Managing HP Serviceguard A.11.20.10 for Linux, December 2012

NOTE: This also applies if HOSTNAME_ADDRESS_FAMILY is set to ANY. See Allowing
Root Access to an Unconfigured Node” (page 130) for more information.
If you use a Quorum Server, you must make sure that the Quorum Server hostname (and the
alternate Quorum Server address specified by QS_ADDR, if any) resolve to IPv6 addresses,
and you must use Quorum Server version A.04.00 or later. See the latest Quorum Server
release notes for more information; you can find them at http://www.hp.com/go/
linux-serviceguard-docs.
NOTE: The Quorum Server itself can be an IPv6–only system; in that case it can serve
IPv6–only and mixed-mode clusters, but not IPv4–only clusters.
If you use a Quorum Server, and the Quorum Server is on a different subnet from cluster, you
must use an IPv6-capable router.
Hostname aliases are not supported for IPv6 addresses, because of operating system limitations.
NOTE: This applies to all IPv6 addresses, whether HOSTNAME_ADDRESS_FAMILY is set to
IPV6 or ANY.
Cross-subnet configurations are not supported in IPv6-only mode.
Virtual machines are not supported.
You cannot have a virtual machine that is either a node or a package if
HOSTNAME_ADDRESS_FAMILY is set to ANY or IPV6.
4.7.3.2.2 Recommendations for IPv6-Only Mode
IMPORTANT: Check the latest Serviceguard for Linux release notes for the latest instructions and
recommendations.
If you decide to migrate the cluster to IPv6-only mode, you should plan to do so while the
cluster is down.
4.7.3.3 What Is Mixed Mode?
If you configure mixed mode (HOSTNAME_ADDRESS_FAMILY set to ANY, or cmquerycl -a
any) then the addresses used by the cluster, including the heartbeat, and Quorum Server addresses
if any, can be IPv4 or IPv6 addresses. Serviceguard will first try to resolve a node's hostname to
an IPv4 address, then, if that fails, will try IPv6.
4.7.3.3.1 Rules and Restrictions for Mixed Mode
IMPORTANT: See the latest version of the Serviceguard release notes for the most current
information on these and other restrictions.
Red Hat 5 and Red Hat 6 clusters are not supported.
NOTE: This also applies if HOSTNAME_ADDRESS_FAMILY is set to IPv6; Red Hat 5 supports
only IPv4-only clusters.
The hostname resolution file on each node (for example, /etc/hosts) must contain entries
for all the IPv4 and IPv6 addresses used throughout the cluster, including all STATIONARY_IP
and HEARTBEAT_IP addresses as well any private addresses. There must be at least one
4.7 Cluster Configuration Planning 85