Serviceguard Extension for RAC supports clusters of up to 16 nodes. The actual
cluster size is limited by the type of storage and the type of volume manager
used.
Up
to Four Nodes with SCSI Storage |
 |
You can configure up to four nodes using a shared F/W SCSI
bus; for more than 4 nodes, FibreChannel must be used. An example
of a four-node RAC cluster appears in the following figure.
In this type of configuration, each node runs a separate instance
of RAC and may run one or more high availability packages as well.
The figure shows a dual Ethernet configuration with all four
nodes connected to a disk array (the details of the connections
depend on the type of disk array). In addition, each node has a
mirrored root disk (R and R'). Nodes may have multiple connections
to the same array using alternate links (PV links) to take advantage
of the array's use of RAID levels for data protection. Alternate
links are further described in the section “Creating
RAC Volume Groups on Disk Arrays ”.
Point
to Point Connections to Storage Devices |
 |
Some storage devices allow point-to-point connection to a
large number of host nodes without using a shared SCSI bus. An example
is shown in Figure 1-6 “Eight-Node
Cluster with XP or EMC Disk Array ”, a cluster
consisting of eight nodes with a FibreChannel interconnect. (Client
connection is provided through Ethernet.) The nodes access shared
data on an HP SureStore XP series or EMC disk array configured with
16 I/O ports. Each node is connected to the array using two separate
F/W SCSI channels configured with PV Links. Each channel is a dedicated
bus; there is no daisy-chaining.
FibreChannel switched configurations also are supported using
either an arbitrated loop or fabric login topology. For additional
information about supported cluster configurations, refer to the HP
9000 Servers Configuration Guide, available through
your HP representative.