No, it does not require administrator interaction--in the service you would add 
a resource for the file system. This would move the file system between nodes.
 
=====
 
________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Randy Brown
Sent: Mon 8/20/2007 16:39
To: linux clustering
Subject: Re: [Linux-cluster] Please correct me if I'm wrong, but...


Right.  That's the way I understood it to be.  Using ext3 would require us to 
have to umount and remount the file systems to the each host after the failure, 
though, correct?  In other words, would require administrator interaction.  GFS 
would do this automatically without impacting the users.

Randy

Lon Hohberger wrote: 

        On Mon, Aug 20, 2007 at 03:26:08PM -0400, Randy Brown wrote:
          

                in order to configure a two-node high availability NFS failover 
cluster, 
                I need to use GFS, correct?
                    

        You can use EXT3; you just can only mount the file system on one
        node at a time. 
        
        With GFS, you can export the same file system from *both* cluster nodes.
        
        -- Lon
        
          

<<winmail.dat>>

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