Forum Discussion
Daniel_55334
Altostratus
Apr 08, 2008LTM network failover
From the manual I got that LTM can use network to determine if the active unit is working fine if network failover is enabled. And for synchronization it is recommended that a separate segment is used solely for this purpose (directly connecting both units). Would LTM use this segment for detecting network failover? What if this link is down? Does this trigger failover? Thanks for any input.
- The_Bhattman
Nimbostratus
LTM would use the the network segments that it's connected to for network failover, which is seperate from failover and syncing. he way it works is that if it detects the NIC is down it will attempt a failover in x amount of seconds. There is another type of failover called VLAN failsafe. You can read more about by clinking on the following link Click here - Daniel_55334
Altostratus
Thanks for your reply. But I am a little bit confused. In redundancy configuration, there we can set the peer IP address and check whether to enable network failover. Does that mean LTM will use the peer address to check the status of the active unit? If it loses connection to the peer, would failover be triggered? - johns
Employee
Yes, the standby unit will listen for status message from the active unit on TCP 1028. The peer IP address is the source it will expect to hear this from. If status message is not received within the time limit, it will make itself the active unit. This is why it is important to have a reliable network connection for Network Failover transport, otherwise, you will have "unwanted" active-active on your hand. See Sol2397 for information on Network Failover, as well as Serial Failover. - The_Bhattman
Nimbostratus
Sorry I was getting a bit head of myself. - dennypayne
Employee
I recommend only using Network Failover if you cannot physically use the serial failover cable. If you use both, they both have to fail to trigger failover, and the serial is much faster than the Network Failover. - The_Bhattman
Nimbostratus
Actually from what I can tell in order for the VLAN failsafe to perform a "failover" it needs to do some form of communication so the peer can take over. - The_Bhattman
Nimbostratus
From a hardware level , that makes sense since the peer unit is the one detects the volatge level drop in the active unit. But how does that work for the VLAN Failsafe. I mean doesn't the active unit need to send a signal to the peer to take over or does the active unit switch to standby and the peer detects the change? - dennypayne
Employee
VLAN Failsafe has several options now. It can trigger a reboot, a failover (ie, go into standby mode), or a restart of the unit's services. Any of those 3 will cause the peer unit to detect that its' partner is no longer active and it will make itself active. It doesn't wait for any communication from the other unit. - The_Bhattman
Nimbostratus
Interesting. What mechanism does the peer/standby unit use to detect it's peer is going to standby mode under VLAN Failsafe? - johns
Employee
VLAN Failsafe and the failover between the units are 2 separate events. VLAN Failsafe causes the failover to take place by creating the condition which failover is initiated. VLAN failsafe in itself does not include a feature to "tell" the standby unit to become active.
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