[Pacemaker] Andrew and Lars please confirm this.
Andrew Beekhof
beekhof at gmail.com
Wed Mar 4 09:47:29 UTC 2009
On Wed, Mar 4, 2009 at 10:30, Romi Verma <romi3rdfeb at gmail.com> wrote:
>> How does a node in Australia connect to a stonith device in Germany if
>> the network is down?
>> Or more generally, how can the nodes in Australia ensure that the
>> nodes in Germany are not running the same services?
>>
>> How do you even know that the nodes in Australia should take over?
>
> ok so it seems i am missing something here. lets take an example of two
> nodes cluster. my understanding is , pacemaker cluster will be using one
> network (bind nw interface) for heartbeat and if it fails then it , both
> node will be in split brain situation and both will try to fence each
> other. now for fencing if we are using ilo then , it will be using entirely
> different network
Unless you work for the military, this is clearly not the case if you
have multiple sites at geographically different locations.
Multiple NICS != multiple _independent_ networks.
> and this way it shoud work . if ilo network becomes down
> , then off course the stonith will not work. and this will be second
> failure. here our goal is to prevent single point of failure.
>
> so the above thing should be independent of distance, in spite of we are
> having local cluster , or extended cluster (whose nodes are spanning across
> multiple sites) , the stonith behavior should be same. am i wrong??
Yes, you are wrong. Because once you start going over the internet
the "stonith network" and "heartbeat network" share a common point of
failure.
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