Managing HP Serviceguard for Linux Ninth Edition, April 2009

4 Planning and Documenting an HA Cluster
Building a Serviceguard cluster begins with a planning phase in which you gather and
record information about all the hardware and software components of the
configuration.
This chapter assists you in the following planning areas:
General Planning
Hardware Planning (page 94)
Power Supply Planning (page 97)
Cluster Lock Planning (page 98)
Volume Manager Planning (page 99)
Cluster Configuration Planning (page 100)
Package Configuration Planning (page 118)
Appendix C (page 309) contains a set of blank worksheets which you may find useful
as an offline record of important details of the configuration.
NOTE: Planning and installation overlap considerably, so you may not be able to
complete the worksheets before you proceed to the actual configuration. In that case,
fill in the missing elements to document the system as you proceed with the
configuration.
Subsequent chapters describe configuration and maintenance tasks in detail.
General Planning
A clear understanding of your high availability objectives will quickly help you to
define your hardware requirements and design your system. Use the following questions
as a guide for general planning:
1. What applications must continue to be available in the event of a failure?
2. What system resources (processing power, networking, SPU, memory, disk space)
are needed to support these applications?
3. How will these resources be distributed among the nodes in the cluster during
normal operation?
4. How will these resources be distributed among the nodes of the cluster in all
possible combinations of failures, especially node failures?
5. How will resources be distributed during routine maintenance of the cluster?
6. What are the networking requirements? Are all networks and subnets available?
7. Have you eliminated all single points of failure? For example:
network points of failure.
disk points of failure.
General Planning 93