On 23 Apr 2012, at 02:23, Net Warrior wrote:
auto_failback on
No. As far as I'm aware this is to control what happens when your initial node
recovers. If you have 2 nodes, a and b, and a is active, but then fails, b will
take over, but when a is fixed and recovers, heartbeat will 'fail back'
Hi, Net Warrior!
What version of HA/Pacemaker do you use?
Did you already RTFM - e.g.
http://www.clusterlabs.org/doc/en-US/Pacemaker/1.1/html/Pacemaker_Explained
- or:
http://www.clusterlabs.org/doc/en-US/Pacemaker/1.1/html/Clusters_from_Scratch
HTH
Nikita Michalko
Am Montag, 23.
Hi Nikita
This is the version
heartbeat-3.0.0-0.7
My aim is to, if node1 is powered off or losts it's ethernet
connection,. node2 wont make the failover automatically, I want to
make it manually, but could not find how to accomplish that.
Thanks for your time and support
Best regards
Why even use heartbeat then - Just manually ifconfig the interface.
On 4/23/12 7:39 AM, Net Warrior wrote:
Hi Nikita
This is the version
heartbeat-3.0.0-0.7
My aim is to, if node1 is powered off or losts it's ethernet
connection,. node2 wont make the failover automatically, I want to
True, but even on the most expensive software likve Veritas Cluster or
Red Hat Cluster I can configure how I want to failover the resources (
auto or manual ), that's why my curiosity to acomplish the same in
here.
Thanks for your time
Best Regards
2012/4/23, David Coulson
On 04/23/2012 01:47 PM, Net Warrior wrote:
True, but even on the most expensive software likve Veritas Cluster or
Red Hat Cluster I can configure how I want to failover the resources (
auto or manual ), that's why my curiosity to acomplish the same in
here.
with the help of the meat-ware
Hi There
I configured heartbeat to failover an IP address , if I for example
shutdown one node, the other takes it's ip address, so far so good, now
my doubt is if there is a way to configure it not to make the failover
automatically and have someone run the failover manually, can you provide