Thursday, February 9, 2012

3-nodes SQL Server 2000 Cluster

Hi there,
Just want to know is it possbile to configure a 3-nodes (A/A/P) SQL
Server 2000 cluster running on Windows 2000 advance OS? Btw, any
website or whitepaper can I refer to?
Thanks in advance!
Dicky
Yes it is possible. No, I am unaware of any particular documentation. What
you are actually looking at is a three-node, two-instance SQL Cluster.
Follow the normal cluster build process, except where you would normally do
something with "the other node" think "the other nodes".
Geoff N. Hiten
Senior Database Administrator
Microsoft SQL Server MVP
"dickym" <dickymok@.esdlife.com> wrote in message
news:1135162138.608572.14620@.g49g2000cwa.googlegro ups.com...
> Hi there,
> Just want to know is it possbile to configure a 3-nodes (A/A/P) SQL
> Server 2000 cluster running on Windows 2000 advance OS? Btw, any
> website or whitepaper can I refer to?
> Thanks in advance!
> Dicky
>
|||Nope, Windows 2000 only supports 2 nodes. Migrate to Windows Server 2003
Windows 2000 is not longer supported and I would not even consider it for a
HA solution today.
Cheers,
Rod
MVP - Windows Server - Clustering
http://www.nw-america.com - Clustering Website
http://www.msmvps.com/clustering - Blog
http://www.clusterhelp.com - Cluster Training
"dickym" <dickymok@.esdlife.com> wrote in message
news:1135162138.608572.14620@.g49g2000cwa.googlegro ups.com...
> Hi there,
> Just want to know is it possbile to configure a 3-nodes (A/A/P) SQL
> Server 2000 cluster running on Windows 2000 advance OS? Btw, any
> website or whitepaper can I refer to?
> Thanks in advance!
> Dicky
>
|||Woops. Rodney is correct. I read that as SQL 2000, not Windows 2000. You
will need Windows 2003 as the base OS.
Geoff N. Hiten
Senior Database Administrator
Microsoft SQL Server MVP
"Geoff N. Hiten" <SQLCraftsman@.gmail.com> wrote in message
news:OJD7LYjBGHA.2356@.tk2msftngp13.phx.gbl...
> Yes it is possible. No, I am unaware of any particular documentation.
> What you are actually looking at is a three-node, two-instance SQL
> Cluster. Follow the normal cluster build process, except where you would
> normally do something with "the other node" think "the other nodes".
> --
> Geoff N. Hiten
> Senior Database Administrator
> Microsoft SQL Server MVP
>
>
> "dickym" <dickymok@.esdlife.com> wrote in message
> news:1135162138.608572.14620@.g49g2000cwa.googlegro ups.com...
>
|||Thanks a lot, all! All you said is I have to upgrade Windows 2003
Enterprise version for a 3-nodes cluster.
|||Yes. That is pretty much all it takes.
Geoff N. Hiten
Senior Database Administrator
Microsoft SQL Server MVP
"dickym" <dickymok@.esdlife.com> wrote in message
news:1135215083.429748.120670@.f14g2000cwb.googlegr oups.com...
> Thanks a lot, all! All you said is I have to upgrade Windows 2003
> Enterprise version for a 3-nodes cluster.
>
|||Hey, Geoff, I don't mean to step into all of your conversations.
I did want to add, however, that although WINDOWS 2K3 EE supports up to
8-node clusters, SQL SERVER 2K, 32 bit will only support up to 4-node
clusters. Before you purchase your OS, seriously consider the IA-64
platform, the license is the same and is transferable from the 32-bit
architecture.
And, the "Liberty" build included the support for 8-nodes.
Sincerely,
Anthony Thomas
"Geoff N. Hiten" <SQLCraftsman@.gmail.com> wrote in message
news:e175I1vBGHA.1028@.TK2MSFTNGP11.phx.gbl...
> Yes. That is pretty much all it takes.
> --
> Geoff N. Hiten
> Senior Database Administrator
> Microsoft SQL Server MVP
>
> "dickym" <dickymok@.esdlife.com> wrote in message
> news:1135215083.429748.120670@.f14g2000cwb.googlegr oups.com...
>

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