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Oracle ZFS Storage Appliance User Manual

Oracle ZFS Storage Appliance
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Shutting Down a Clustered Configuration (CLI)
Network fabric redundancy provided by LACP and IPMP functionality
Redundant storage devices (RAID)
Additional information about other availability features can be found in the appropriate sections
of this document.
When deciding between a clustered and standalone Oracle ZFS Storage Appliance
configuration, it is important to weigh the costs and benefits of clustered operation. It is
common practice throughout the IT industry to view clustering as an automatic architectural
decision, but this thinking reflects an idealized view of clustering risks and rewards
promulgated by some vendors in this space. In addition to the obvious higher up-front and
ongoing hardware and support costs associated with the second controller, clustering also
imposes additional technical and operational risks. Some of these risks can be mitigated by
ensuring that all personnel are thoroughly trained in cluster operations; others are intrinsic to the
concept of clustered operation. Such risks include:
The potential for application intolerance of protocol-dependent behaviors during takeover,
The possibility that the cluster software itself will fail or induce a failure in another
subsystem that would not have occurred in standalone operation,
Increased management complexity and a higher likelihood of operator error when
performing management tasks,
The possibility that multiple failures or a severe operator error will induce data loss or
corruption that would not have occurred in a standalone configuration, and
Increased difficulty of recovering from unanticipated software and/or hardware states.
These costs and risks are fundamental, apply in one form or another to all clustered or cluster-
capable products on the market (including the Oracle ZFS Storage Appliance), and cannot be
entirely eliminated or mitigated. Storage architects must weigh them against the primary benefit
of clustering: the opportunity to reduce periods of unavailability from hours or days to minutes
or less in the rare event of catastrophic hardware or software failure. Whether that cost/benefit
analysis will favor the use of clustering in an Oracle ZFS Storage Appliance deployment will
depend on local factors such as SLA terms, available support personnel and their qualifications,
budget constraints, the perceived likelihood of various possible failures, and the appropriateness
of alternative strategies for enhancing availability. These factors are highly site-, application-,
and business-dependent and must be assessed on a case-by-case basis. Understanding the
material in the rest of this section will help you make appropriate choices during the design and
implementation of your unified storage infrastructure.
Related Topics
“Shutting Down a Clustered Configuration (CLI)” on page 199
204 Oracle ZFS Storage Appliance Administration Guide, Release OS8.6.x • September 2016

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Oracle ZFS Storage Appliance Specifications

General IconGeneral
Connectivity10GbE, 40GbE, InfiniBand, Fibre Channel
ProtocolsNFS, SMB, iSCSI, Fibre Channel, HTTP
Operating SystemOracle Solaris
Data Protectionsnapshots, clones, remote replication
Data ReductionInline compression, deduplication
High AvailabilityRedundant hardware components (controllers, power supplies, fans). Automatic failover between controllers. Hot-swappable drives and components. Cluster configurations for increased availability and scalability.
Management InterfaceWeb-based GUI, CLI, REST API
Storage TypeHybrid (SSD + HDD), All-Flash
Storage CapacityUp to several petabytes
EncryptionAES-256 encryption at rest

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