Determine if Cluster Resources Move before Rebooting

From: Mike (anonymous_at_discussions.microsoft.com)
Date: 03/30/04


Date: Mon, 29 Mar 2004 16:05:39 -0800


How do I determine if the Cluster Group was moved before
reboot the one node on a Windows 2000 Advanced Server?

I have Active/Active Cluster with Node A and Node B

My goal was to move Node A resources to Node B and reboot
Node A and then resouces back to Node A.

I think the Server Administrator did not move the
resources before rebooting the server which caused the
link server not to work properly.

Please help me with this problem.

Thank You,

Mike



Relevant Pages

  • Another disaster recovery exercise (but not yet)...
    ... I updated a client's Server. ... indeed, I reboot before updating, and after ). ... Chkdsk is all good on all drives. ... Enabling boot logging option at boot - well, ...
    (microsoft.public.backoffice.smallbiz2000)
  • RE: Event 19011: SBS Monitoring services wont auto-start
    ... automatically start when rebooting the SBS server. ... Let us ensure the MSSQL$SBSMONITORING service and the Microsoft Exchange ... Please clean the Event logs in event viewer and then reboot the server, ... This newsgroup only focuses on SBS technical issues. ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.server.sbs)
  • Re: Another disaster recovery exercise (but not yet)...
    ... Do the full system state restore. ... I updated a client's Server. ... > indeed, I reboot before updating, and after ). ... Still very slow boot time and many ...
    (microsoft.public.backoffice.smallbiz2000)
  • Re: IIS Messed UP... must reboot?
    ... SBS and after reboot, the IIS works again. ... Can you see in IIS the websites or server shows stop status? ... Click Services tab and select Hide All Microsoft Services and Disable ... After reboot, check whether the problem still occurs. ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.server.sbs)
  • Re: Do I need to reinstall SBS2k3?
    ... again thank you for your assistance. ... have done the reboot and rerun CEICW. ... Server has to be on line ... Another site may already be using the port you ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.server.sbs)