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Moderators: anton (staff), art (staff), Max (staff), Anatoly (staff)
peter.auchincloss wrote:extended power outage required both nodes to be shutdown - not common but does occur.
The HA storage which goes down due to power outage loses the whole sence. And if you have 10 Tb storage it will take a while to resynchronize. So if you are sure that your device is in sync it is much faster to recreate it than to make a full sync.codex wrote:Hi ,
Just been reading this thread and I was just wondering what the actual process to restore the sync is say if both nodes go down due to a power outage ?
Can you not just issue a sync when both nodes are back up ?
anton (staff) wrote:And again... We have a misunderstanding here. When cluster is up syncrhonization takes it time IN THE BACKGROUND. So primary node serves requests and other nodes are coming back from sleep at the same time. When data is synchronized we'll update cluster status to healthy (full HA) and turn Write-Back Cache ON again.
It's like when you start your car engine it works at higher revs and lower power response for some time before it gets warmed to normal working temperature.
Assumptions guys like this one do here:
http://ccolonbackslash.com/2011/03/06/v ... -problems/
is *INCORRECT*. Wanted you to know this.
I wrote the post referenced by Anton earlier in this forum. This is my first production install of Starwind, my frustration stemmed from me stupidly having already purchased two enterprise HA licenses only to discover that the both-nodes-down issue stops me using it how i wanted to and following this i look very silly (fully my fault of course, i wont make the mistake of failing to do a poweroff when i test a product like this again). When 5.7 addresses these issues i'll be delighted, as i've had to put our hyper-v cluster on hold until the product is able to deal with a powerdown. I am also very happy to beta testcamealy wrote:I do understand the poster's original frustration. It has nothing at all (for me at least) to do with expecting you all to be perfect. I have stuck through it thick and thin. Through the past couple years of BSOD's and upgrade failures, lost data, and persistent reservations that didn't work, etc... I sold it to 3 of my customers, one that even left us because of the failures. I have tested, and tested, purchased tons of hardware, and tested more. I would even like to be a beta tester.
What really matters (being a VAR I know) is service. And back when Bob was here in the states he tried really hard. Not only do I not expect you to be perfect, but I don't expect your support staff to know everything either. However, being knowledgeable in both the sub-systems (RAID, Switching, TCP stack, iSCSI, etc) and the big reasons your software is gaining traction (Hyper-V, VMware, Citrix, etc) should be a necessity. I can't believe that for an IT infrastructure product that theoretically could take a datacenter down, there is no 24/7 support, there is no phone number that you can call and sit on the phone with someone well versed in your product and these technologies. In fact a week can go by, and I get someone who sends me emails in the middle of the night with lists of things to try and get done during the day, only to get more emails the next night, arguing with me. Oh, by the way, during which our systems are down.
I am going to continue to stick with StarWind, but for your product to really be amazing, you must remember that customer service is KING.