
Demonstration Utilities
•Cluster
A Standby Host is a host that does not control a bus domain. A Standby Host is referred to as being in Standby mode. An Active Host is a host that owns at least one bus segment. Functionality such as software initiated handovers, hardware initiated failovers, switchovers, event reporting and alarms are exercised.
10.1.2.1Software Initiated Handovers
Software initiated handovers allow an active system master board to switch over to the backup host through application software intervention. This allows the user to perform preventative maintenance or software upgrades to one host without shutting down the entire system. During a handover, the device drivers are allowed to quiesce activity to the devices and synchronize state information to allow an orderly transition of a bus segment.
10.1.2.2Hardware Initiated Failovers
Hardware initiated failovers occur when a catastrophic failure occurs on the active system master board. The active host can then failover to the backup host or the backup host can perform a takeover so that interruptions to system operation are minimized. Examples of catastrophic failures are a software watchdog timeout or a detected voltage spike that may render the CPU unstable. These events warrant a
10.1.2.3Multiple Mode Capabilities
10.1.2.3.1Active/Standby Mode
The Active/Standby mode is the standard Redundant Host configuration. This mode allows only one system master CPU board to have visibility to all backplane bus segments and all the connected PCI devices. This mode requires that the standby system master CPU board be electrically disconnected from the backplane at the
10.1.2.3.2Active/Active Mode
Active/Active mode configuration allows each board segment to control a single bus segment. Each system master CPU board controls the clock and arbitration for its controlled or owned bus segment. It is through the PCI spoofing mechanism that each system master has visibility to the bus segment and the devices that are owned by the redundant host. In this mode if one host fails then the redundant host can take ownership of the relinquished bus segment.
10.1.2.3.3Cluster Mode
Cluster mode is a variant on the Active/Active host mode. In Cluster mode if either host fails then the bus assigned to the failed host is unavailable for ownership transference. This is referred to as bus locking. While a system is dynamically capable of transitioning between Active/Standby and Active/Active modes, and even into a Cluster mode, it is only through a system power cycle that a system can transition out of Cluster mode. This is due to the fact that a locked bus segment may not have PCI spoofing information consistent across multiple host domains.
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