IBM DR550 Computer Drive User Manual


 
IBM System Storage DR550 Version 3.0 ------17 March 2006 Page 14
IBM Storage Systems Copyright © 2006 by International Business Machines Corporation
Software Overview
High Availability Cluster Multi-Processing (HACMP) for AIX
The data retention application can be a business critical application. The DR550 can provide a
high availability environment by leveraging the capabilities of AIX and High Availability Cluster
Multi-Processing (HACMP) with dual P5 servers and redundant networks. This is referred to as
the dual node configuration. IBM also offers a single node configuration that does not include
HACMP.
HACMP is designed to maintain as operational applications such as System Storage Archive
Manager if a component in a cluster node fails. In case of a component failure, HACMP is
designed to move the application along with the resources from the active node to the standby
(passive) node in the DR550.
Cluster Nodes
The two P5 520 servers running AIX with HACMP daemons are Server nodes that share
resources—disks, volume groups, file systems, networks and network IP addresses.
In this HACMP cluster, the two cluster nodes communicate with each other over a private
Ethernet IP network. If one of the network interface cards fails, HACMP is designed to preserve
communication by transferring the traffic to another physical network interface card on the
same node. If a “connection” to the node fails, HACMP is designed to transfer resources to
backup node to which it has access.
In addition, heartbeats are sent between the nodes over the cluster networks to check on the
health of the other cluster node. If the passive standby node detects no heartbeats from the
active node, the active node is considered as failed and HACMP is designed to automatically
transfer resources to the passive standby node.
Within the DR550 (dual node configuration only), HACMP is configured as follows:
The clusters are setup in Hot Standby (active/passive) mode.
The resource groups are setup in cascading mode.
The volume group is setup in enhanced concurrent mode.
System Storage Archive Manager
IBM System Storage Archive Manager (this is the new name for Tivoli Storage Manager for Data
Retention) is designed provide archive services and to prevent critical data from being erased or
rewritten. This software can help address requirements defined by many regulatory agencies for
retention and disposition of data. Key features include the following:
Data retention protection This feature is designed to prevent deliberate or accidental
deletion of data until its specified retention criterion is met. See “Data Retention Protection”
for more information.
Event-based retention policy - In some cases, retention must be based on an external
event such as closing a brokerage account. System Storage Archive Manager supports
event-based retention policy to allow data retention to be based on an event other than the
storage of the data. See “Defining and Updating an Archive Copy Group” for more
information. This feature must be enabled via the commands sent by the content
management application.
Deletion hold In order to ensure that records are not deleted when a regulatory retention
period has lapsed but other requirements mandate that the records continue to be
maintained, System Storage Archive Manager includes deletion hold. Using this feature will