Your hardware or virtualization platform largely determines which fence
agents are available to you. For example, fence_ipmilan works with HP
ProLiant, Dell PowerEdge, and any other platform that offers power
management via IPMI over LAN.

sbd (optionally combined with fence_sbd) is a great option if you're on a
platform that offers a hardware watchdog device. Notably, VMware and the
major public cloud providers don't currently offer hardware watchdog
devices.

The fence-agents-all package installs most of te available fence agents as
dependencies. IIRC, a few agents (e.g., fence-agents-aws) aren't included
when you install fence-agents-all.

On Sat, Mar 27, 2021 at 7:53 AM Jason Long <hack3r...@yahoo.com> wrote:

> Hello,
> How To Configure High-Availability Cluster on CentOS 7 / RHEL 7 tutorial
> In "
> https://www.itzgeek.com/how-tos/linux/centos-how-tos/configure-high-avaliablity-cluster-on-centos-7-rhel-7.html";
> address, used below command:
>
> # yum install pcs fence-agents-all -y
>
> Is "fence-agents-all" package needed?
>
> Thank you.
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-- 
Regards,

Reid Wahl, RHCA
Senior Software Maintenance Engineer, Red Hat
CEE - Platform Support Delivery - ClusterHA
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