Simulate failure of this resource windows 2008
This browser is no longer supported. Download Microsoft Edge More info. Contents Exit focus mode. Please rate your experience Yes No. Any additional feedback? Module: FailoverClusters. Simulates a failure of a cluster resource. Add and remove nodes to and from a cluster. Add disks to a cluster. Add services to or remove them from a cluster. Configure quorum disk rules. View events related to all cluster components. The File menu is very sparse in this console and only has Options and Exit commands.
Options gives you a way to clean up after the MMC. The Action menu holds most of the cluster management tasks in the Failover Cluster Management tool. The commands in the File menu vary according to the object you have selected in the panes below. In all cases, you can choose Open Connection from the File menu to open a connection to an existing cluster or to create a new cluster.
Your best bet is to right-click specific objects in the interface and work with the context menu for the selected object; this helps you to avoid possible mistakes.
Use the View menu to customize the look of the management console. Use this menu to view the Failover Cluster Management tool Help content. The toolbar The Failover Cluster Management tool includes a toolbar with the following buttons: Back. Navigate back through the console. Navigate forward through the console. Up One Level not always shown. Move to the next higher level in the tree.
This is only available when a domain is selected. Toggle the display of the left-hand navigation pane. Open the properties for the selected item. Refresh not always shown. Refresh the current view.
Open the Help content. The console tree Although the Failover Cluster Management tool isn't an MMC snap-in, it looks and functions like one, so I'll use the same terminology for it as for a typical snap-in and refer to the left pane as the console tree. Services And Applications Choose this navigation option to get a list of the services and applications that have been configured for high availability in the cluster. Nodes Each node in the cluster is represented in the console tree underneath the Nodes option Figure B.
When you select a node, all of the details for that node appear in the work pane in the middle of the screen. If you want to add a disk to the cluster, right-click this option and, from the shortcut menu, choose Add Node. Figure B Details of one node in this cluster. Storage Selecting the Storage option in the navigation pane shows you, in the work pane, a list of all of the disks shared in the cluster Figure C.
If you want to add a disk to the cluster, right-click this option and, from the shortcut menu, choose Add A Disk. Figure C A list of the storage resources present in the cluster. Networks Each network in the cluster is represented in the console tree in the Networks option Figure D.
When you select a network, all of the details for that network appear in the work pane in the middle of the screen. Figure D Details of one network in the cluster. You can indicate whether the cluster should use a particular network by right-clicking an individual network entry and, from the shortcut menu, choosing Properties. Figure E Change the configuration of a network. Cluster Events This link houses all of the events related to the cluster service.
Working with the tool's wizards The Failover Cluster Management tool provides wizards that help you accomplish common tasks such as setting up a cluster, adding nodes, adding groups, and adding resources.
Validating your hardware configuration Before you create a cluster, you should examine your infrastructure to make sure it's ready to support your new high-availability configuration.
Qualifiers: MaxLen Provides the characteristics of the object. The cluster defines characteristics only for resources. If True , indicates that the resource is essential to the cluster and cannot be deleted. Indicates the length of time to wait, in milliseconds, before declaring a deadlock in any call into a resource. If True , the resource cannot be deleted unless all nodes are active. Qualifiers: Override Description.
Provides access to the resource's Description property. The time, in milliseconds, that a resource should remain in a failed state before the Cluster service attempts to restart it. Provides access to the flags set for the object. The cluster defines flags only for resources. A datetime value indicating when the object was installed. A lack of a value does not indicate that the object is not installed. Qualifiers: Units "Milliseconds".
Provides access to the resource's IsAlivePollInterval property, which is the recommended interval in milliseconds at which the Cluster Service should poll the resource to determine whether it is operational.
The last application-specific error code returned by the Resource DLL during a cluster operation. The resource can be selected as the quorum resource in clusters configured using the -localquorum switch.
Provides access to the resource's LooksAlivePollInterval property, which is the recommended interval in milliseconds at which the Cluster Service should poll the resource to determine whether it appears operational. Qualifiers: Override Name , Key.
Provides access to the resource's PendingTimeout property. If a resource cannot be brought online or taken offline in the number of milliseconds specified by the PendingTimeout property, the resource is forcibly terminated. Provides access to the resource's PersistentState property, which specifies whether the resource should be brought online or left offline when the Cluster Service is started.
Provides access to the resource's RestartAction property, which is the action to be taken by the Cluster Service if the resource fails. The following are the possible values.
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