Hmmm...So everyone likes to cut down clustering. I don't fully agree.

I have worked with it tons, both on the 5.5 and 2000 platforms. It is
more complex, more things can go wrong, many times 'the clustering part
of it' lags behind the other parts of the program, third party products
aren't always cluster aware and therefore can cause problems, human
error is much more common because people aren't sufficiently trained on
it, etc.

But, if you educate yourself on the technology, work with 3rd parties
that do consider clustering, etc. it is possible to, first and foremost,
have less planned downtime. That really is one of clustering's major
benefits. You can deploy service packs, etc. on the passive nodes while
the active one is still running, and effectively cut a 1/2 hour downtime
situation to 2 minutes (if everything goes well ;-) ).

Also, if the hardware, OS, or a service, goes South on a system,
failovers happen quite gracefully (given you're up to date on service
packs) and you will have the service back up faster than if you weren't
clustered. I've had systems with 5,000 users on them failover with
minimal reports to the customers help desk...it does work.

If you're in an environment that has people who know what they're doing,
and the decision makers above are willing to spend the money for adding
possibly another 9, clustering can help. If you are new to the
technology, let others do it - your stand alone server will run just
fine and will be easier for you to maintain.

If you do go with clustering: Don't do active/active clusters, and don't
forget that the single point of failure is your SAN/external disks -
clustering won't save you from database corruption or external disk
failure.

In your situation it certainly sounds like not clustering is the right
thing to do. I just wanted to defend the technology a bit, because I
feel given the right circumstances, it performs as advertised.

'Hope it helps,

Per Farny
Senior Network Architect
Goliath Networks Inc
[EMAIL PROTECTED]





-----Original Message-----
From: Callan, Chris [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Posted At: Thursday, January 17, 2002 11:34 AM
Posted To: Exchange
Conversation: Clustering Exchange
Subject: Clustering Exchange

My immediate supervisor mentioned that when we finally get new Exchange
Servers that we should have them clustered.  Now I have never clustered
servers before and wouldn't know how to start, but I just wanted to get
everyone's opinions on the subject to begin with.  How hard is it to do,
and
how is it to maintain.  What are the pro's and con's.  Any help would be
appreciated.

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