About configuring Storage Foundation clusters for data integrity

When a node fails, Storage Foundation takes corrective action and configures its components to reflect the altered membership. If an actual node failure did not occur and if the symptoms were identical to those of a failed node, then such corrective action would cause a split-brain situation.

Some example scenarios that can cause such split-brain situations are as follows:

I/O fencing is a feature that prevents data corruption in the event of a communication breakdown in a cluster. Storage Foundation uses I/O fencing to remove the risk that is associated with split-brain. I/O fencing allows write access for members of the active cluster. It blocks access to storage from non-members so that even a node that is alive is unable to cause damage.

After you install and configure Storage Foundation, you must configure I/O fencing in Storage Foundation to ensure data integrity.

You can configure disk-based I/O fencing or server-based I/O fencing either manually or using the installsf.