HA Troubleshooting
If you encounter problems with an HA group, refer to this section.
Administration Tasks on HA Groups
Do not attempt to run administrative tasks on an HA group virtual slot (such as changing the CO password or altering partition policies). These virtual slots are intended for cryptographic operations only. It is not possible to use an HA group to make administrative changes to all partitions in the group simultaneously.
Unique Object IDs (OUID)
If two applications using the same HA group modify the same object using different members, the object fingerprint may conflict.
Client-Side Failures
Any failure of the client (such as operating system problems) that does not involve corruption or removal of files, should resolve itself when the client is rebooted.
If the client workstation seems to be working fine otherwise, but you have lost visibility of the HSMs in LunaCM or your client, try the following remedies:
>verify that the Thales Group drivers are running, and retry
>reboot the client workstation
>restore your client configuration from backup
>re-install SafeNet Luna HSM Client and re-configure the HA group
Failures Between the HSM Appliance and Client
The only failure that could likely occur between a SafeNet Luna Network HSM (or multiple HSMs) and a client computer coordinating an HA group is a network failure. In that case, the salient factor is whether the failure occurred near the client or near one (or more) of the SafeNet Luna Network HSM appliances.
If the failure occurs near the client, and you have not set up port bonding on the client, then the client would lose sight of all HA group members, and the application fails. The application resumes according to its timeouts and error-handling capabilities, and HA resumes automatically if the members reappear within the recovery window that you had set.
If the failure occurs near a SafeNet Luna Network HSM member of the HA group, then that member disappears from the group until the network failure is cleared, but the client can still see other members, and normal failover occurs.
Effect of PED Operations
PED operations can block some cryptographic operations, so that while a member of an HA group is performing a PED operation, it could appear to the HA group as a failed member. When the PED operation is complete, failover and recovery HA logic are invoked to return the member to normal operation.