Managing HP Serviceguard A.12.00.00 for Linux, June 2014

Figure 25 Bonded NICs Configured for Load Balancing
3.5.6 Monitoring LAN Interfaces and Detecting Failure: Link Level
At regular intervals, determined by the NETWORK_POLLING_INTERVAL (see “Cluster Configuration
Parameters” (page 89)), Serviceguard polls all the network interface cards specified in the cluster
configuration file (both bonded and non-bonded). If the link status of an interface is down,
Serviceguard marks the interface, and all subnets running on it, as down; this is shown in the output
of cmviewcl (1m); see “Reporting Link-Level and IP-Level Failures” (page 67). When the link
comes back up, Serviceguard marks the interface, and all subnets running on it, as up.
3.5.7 Monitoring LAN Interfaces and Detecting Failure: IP Level
Serviceguard can also monitor the IP level, checking Layer 3 health and connectivity for both IPv4
and IPv6 subnets. This is done by the IP Monitor, which is configurable: you can enable IP monitoring
for any subnet configured into the cluster, but you do not have to monitor any. You can configure
IP monitoring for a subnet, or turn off monitoring, while the cluster is running.
The IP Monitor:
Detects when a network interface fails to send or receive IP messages, even though it is still
up at the link level.
Handles the failure, failover, recovery, and failback.
3.5.7.1 Reasons To Use IP Monitoring
Beyond the capabilities already provided by link-level monitoring, IP monitoring can:
Monitor network status beyond the first level of switches; see “How the IP Monitor Works
(page 65)
Detect and handle errors such as:
IP packet corruption on the router or switch
Link failure between switches and a first-level router
64 Understanding Serviceguard Software Components