Availability Concepts Flashcards
1
Q
Fault tolerance
A
- Maintain uptime in the case of a failure
- If a problem occurs, what happens?
- Can degrade performance
- Fault tolerance adds complexity
- The cost of managing the environment increases
- Single device fault tolerance
- RAID, redundant power supplies, redundant NICs
- Multiple device fault tolerance
- Server farms with load balancing
- Multiple network paths
2
Q
Load balancing
A
- Some servers are active, others are on standby
* If an active server fails, the passive server takes its place
3
Q
Redundancy and fault tolerance
A
- Redundant hardware components
- Multiple devices, load balancing power supplies
- RAID
- Redundant Array of Independent Disks
- Uninterruptible power supplies (UPS)
- Prepare for the disconnections
- Clustering
- A logical collective of servers
- Load balancing
- Shared service load across components
4
Q
High availability
A
- Redundancy doesn’t always mean always available
- May need to be enabled manually
- HA (high availability)
- Always on, always available
• May include many different components working
together
• Watch for single points of failure
• Higher availability almost always means higher costs
• There’s always another contingency you could add
• Upgraded power, high-quality server components,
etc.
5
Q
NIC teaming
A
- Load Balancing / Fail Over (LBFO)
- Aggregate bandwidth, redundant paths
- Becomes more important in the virtual world
- Multiple network adapters
- Looks like a single adapter
- Integrate with switches
- NICs talk to each other
- Usually multicast instead of broadcast
- Fails over when a NIC doesn’t respond