Thanks to Wesley garland, Tim Chapman, and Brian Miller. ORIGINAL QUESTION: I have a question that I need an answer to if anyone knows the answer. Basically, my E420R contract is up for renewal with SUN. My boss wants me to consider some options including having a E280R with a disk array attached as a standby. Here is my problem. My disks (8-18gb SCSI, 4-36gbSCSI) are striped and mirrored using disksuite. If for some reason the 420R went down is it possible to move the disks into a E280R with an Array or will the mirror be confused because the controller addresses are now different? Will disksuite even care? Is there a way to successfully bring these disks up on the E280R, if say, the E420R motherboard crashes? ANSWERS ... #1) I'm pretty certain, if you transplant the disks to/from the same location, you should be fine. I think the only stuff that might cause issues / require verification would be settings stored in the boot PROM.(ie, which boot disk to use, etc). However, such things can be verified / tested .. and then set appropriately. This is of course assuming the hardware is more-or-less the same (so you want to have OBP flashed to same revision on the production and spare system ; same type of add-on-hardware present in both, if any is required -- or of course be sure to install the stuff before powering up, otherwise the device trees might get clobbered/ rebuilt and potentially inherit "change" in the process. ie, I've seen a case where I -moved a1000 from sunblade 100 (A) to blade100(b) -booted up the blade (A) once without the array attached, reconfigure reboot so I lost my device paths -re-attached the array, it now had a different identity after the next reconfigure-reboot. So.. ideally you get the hardware "the same" before booting. If you have to, however, the tweaks required should be fairly minimal. #2) I have successfully moved a mirrored drive from one v240 to another, been able to rebuild the drive, and get the system to work without a problem. But I was only using disk mirroring, no striping. I was able to do this without first breaking the software mirror (i.e., I just shut one system down, moved one drive to the other system, and brought both systems back up, one at a time). I brought the second system up without attaching a network cable. After rebuilding the mirrors, I did a "sys-unconfig" on the second system, connected the network cable, and brought the system up, changing its IP and server name. I was also fortunate to be able to test this in a non-production environment. I don't think I would even attempt it if the RAID controllers weren't identical. The only way I would be willing to do this is if I could test the procedure in a non-emergency situation, which means you should have a spare set of disks on which to test. But if I had that extra disk space case, i would just run the E280R, and use rsync to keep the files on the backup system in sync with the production system. After all, what happens if a couple of disks die on your production system? Having that extra processor and motherboard won't do you any good at that point. #3)Here's how you do a really good job with a hot standby with SDS/SVM. This is similar to the procedure for VxVM, but Veritas is a little more tolerant of hardware/software mismatches: 1. Use External disks. I like Sun A5x00 arrays; they are cheap [on eBay] and robust. 2. Disks get connected to BOTH hosts (using either FC_AL or multi-initiator SCSI) 3.You MUST have the exact same OS version and FC_AL controllers. Preferably using the same slots. 4. Disks MUST have same cxtxdx numbers on both hosts. Modify /etc/path_to_inst to achieve this if you're very brave; can also modify pci slot scan order in EEPROM. 5. Set up both disks in a shared metaset 6. If you are using the latest Solaris 9, you can have "autotake" metasets. Otherwise, your mount-at-boot scripts will need to a "metaset -s SetName -t" 7. If one box fails, do a "metaset -s SetName -t" on the other, and mount the storage. No hardware switching necessary! In GENERAL -- SVM/SDS sets are a bitch to move from one machine to another, especially without the initial configuration of both-at-once as described above. If you are really stuck, you can carefully recreate the disk set on the other box, but you risk losing all your data. -- Gary D Lopez Unix Systems Administrator Catapult Communications 160 S Whisman Rd Mountain View, CA 94041 Ph (650) 314-1029 Fax (650) 960-1029 _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Mon Jun 27 13:30:16 2005
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