AlwaysOn Architecture Guide: Building a High Availability and Disaster Recovery Solution by Using Failover Cluster Instances and Availability Groups
SQL Server Technical Article
Writers: Joseph Sack (SQLskills.com), Sanjay Mishra (Microsoft)
Technical Reviewers: Min He (Microsoft), Chuck Heinzelman (Microsoft), Alexi Khalyako (Microsoft), Charles Mathews (Microsoft), Prem Mehra (Microsoft) , Juergen Thomas (Microsoft), Mike Weiner (Microsoft), Amitabh Tamhane (Microsoft), Brent Ozar (Brent Ozar PLF), Gianluca Hotz (SolidQ), David P. Smith (ServiceU), Michael Steineke (Edgenet), Glenn Berry (SQLskills.com)
Content Program Manager: Glenn Minch (Microsoft)
Published: June 2012
Applies to: SQL Server 2012
Summary: SQL Server 2012 AlwaysOn Failover Cluster Instances (FCI) and AlwaysOn Availability Groups provide a comprehensive high availability and disaster recovery solution. Prior to SQL Server 2012, many customers used FCIs to provide local high availability within a data center and database mirroring for disaster recovery to a remote data center. With SQL Server 2012, this design pattern can be replaced with an architecture that uses FCIs for high availability and availability groups for disaster recovery business requirements. Availability groups leverage Windows Server Failover Clustering (WSFC) functionality and enable multiple features not available in database mirroring. This paper details the key topology requirements of this specific design pattern, including asymmetric storage considerations, quorum model selection, quorum votes, steps required to build the environment, and a workflow illustrating how to handle a disaster recovery event in the new topology across participating job roles.
To review the document, please download the AlwaysOn Architecture Guide: Building a High Availability and Disaster Recovery Solution by Using Failover Cluster Instances and Availability Groups Word document.