Compartilhar via


Identifying failovers

Applies To: Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2003 R2, Windows Server 2003 with SP1, Windows Server 2003 with SP2

Identifying failovers

Failover can occur in one of two situations: An entire node fails, or a resource on a node fails (such as a network interface). Node failure is easily identifiable in Cluster Administrator. When you are connected to a cluster, Cluster Administrator displays a list of all nodes and their current status. Resource failure that does not bring down a node, but does result in group failover, can be harder to detect. Use Cluster Administrator or another cluster management application to periodically check the owner of all cluster groups to see if a group has failed over.

It is important to use Cluster Administrator to routinely monitor the status of all clusters and check for failover activities that diminish either the performance or the availability of resources. Failover is supposed to be easily tolerated. Your work flow will not suffer if all applications are working, failover policies have been correctly set, and you have provided sufficient capacity for all situations. If any of these three criteria are not met, you must take action to meet them. For information on how to plan your server cluster, failover policies, and capacity requirements, see Planning Your Server Cluster.

Serious failover situations can affect performance and availability. If a node fails and its companion node is unable to serve clients efficiently, the situation must be resolved immediately. If groups persistently fail over and fail back without surviving on either node for very long, availability to clients is completely lost.

Responding to a failover

When investigating possible problems with failovers, answer the following questions:

  • How serious is the problem?

    For example, other resources could be suffering due to the increased load placed on the alternate node.

  • What caused the failover?

    Many types of failure can cause failovers. Usually, these occur at the operating system and hardware levels. For help with determining the exact type of a failure, see Server Cluster Troubleshooting.

    To review what happened prior to and during a group failure, run Event Viewer and look at the application log, system log, and the security log (if applicable). This helps you determine what types of errors occurred.

  • Are any changes needed to prevent this kind of event in the future?

    If your performance has seriously suffered as a result of a failover, review the capacity planning issues presented in Capacity Planning for Server Clusters.

    If you determine that the nodes did not efficiently transfer control of various groups and resources during failover, review the failover policies you have set. For example, the Cluster service could be attempting to bring a File Share resource online before the corresponding Physical Disk resource was brought online. This type of error is easily fixed by configuring dependencies.

The Cluster service records error messages about resource failure in the system log. The system log is found in Event Viewer. The Event Properties dialog box contains error message information. Information about a resource failure might appear as follows:

Date: 9/8/2001

Time: 3:22:49 PM

Type: Error

Source: ClusSvc

Category: Failover Mgr

Event ID: 1069

User: N/A

Computer: DTCENTER3

Description: "Cluster resource 'Disk V:' in Resource Group 'SQL' failed.

For more information, see Help and Support Center at https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/events.asp."

Other applications can keep track of such errors and notify appropriate parties as necessary.

For more information about diagnosing and resolving specific kinds of failures and errors, see Server Cluster Troubleshooting. For more information on resource dependencies, see Server Cluster groups.

For information on how to solve failover problems, see Server Cluster Troubleshooting.