Operating Systems: i5/OS
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High availability group policy selection process
Every high availability group has a unique group name that consists
of a set of name-value pairs. Every policy definition contains an attribute
called match criteria that is also a set of name-value pairs. To determine
the policy for a high availability group, the group name is compared to the
match criteria of all the associated core group polices. The policy with the
strongest match to the group name is assigned to the high availability group:
When selecting a policy for a high availability group, the high availability
manager:
- Finds the set of policies that are eligible to govern a high availability
group. For a policy to be eligible, all name-value pairs in the match criteria
of an eligible policy must be contained in the name of the high availability
group.
- Selects the policy that has the most name-value pair matches from the
list of eligible policies, and uses that policy to govern the high availability
group.
Any component can create a high availability group for that component to
use. However, the component code must specify the name-value pairs that are
used for the high availability group name. The WebSphere Application Server
administrator can control the name-value pairs that make up a policy match
criteria, and thereby control which policy governs a particular high availability
group.
WebSphere Application Server includes a couple of predefined policies.
The following examples demonstrate the matching mechanism that is used for
these policies.
Example
The transaction manager component
uses the policy Clustered TM Policy when the component is configured for high
availability. The following description illustrates why, under these conditions,
this policy is selected for the transaction manager high availability group:
Example
This example builds on the
previous example and demonstrates how an administrator can define a new policy
to govern the transaction manager high availability group. In this example
the same high availability group name and default policies that are described
in the previous example are used. However, in this example, the administrator
creates a new policy in the DefaultCoreGroup configuration called the Administrator
TM Policy. For the high availability manager to select this new policy, the
policy must be eligible and contain more matches than any other policy.
The
following description illustrates why, under these conditions, the policy
Administrator TM Policy is selected for the transaction manager high availability
group:
- The cluster member process ServerA is started.
- The transaction manager component code joins a high availability manager
to the high availability group named:
GN_PS=testCell\testNode\ServerA,IBM_hc=MyCluster,type=WAS_TRANSACTIONS
- ServerA is defined as a member of the DefaultCoreGroup core group, for
which the following policies are defined:
- Clustered TM Policy, which has the match criteria type=WAS_TRANSACTIONS.
- Default SIBus Policy, which has the match criteria type=WSAF_SIB.
- Administrator TM Policy, which has the match criteria IBM_hc=MyCluster,type=WAS_TRANSACTIONS.
- The high availability manager compares the group name to the match criteria
for the available policies. The high availability manager eliminates the Default
SIBus Policy because the match criteria is not a proper subset of the high
availability group name. It determines that Clustered TM Policy and Administrator
TM Policy are both eligible policies, because their match criteria are proper
subsets of the high availability group name:
- Clustered TM Policy contains the name-value pair type=WAS_TRANSACTIONS,
which is also specified in the high availability group name.
- Administrator TM Policy contains the name-value pairs IBM_hc=MyCluster
and type=WAS_TRANSACTIONS, which are both specified in the high availability
group name.
Because Administrator TM Policy has two matching pairs, IBM_hc=MyCluster
and type=WAS_TRANSACTIONS, and Clustered TM Policy has only one matching pair,
type=WAS_TRANSACTIONS, the high availability manager associates Administrator
TM Policy with the transaction manager high availability group.
Ambiguous Matches
Do not configure identical match
criteria for multiple policies in the same core group. Configuring identical
match criteria causes an ambiguous match to the associated high availability
group. Because a high availability group can only be associated with one policy,
if the previously described matching mechanism does not result in a single
policy match, the high availability manager puts the high availability group
in error state, and does not make any of the group members active. Depending
on the nature of the problem, the high availability manager might write one
of the following error messages to the SystemOut.log file:
HMGR0301W: No policy was located for the group named {0}
HMGR0302W: Multiple policies match the group named {0}, Matching Policies are {1}
You
can use the administrative console to view the policies associated with a
high availability group and the current state of members of that group.
Related concepts
High availability groups
High availability group policies