for demonstration purposes).

Two virtual machines on one physical server


In this scenario an HA cluster is built between two (or more) virtual machines on a single physical machine. Here we have a single physical server running Hyper-V and two child partitions where you run Failover Clustering. This setup does not protect against hardware failures because when the physical server fails, both (virtual) cluster nodes will fail. Therefore, the physical machine itself is a single point of failure (SPOF).

Two virtual machines on one physical server
(Click to enlarge)

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