Exchange 2010 introduces several new high availability features:
- It allows up to 16 replicated copies of each database across multiple mailbox servers for improved redundancy.
- Failover can occur at the database level within 30 seconds for higher availability.
- Storage has been optimized to support larger mailboxes and allow storage on inexpensive JBOD disks without RAID.
- Simplified administration and incremental deployment make high availability easier and cheaper to manage.
19. Exchange 2010 High Availability Overview AD site: Dallas Client Access Server All clients connect via CAS servers DB1 Client DB3 Mailbox Server 6 DB5 AD site: San Jose Client Access Server Easy to stretch across sites Failover managed within Exchange Mailbox Server 1 Mailbox Server 2 Mailbox Server 3 Mailbox Server 4 Mailbox Server 5 Database Availability Group DB1 DB1 DB1 DB4 DB2 DB5 DB3 DB2 DB5 DB3 DB4 DB1 Database centric failover DB1 DB3 DB2 DB5 DB4
20. Database Availability Group (DAG) Mailbox Servers Mailbox Database Database Copy Active Manager RPC Client Access Service (Active Manager Client) High Availability Fundamentals RPC Client Access Service Active Manager Active Manager Active Manager DB1 DB1 DB1 DB2 DB2 DB2 Database Availability Group DB3 DB3 DB3
21. Exchange 2010 HA FundamentalsDatabase Availability Group (DAG) Group of up to 16 servers Wraps a Windows® Failover Cluster Defines the boundary of replication and failover/switchover Mailbox Servers …. Host the active and passive copies of multiple mailbox databases Support up to 100 databases per server
22. Mailbox Database Unit of Failover/Switchover 30 second Database Failover/Switchover Database names are unique across an forest Mailbox Database Copy A database has one active copy in a DAG A server may not host more than one copy of a given database Replication of copies using Log Shipping System tracks health of each copy Exchange 2010 HA FundamentalsMailbox Databases and Copies
23. High Availability’s Brain Manages which database copies should be active and passive Source of definitive information on where a database is active and mounted Active Directory is primary source for configuration information Active Manager is primary source for changeable state information such as active and mounted A process that runs on every server in DAG Exchange 2010 HA FundamentalsActive Manager Active Manager
24. Incremental DeploymentReduces cost and complexity of HA deployments Easy to add high availability to existing deployment High availability configuration is post-setup HA Mailbox servers can host other server roles Datacenter 1 Datacenter 2 Database Availability Group Mailbox Server 3 Mailbox Server 1 Mailbox Server 2 DB1 DB1 DB1 DB2 DB2 DB2 DB3 DB3 DB3
25. Simplified ManagementReduces cost and complexity of management HA Administration within Exchange Recovery uses the same simple operation for a wide range of failures Simplified activation of Exchange services in a standby datacenter
27. Use a VSS backup solution Backup from any copy of the database/logs Always choose passive (or active) copy Backup an entire server Designate a dedicated backup server for a given database Restore from any of these backups: Database Availability Group Mailbox Server 3 Mailbox Server 1 Mailbox Server 2 DB1 DB1 DB1 VSS requestor DB2 DB2 DB2 DB3 DB3 DB3 Exchange Server 2010 Backups
28. Storage ImprovementsPerformance enhancements enable new options Exchange 2010 Storage Enhancements 70% reduction in IOPS Smoother IO patterns Resilience against corruption Choose from a wide range of storage technologies without sacrificing system availability: Storage Area Network (SAN) Direct Attached w/ SAS Disks JBOD SATA (RAID-less) Direct Attached w/ SAS Disks
29. Lowering Exchange 2010 Storage Costs Optimized for DAS storage Use larger, slower, cheaper disks Support larger mailboxes at lower cost HA provides resilience from disk failures HA Solution remains unchanged regardless of data volume size JBOD/RAID-less storage now an option Requires 3+ DB Copies
33. All server roles on one server (Small deployments)3000 Mailboxes 2 Node Cluster Double Server/Disk Failure Resiliency 24,000 Mailboxes 6 Node DAG 3 copies (JBOD) 4 x 2 Node CCR 2 copies (RAID) Storage Cost savings examples
34. Automatic protection against loss of queued e-mails due to hardware failure Simplifies hub and edge transport server upgrades and maintenance Improved Transport Resiliency X Mailbox Server EdgeTransport Servers keep “shadow copies” of items until they are delivered to the next hop Edge Transport HubTransport
35. Online Move MailboxLimit user disruption during mailbox moves and maintenance Users remain online while their mailboxes are moved between servers Sending messages Receiving messages Accessing entire mailbox Administrators can perform migration and maintenance during regular hours Also can be used to migrate users from on-premise server to Exchange Online E-Mail Client Client Access Server Exchange 2010 & Exchange 2007 SP2 Online Exchange 2003 Offline Mailbox Server 1 Mailbox Server 2
36. Hardware Load Balancer Mailbox servers in a DAG can host other Exchange server roles CAS/HUB/MAILBOX 2 CAS/HUB/MAILBOX 1 DB1 DB1 2 server configurations, should always use RAID DB2 DB2 DB2 DB3 DB3 High Availability Design ExampleBranch office or smaller deployment
40. Exchange 2010 High Availability ….. Easier & cheaper to deploy Simplified administration Granular failover & recovery Better end-to-end availability One technology for both high availability and site resilience Summary