Hello Cristian I don't understand what it's your problem, i have two redhat cluster with oracle with this config
node1+node2(oracle+ext3fs+lvm+san), the oracle datafiles && oracle home are on san, if i need do some work, i make it on the node where the service are active Thanks 2013/3/29 Digimer <li...@alteeve.ca> > On 03/29/2013 06:02 AM, Cristian Mammoli wrote: > >> On 25/03/2013 22:33, Cristian Mammoli wrote: >> >>> I'm not talking about rac and/or gfs, just a plain old active/passive >>> cluster. What's the right way to implement it? >>> As far as I understand the easiest way is to put the whole $ORACLE_HOME >>> on shared storage (SAN) and mount it on the active node. >>> But in this way I loose the chance to do "rolling updates": >>> Update Oracle software on node2, migrate instance to node2, update >>> software on node1 ecc >>> >>> If install Oracle software on each node and put database files on shared >>> storage (eg. /u02) there are some files which reside inside $ORACLE_HOME >>> anyway (spfile, listener, audit trail ecc). How do I keep them in sync? >>> Symlinks? >>> >>> Thanks >>> >> >> anyone? :( >> >> > Your question is probably better suited for an Oracle mailing list. I > don't see RAC discussed here much. > > -- > Digimer > Papers and Projects: https://alteeve.ca/w/ > What if the cure for cancer is trapped in the mind of a person without > access to education? > > -- > Linux-cluster mailing list > Linux-cluster@redhat.com > https://www.redhat.com/**mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster<https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster> > -- esta es mi vida e me la vivo hasta que dios quiera
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