What is a Microsoft Failover Cluster Virtual Adapter anyway?

A question often asked is, "What is the Microsoft Cluster Virtual Adapter and what can I do with it?" The typical, and correct answer, is to leave it alone and let it just work for you. While that answer satisfies most, others may want just a little more by way of an explanation, so hopefully, this blog will provide that.

The networking model in Windows Server 2008 Failover Clustering was rewritten to accommodate new functionality which included being able to obtain IP addresses from DHCP servers and being able to locate Cluster nodes on separate, routed subnets. Additionally, communications went from being UDP Broadcast transmissions to UDP Unicast with a smattering of TCP connections thrown in for good measure. What this all adds up to is more reliable and robust communication connectivity within the Cluster, no matter where the Cluster nodes were located. It no longer matters if Cluster nodes are located in the same physical rack in the same datacenter or in a server rack in a server room in a remote datacenter located at the end of an OC3 WAN connection. This now makes the Cluster more tolerant of single points of failure, e.g. Network Interface Card (NIC) card (and hence the new driver name 'Network Fault-Tolerant or NetFT.sys). The only real minimum requirement is multiple (at least two), redundant communication paths between all nodes in the Cluster. This way, the Cluster network driver (NETFT.SYS) could build a complete routing structure to provide the redundant communication connectivity the Cluster would need to keep applications and services highly available.

本日志由 flyinweb 于 2011-10-25 18:20:25 发表到 云计算与虚拟化 中,目前已经被浏览 732 次,评论 0 次;

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