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  2. High availability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_availability

    Passive redundancy is used to achieve high availability by including enough excess capacity in the design to accommodate a performance decline. The simplest example is a boat with two separate engines driving two separate propellers. The boat continues toward its destination despite failure of a single engine or propeller.

  3. High-availability cluster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-availability_cluster

    High-availability clusters (also known as HA clusters, fail-over clusters) are groups of computers that support server applications that can be reliably utilized with a minimum amount of down-time. They operate by using high availability software to harness redundant computers in groups or clusters that provide continued service when system ...

  4. High availability software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_availability_software

    High availability software is software used to ensure that systems are running and available most of the time. High availability is a high percentage of time that the system is functioning. It can be formally defined as (1 – (down time/ total time))*100%.

  5. Continuous availability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuous_Availability

    The terms high availability, continuous operation, and continuous availability are generally used to express how available a system is. [3] [4] The following is a definition of each of these terms. High availability refers to the ability to avoid unplanned outages by eliminating single points of failure. This is a measure of the reliability of ...

  6. Data centre tiers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_centre_tiers

    Data centre tiers are defined levels of resiliency and redundancy for IT facility infrastructure. They are widely used in the data center, ISP and cloud computing industries as part of the engineering design for high availability systems. The standard data center tiers are: [1] Tier I: no redundancy; Tier II: partial N+1 redundancy

  7. Availability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Availability

    In reliability engineering, the term availability has the following meanings: . The degree to which a system, subsystem or equipment is in a specified operable and committable state at the start of a mission, when the mission is called for at an unknown, i.e. a random, time.

  8. Redundancy (engineering) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redundancy_(engineering)

    Geographic redundancy is used by Amazon Web Services (AWS), Google Cloud Platform (GCP), Microsoft Azure, Netflix, Dropbox, Salesforce, LinkedIn, PayPal, Twitter, Facebook, Apple iCloud, Cisco Meraki, and many others to provide geographic redundancy, high availability, fault tolerance and to ensure availability and reliability for their cloud ...

  9. Service Availability Forum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Service_Availability_Forum

    Service availability is an extension of high availability, referring to services that are available regardless of hardware, software or user fault and importance. Key principles of service availability: Redundancy – "backup" capability in case of need to failover due to a fault; Stateful and seamless recovery from failures