7

In Exchange 2010, you can define Database Availability Groups and have your mailbox database(s) automatically replicated between multiple servers, and you can have mailbox server which are members of a DAG also host other server roles, such as Hub Transport and/or Client Access (which wasn't possible with Exchange 2007).

But can you define an array of Client Access Servers on the same two servers which are members of a DAG? The documentation I've found states quite clearly that you can't use NLB with DAGs due to incompatibilities with the cluster service... or, that you can try to set it up, but it would be an unsupported scenario.

What about using a hardware load balancer? Or a reverse proxy which can publish multiple internal servers on the same external URL (such as ISA)? If NLB is not used on the two servers and another balancing solution is implemented, can then full high availability of all main Exchange services (Mailbox, Hub, CAS) be achieved with only two servers?

4 Answers 4

3

Yes. It can be done quite well. Do a basic Exchange install on each server (Mailbox, CAS, and Hub). Setup a CAS Array and assign it to the mailbox

New-ClientAccessArray –Name “CAS Array” –Fqdn “exchange.domain.com” –Site “Default-First-Site-Name”
Set-MailboxDatabase DatabaseName -RpcClientAccessServer “exchange.domain.com”

Setup a DNS record pointing exchange.domain.com to your hardware load balancer. Then setup your DAG, create mailbox copies, and you're all done.

You also might want to check out yesterday's Exchange team blog. It doesn't talk about a single server but does go over your options for load balancing your CAS servers with ISA (now called TMG) and HLBs. http://msexchangeteam.com/archive/2010/07/20/455575.aspx

3
  • Perfect, great.
    – Massimo
    Jul 21, 2010 at 18:59
  • The load balancer you can possibly also retire if using NLB (Network Load Balancing) which is part of windows.
    – TomTom
    Sep 14, 2010 at 7:12
  • 2
    @TomTom - Unfortunately, no you can't. NLB cannot be installed on a DAG member. It conflicts with the failover clustering components. You'd have to separate out the Mailbox servers (adding 2 additional servers) or use a HLB. technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd979781.aspx
    – Jason Berg
    Sep 14, 2010 at 11:55
1

http://rebootuser.com/2011/01/05/exchange-2010-configuring-dag-on-a-2-node-cluster-each-running-cas-ht-mb-roles/

By this method you can configure 2 servers with MB/HT/CAS and DAG with High Availability. If one server is out of service owa and outlook will work fine. Please be note that when we create DAG, windows will automatically create a cluster IP. That you can use as "cas array" dns entry.

-1

You can use the Windows Clustering Services for fail over of the CAS role. It will not load balance but it will still be HA.

You can do so by creating an IP resource in your Windows Cluster and creating a CAS array with the cluster node name.

It's what we used for 2 server HA Exchange solution, and it works fine without needing an additional load balancer.

2
  • -1... this is not high availability because you risk corruption on failover AND you need a lot more infrastructure than two nodes, namely a SAN for the shared discs. Using exchange only you can put up a real HA solution a lot cheaper.
    – TomTom
    Sep 14, 2010 at 7:11
  • I haven't logged on for a really long time, and I just read this. What are you talking about? You have two nodes, running all HUB/HT/MB roles, with a DAG configured for the MB roles. And you use Windows Clustering Services to create a Virtual IP. You then assign a DNS name for that IP address, and make it your CAS array. Nothing is needed other than 2 Exchange Standard licenses, 2 Windows Server Enterprise licenses and 2 servers. Exchange 2010 does NOT support shared disk storage in clusters. They each need to have separately allocated storage.
    – kkr16
    Aug 23, 2011 at 10:13
-2

Yes, it can. There are additional services I have used, that simply clone an exchange server with all the roles, and keep it in active stdby: NeverFail, DoubleTake, WanSyncHA - just to name a few.

4
  • The question was more oriented to using only Exchange 2010, no additional software or services...
    – Massimo
    Jul 21, 2010 at 13:43
  • 1
    Well, you never mentioned you didn't want to purchase anything in addition to Exchange itself, so I provided some options :)
    – dyasny
    Jul 21, 2010 at 16:04
  • -1... You also seem ignorant to the exchange internal HA mechanisms that make the use of any other software simply unneeded.
    – TomTom
    Sep 14, 2010 at 7:12
  • @TomTom: Have I ever mentioned that the answer I provided is the ONLY option or that the task cannot be achieved using Exchange only? As I have said before - I only provided some additional options. Before you claim someone's ignorance, learn to understand the text you're reading.
    – dyasny
    Jul 4, 2011 at 19:35

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .