This post has been republished via RSS; it originally appeared at: Failover Clustering articles.
First published on MSDN on Apr 29, 2016From time-to-time people ask me for suggestions on what tweaks they can do to make Windows server Failover Cluster failover faster. In this blog I’ll discuss a few tips-n-tricks.
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Disable NetBIOS over TCP/IP
- Unless you need legacy OS compatibility, NetBIOS is doing you nothing but slow you down. You want to disable NetBIOS in a couple different places:
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Every Cluster IP Address resources
- Here is the syntax (again, this needs to be set on all IP Address resources). Note: NetBIOS is disabled on all Cluster IP Addresses in Windows Server 2016 by default.
Get-ClusterResource “Cluster IP address” | Set-ClusterParameter EnableNetBIOS 0
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Base Network Interfaces
– In the Advanced TCP/IP Settings, go to the WINS tab, and select “Disable NetBIOS over TCP/IP. This needs to be done on every network interface.
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Every Cluster IP Address resources
- Here is the syntax (again, this needs to be set on all IP Address resources). Note: NetBIOS is disabled on all Cluster IP Addresses in Windows Server 2016 by default.
- Go Pure IPv6 - Going pure IPv6 will give faster failover as a result of optimizations in how Duplication Address Detection (DAD) works in the TCP/IP stack.
- Avoid IPSec on Servers – Internet Protocol Security (IPsec) is a great security feature, especially for client scenarios. But it comes at a cost, and really should not be used on servers. Specifically enabling a single IPSec policy will reduce overall network performance by ~30% and significantly delay failover times.
A few things I've found you can do to speed up failover and reduce downtime.
Thanks!
Elden Christensen
Principal PM Manager
High-Availability & Storage
Microsoft