Article ID: 301647 - Last Review: March 1, 2007 - Revision: 12.3 Cluster Service improvements for Storage Area Networks (SANs)This article was previously published under Q301647 SUMMARY The Cluster service in Windows Server 2003 provides better
support for clusters in a Fibre Channel topology than earlier versions of
Windows. This article describes Windows Server 2003 Cluster service
improvements for Storage Area Networks (SANs). MORE INFORMATION Earlier versions of Windows server clusters presumed that
all communications to the shared disk should be treated as a SCSI bus. This
behavior may be somewhat disruptive, and it does not take advantage of the more
advanced features of Fibre Channel to both improve arbitration performance and
reduce disruption. The key enhancement is that the Cluster service issues a command to break a RESERVATION, and the port driver can do a targeted or device reset for disks that are on a Fibre Channel topology. In Microsoft Windows 2000 server clusters, an entire bus-wide SCSI RESET is issued. This causes all devices on the bus to be disconnected. When a SCSI RESET is issued, a lot of time is spent resetting devices that may not need to be reset, such as disks that the CHALLENGER node may already own. Resets occur in the following order:
If the targeted resets fail, the Cluster service resorts to a Windows 2000-style bus-wide SCSI RESET. For more information about how server clusters communicate with the shared disk, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base: 309186
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/309186/
)
How the Cluster service reserves a disk and brings a disk online
For more information about SANs, visit the following Microsoft Web site:http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserver2003/techinfo/overview/san.mspx
(http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserver2003/techinfo/overview/san.mspx)
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