You can use OES Cluster Services to provide high-availability access to OES services and some Linux services. See the tables in this section for links to information about how to configure cluster resources for services and data.
Table 11-1 Clustering OES Services with OES Cluster Services
OES Service |
For clustering information, see |
---|---|
Certificate Server |
The NetIQ Certificate Server is not cluster-enabled. The Certificate Server service issues Server Certificate objects that might need to reside on each node in a cluster, depending on the service that is clustered. See |
DFS VLDB (Distributed File Services volume location database) |
|
DHCP Server |
In the DNS/DHCP Services for Linux Administration Guide, see: |
DNS Server |
|
eDirectory |
eDirectory is not clustered because it has its own replica system. |
File, CIFS (Windows File Services) |
|
iPrint |
|
Table 11-2 Clustering Storage with OES Cluster Services
Storage |
For clustering information, see |
---|---|
Storage, Dynamic Storage Technology (DST) shadow volume pairs built with NSS volumes |
|
Storage, LVM volume groups and logical volumes |
Section 13.0, Configuring and Managing Cluster Resources for Shared LVM Volume Groups. |
Storage, NCP volumes |
|
Storage, NSS pools and volumes |
Section 12.0, Configuring and Managing Cluster Resources for Shared NSS Pools and Volumes. |
Cloud Integrated Storage (CIS) |
Table 11-3 Clustering Linux Services with OES Cluster Services
Linux Service |
For clustering information, see |
---|---|
Apache Web Server |
|
File, FTP |
|
MySQL |
A MySQL template is available that uses a shared LVM volume group and logical volume that you have already created. |
Xen virtual machines |
Section 14.2, Virtual Machines as Cluster Resources. You can use XEN and XENLive resource templates to configure virtual machines as cluster resources that can be failed over between host (Dom0) environments. |