IBM SG24-5131-00 manual Network Connection and Testing, Cabling Considerations

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3.2 Network Connection and Testing

The following sections describe important aspects of network connection and testing.

3.2.1 TCP/IP Networks

Since there are several types of TCP/IP Networks available within HACMP, there are several different characteristics and some restrictions on them. Characteristics like maximum distance between nodes have to be considered. You don’t want to put two cluster nodes running a mission-critical application in the same room for example.

3.2.1.1 Cabling Considerations

Characteristics of the different types of cable, their maximum length, and the like are beyond the scope of this book. However, for actual planning of your clusters, you have to check whether your network cabling allows you to put two cluster nodes away from each other, or even in different buildings.

There’s one additional point with cabling, that should be taken care of. Cabling of networks often involves hubs or switches. If not carefully planned, this sometimes introduces another single point of failure into your cluster. To eliminate this you should have at least two hubs.

As shown in Figure 9, failure of a hub would not result in one machine being disconnected from the network. In that case, a hub failure would cause either both service adapters to fail, which would cause a swap_adapter event, and the standby adapters would take over the network, or both standby adapters would fail, which would cause fail_standby events. Configuring a notify method for these events can alert the network administrator to check and fix the broken hub.

60 IBM Certification Study Guide AIX HACMP

Page 78
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IBM SG24-5131-00 manual Network Connection and Testing, Cabling Considerations