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Advanced POWER Virtualization on IBM System p5 - Previous ...

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complexity of failover logic in the routing partiti<strong>on</strong>s. This approach is shown in<br />

Figure 4-7.<br />

To implement IPAT in the router partiti<strong>on</strong>s, additi<strong>on</strong>al software would be required,<br />

such as HACMP for AIX 5L, Tivoli <strong>System</strong> Automati<strong>on</strong> for AIX 5L or Linux,<br />

Heartbeat for Linux, or an implementati<strong>on</strong> of the Virtual Router Redundancy<br />

Protocol (VRRP) <strong>on</strong> Linux, for example, similar to the approach described in<br />

Linux <strong>on</strong> <strong>IBM</strong> eServer zSeries and S/390: Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol<br />

<strong>on</strong> VM Guest LANs, REDP-3657.<br />

Figure 4-7 Router failover<br />

Shared Ethernet Adapter Failover<br />

Starting with Virtual I/O Server V1.2, there is a very straightforward soluti<strong>on</strong> for<br />

Shared Ethernet high availability, Shared Ethernet Adapter Failover (SEA<br />

Failover). SEA Failover is implemented <strong>on</strong> the Virtual I/O Server and not <strong>on</strong> the<br />

client, and it supports the simpler bridging (layer-2) approach to access external<br />

networks. SEA Failover supports IEEE 802.1Q VLAN-tagging, just like the basic<br />

SEA feature.<br />

Chapter 4. Setting up virtual I/O: advanced 193

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