I think I might abandon the cluster idea...

Thank you Missy, Robert, and Andy.

-botp

-----Original Message-----
From: missy koslosky [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, September 06, 2001 12:26 PM
To: Exchange Discussions
Subject: Re: [Exchange2000] Exchange Fault Tolerance


I'd say it's darn close to impossible...

M
----- Original Message -----
From: "Peņa, Botp" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Exchange Discussions" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, September 06, 2001 12:07 AM
Subject: RE: [Exchange2000] Exchange Fault Tolerance


Thanks, sir Andy.

I have seen firewalls clusters and web farms in action. And was quite very
impressed. None yet for Exchange though. In your case then, can we fairly
say that Exchange clusters are a flop (or "forget it" as some would say)?
You did not answer as to whether we should wait or "forget it -it is
impossible for exchange to attain 5 9s in a cluster, ever" (again, I am just
asking your opinion since you are well respected in this list).

Thanks,
-botp



-----Original Message-----
From: Webb, Andy [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, September 06, 2001 11:49 AM
To: '"Peņa, Botp"'
Subject: RE: [Exchange2000] Exchange Fault Tolerance


Definitely 1.  2 is a matter of your expertise and the ultimate roi of the
clustered solution in your environment.

I think clusters have their place, but it's more with applications which
behave more like the clusters do.  People seem to be unsatisfied with their
clusters in my experience once they've seen them in action.

=======================================================
Andy Webb            [EMAIL PROTECTED]      www.swinc.com
Simpler-Webb, Inc.   Austin, TX            512-322-0071
-- Way to go USPS Cycling Team and Lance Armstrong!! --
=======================================================

-----Original Message-----
From: "Peņa, Botp" [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, September 05, 2001 10:39 PM
To: 'Webb, Andy'
Subject: RE: [Exchange2000] Exchange Fault Tolerance


Thanks, Sir Andy. Very helpful and well said.

To summarize your point (in so far as I can comprehend):
1. clusters add complexity
2. clusters are risky

Do your statements apply to clusters in general, or is it only for Exchange
(or as to the current Exchange clustering stage)? I am asking since we might
abandon the plan totally or just wait for another year or years....

Thank you again,
-botp


-----Original Message-----
From: Webb, Andy [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, September 06, 2001 3:27 AM
To: '"Peņa, Botp" '
Cc: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: [Exchange2000] Exchange Fault Tolerance


Knowing no more about your business than what is in that note, I'd say
you're needlessly adding complexity to your environment which will not
result in the net availability increase you forecast at the low cost you
expect.

There is downtime associated with a clean node swap in a clustered
environment.  Is 2x that downtime significantly less than that required for
a service pack install?  Not usually.  Does it let you apply one or more
hotfixes with less impact to the users?  Not usually.

Running a clustered environment also means you need to be running a
clustered test environment so that you can simulate all these rolling
upgrades.  Having that AV upgrade hose an entire node of your cluster is not
significantly better than having it hose a standalone server, and you may
not know that things are bad until you've moved the active node back to the
already upgraded server.

As noted above, I don't know enough about your environment to make this a
firm recommendation.  To spend the time to get that familiarity, I'd likely
want a consulting contract.  Clustering is not for the faint of heart, and
it is not to be used without serious thought to the whys and whatfors.  Do
you really have a business need for mail to every user to be available five
nines or more?  You may, but you would be one of a very few.  I'd rather
take that second server and use it for disaster recovery drills and testing
of all the software upgrades you mentioned.  Then my actual downtime would
be minimized by having a known, tested, and understood upgrade process that
could proceed quickly.  Most service packs and hotfixes are 10-15 minute
activities if planned and practiced.

$0.02
Andy

Andy

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