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No-Cost! Address SQL Server 2008 End of Support by Re-hosting in Azure Now

April 14, 2019 by Jason Aw Leave a Comment

SIOS Technology Offers No-Cost Assessment to Address SQL Server 2008 End of Support by Re-hosting in Azure

SIOS’ experience and expertise building highly-available SQL Server clusters in the cloud can help fast-track customer migrations and maintain SQL Server 2008 security updates

 

SIOS Technology Corp. is the industry pioneer in providing IT Resilience through intelligent application availability. Today, they announced a new no-cost assessment for customers considering migrating Microsoft SQL Server 2008 to Azure to address the July 9, 2019, End-of-Support.

A major challenge when considering this option from Microsoft is how to maintain SQL Server availability. High availability clustering solutions used on premises are not possible in Azure due to their reliance on shared-storage. This new SIOS offer provides businesses a no-cost assessment of their SQL Server 2008 environments and delivers an Azure re-hosting and configuration plan that ensures protection against unplanned downtime and data loss to meet customer-specific SLAs.

“Moving SQL Server 2008 environments to Azure achieves the goal of obtaining continued product updates from Microsoft without the need to upgrade. However, the question of maintaining availability of those SQL Server environments in the cloud becomes a challenge,” said Michael Bilancieri, VP, Product, SIOS Technology. “Shared-storage clustering solutions that deliver availability for on-premises environments are not a native option in Azure. Designing and implementing high availability clusters in the cloud requires specialized skills to ensure that reliable availability is achieved and that the SLAs of critical systems using SQL Server are met. We’ve helped customers deploy thousands of SQL Server instances in the cloud with our software and expertise. We’re looking to help customers take advantage of Microsoft’s SQL Server 2008 EOS program in Azure.”

Supporting Resources:

For more information on the SIOS No-Cost Assessment for SQL Server 2008 end of support on Azure, visit here: https://us.sios.com/solutions/sql-server-2008-end-of-support

Microsoft SQL Server 2008 end of support reference page:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/cloud-platform/windows-sql-server-2008

Tweet this: .@SIOSTech offers No-Cost Assessment for #SQLServer 2008 End of Support on #Azure http://bit.ly/2VvvQ9x #highavailability #nocost

About SIOS Technology Corp.

SIOS Technology Corp. is the leading expert in IT Resiliency with software and services focused on High Availability and Disaster Recovery. SIOS delivers tightly-integrated availability solutions for business-critical applications running on-premises, in the cloud, and in hybrid cloud environments. Also, it has the flexibility to meet the widely-varying requirements of different platforms, applications, and Linux and Windows Operating Systems.

SIOS DataKeeper Cluster Edition software is Microsoft Azure-certified and available in the Azure marketplace. It is the only Azure-certified software that enables customers to create a SANless high availability SQL Server 2008 cluster in Azure using Microsoft Windows Server Failover Clustering (WSFC). It eliminates the need for shared storage while maintaining availability SLAs in the cloud.

Founded in 1999, SIOS Technology Corp. (https://us.sios.com) is headquartered in San Mateo, California, and has offices throughout the United States, United Kingdom and Japan.

Media Contact:
Beth Winkowski
Winkowski Public Relations, LLC for SIOS
978-649-7189
bethwinkowski@US.SIOS.com

 

Interested to create SANless high availability SQL Server 2008 cluster in Azure using Microsoft Windows Server Failover Clustering (WSFC), SIOS could be a viable solution. Find out more about clus

Filed Under: News and Events Tagged With: Clustering, High Availability, SQL Server, SQL Server clusters

White Paper: SQL Server HA and DR: A Simple Strategy for Realizing Dramatic Cost Savings

April 12, 2019 by Jason Aw Leave a Comment

SQL Server High Availability and Disaster Recovery A Simple Strategy for Realizing Dramatic Cost Savings

White Paper: SQL Server High Availability and Disaster Recovery: A Simple Strategy for Realizing Dramatic Cost Savings

Simple SQL Savings in HA
White Paper: SQL Server High Availability and Disaster Recovery: A Simple Strategy for Realizing Dramatic Cost Savings

              As companies become increasingly reliant on SQL Server to run their critical business operations, their tolerance for application downtime soon approaches zero. However, with the licensing changes that were introduced in SQL Server 2012 and the rising TCO of SAN-based clusters, the cost of providing high availability (HA) and disaster recovery (DR) protection has risen sharply.

Download White Paper: SQL Server HA and DR: A Simple Strategy for Realizing Dramatic Cost Savings

Filed Under: News and Events Tagged With: disaster recovery, High Availability

White Paper: Controlling Cloud Costs without Sacrificing Availability or Performance

April 11, 2019 by Jason Aw Leave a Comment

Controlling Cloud Costs without Sacrificing Availability or Performance

White Paper: Controlling Cloud Costs without Sacrificing Availability or Performance

White Paper: Controlling Cloud Costs without Sacrificing Availability or Performance
White Paper: Controlling Cloud Costs without Sacrificing Availability or Performance

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

After signing up with a cloud service provider, you receive a bill that causes sticker shock. There are unexpected and seemingly excessive charges, and those responsible seem unable to explain how this could have happened. The situation is critical because the amount threatens to bust the budget unless cost-saving changes are made immediately. The objective of this white paper is to help prevent cloud services sticker shock from occurring ever again.

Download this white paper on Controlling Cloud Costs without Sacrificing Availability or Performance

Filed Under: News and Events Tagged With: Cloud, controlling cloud costs, High Availability

White Paper: Implementing High Availability in a Linux Environment

April 11, 2019 by Jason Aw Leave a Comment

Implementing High Availability in a Linux Environment Without sacrificing performance or security

White Paper: Implementing High Availability in a Linux Environment Without sacrificing performance or security

White Paper: Implementing High Availability in a Linux Environment
White Paper: Implementing High Availability in a Linux Environment

Using open source solutions can dramatically reduce capital expenditures, especially for software licensing fees. But most organizations also understand that open source software needs more “care and feeding” than commercial software—sometimes substantially more- potentially causing operating expenditures to increase well above any potential savings in CapEx. This white paper explores how organizations can lower both CapEx and OpEx running high-availability applications in a Linux environment without sacrificing performance or security.

Learn more about SIOS Protection Suite for Linux, which provides all the elements you need to create a high availability Linux cluster quickly and easily.

Download the White Paper on White Paper: Implementing High Availability in a Linux Environment.

Filed Under: News and Events Tagged With: cluster, High Availability, high availability in a linux environment, Linux

Achieving SQL Server High Availability Disaster Recovery With DataKeeper

March 26, 2019 by Jason Aw Leave a Comment

Achieve SQL Server High Availability, Disaster Recovery With A Mix Of Always On Availability Groups And SANless SQL Server Failover Cluster Instances

Introduction

The topic of mixing SQL Server Failover Cluster Instances (FCI) with Always On Availability Groups (AG) is pretty well documented. However, most of the available documentation documents configurations that assume the SQL Server FCI portion of the solution utilizes shared storage. What if I want to build a SANless SQL Server FCI using Storage Spaces Direct (S2D), can I still add a SQL Server AG to the mix? Unfortunately, the answer to this question is no. As of today, this combination of S2D based SQL Server FCI and Always On AG is not supported. I previously blogged about this S2D limitation here.

However, the good news is you CAN build a SANless SQL Server FCI with SIOS DataKeeper and still leverage Always On AG for things like readable secondaries. You still have to abide by the same rules that apply when mixing traditional SAN based SQL Server FCI and Always On AGs, but most part to achieve SQL Server high availability is about the same.

DataKeeper Synchronous replication is commonly used between nodes in the same data center or cloud region, but you may want to replicate asynchronously to an additional node in a different region for disaster recovery. In this case, if you ever do have to bring the DR node online after an unexpected failure, you will have to scrap the Always On AG configurations and reconfigure them. This requirement is very similar to to what Microsoft published here in regards to restoring asynchronous snapshots of SQL Server Always On AGs running inside VMs.

Availability Groups

Essentially, a SANLess SQL Server Failover Cluster Instance with DataKeeper looks like a single instance of SQL Server as far as the Always On Availability Group Wizard is concerned. The configuration of the Always On AG is exactly the same as if you were creating just an Always On AG between two Standalone (non-clustered) SQL Server instances.

The real confusion arise in the fact that in this configuration all the servers reside in the same failover cluster. But the SQL Server FCI is only configured to run only on the cluster nodes where SQL Server was installed as a Clustered SQL Server Instance. The other nodes are in the same cluster. However, SQL is installed on those nodes as a Standalone SQL Server Instance, not a Clustered Instance. It’s a bit confusing. Essentially what is happening is that Always On AG’s leverage the WSFC quorum model and listeners. As such all the AG Replicas need to reside in the same WSFC, even though they typically do not run clustered instances of SQL Server. If you are completely confused that is okay, most people are confused when they first try to wrap their head around this hybrid configuration.

The real benefit in a configuration like this is that a SQL Server Failover Cluster Instance can be a better and more cost effective (more on this later*) High Availability solution than Always On AG in many circumstances, but it lacks the ability to offer a readable secondary replica. Adding an Always On AG readable secondary replica becomes a viable option to address this need. And using SIOS DataKeeper eliminates the need for a SAN for the SQL Server FCI, which opens up the possibility of configuring SQL Server FCIs where nodes reside in different data center, which also means support for SQL Server FCI’s that span Availability Zones in both Azure and AWS.

Please note that pictured below is just one possible configuration. Multiple FCI cluster nodes, multiple AGs and multiple Replicas are all supported. You are only limited by the limits imposed by your version of SQL Server.

This article seems to document the setup steps pretty well. Of course, instead of shared storage for the SQL FCI, you will use SIOS DataKeeper to build the FCI as I document here.

Image result for SQL Server FCI with Availability Groups

Basic Availability Groups

As of SQL Server 2016 a scaled down “Basic Availability Groups” became available in SQL Server Standard Edition, making this configuration possible even in SQL Server Standard Edition. Basic AGs are limited to a single database per Availability Group, a Single Replica (2-nodes). However, they do not support a readable secondary replica so their use cases in this hybrid configuration are very limited.

Distributed Availability Groups

Distributed AGs were introduced in SQL Server 2016 are also supported in this hybrid configuration. Distributed AGs are very similar to regular AGs, but the Replicas do not need to reside in the same cluster, or even in the same Windows Domain. Microsoft documents the the main use cases of Distributed Availability Groups as follows:

  • Disaster recovery and easier multi-site configurations
  • Migration to new hardware or configurations, which might include using new hardware or changing the underlying operating systems
  • Increasing the number of readable replicas beyond eight in a single availability group by spanning multiple availability groups
Image result for distributed availability groups

Summary

If you like the idea of SQL Server FCIs for SQL Server high availability, but want the flexibility of read-only secondary replicas, this hybrid solution might just be the thing you are looking for. Traditional SAN based SQL Server FCIs, and even Storage Spaces Direct (S2D) based FCIs, limit you to a single data center. SIOS DataKeeper frees you from the limits of your SAN and enables configurations such as SQL Server FCI that span Availability Zones or Cloud Regions. It also eliminates the reliance on the SAN, allowing you to leverage locally attached high speed storage devices without giving up your SQL Server Failover Cluster Instance.

* How to Save Money

Earlier I promised I would tell you how to save money by doing this all with SQL Server Standard Edition. If you can live with readable replicas that are point in time based snapshots, you can skip Always On AGs completely and just use the SIOS DataKeeper target side snapshot feature to periodically take an application consistent snapshot of the volumes on the target server without impacting ongoing replication or availability. Here’s how…

http://discover.us.sios.com/rs/siostechnology/images/10-Ways-Save-AlwaysOn-vs-Failover-Clustering.pdf

Create a 2-node SQL Server FCI with SQL Server Standard Edition and save a boatload of money on SQL licenses. And yet still replicate the data to a 3rd node outside the cluster for reporting or DR purposes. If you take a snapshot of the volumes on this third server these snapshots are read-right accessible. This way, you can mount those databases from a standalone instance of SQL Server to run month end reports, copy to archives, or you might even want to use those snapshot to quickly and easily update your QA and Test/Dev environments with the latest SQL data.

I hope you found guide to create to achieve SQL Server high availability, disaster recovery with a mix of Always On Availability Groups and SANless SQL Server Failover Cluster Instances useful.

Reproduced with permission from Clusteringformeremortals.com

Filed Under: Clustering Simplified Tagged With: High Availability, SQL Server Failover Cluster Instance, SQL Server High Availability

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