Blog Post

Windows Server 2016 and SQL Server 2016 – A match made in heaven!

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For all these years Windows Server 2016 is the Windows version I was waiting for, and this blog post will explain why I’m super excited about this!

With Windows Server 2016, you can now create a Windows Cluster with nodes in multiple domains. Or even without a domain (Workgroup).

With Windows Server 2016 and SQL Server 2016, you can now create an Always On Availability Group configuration with nodes in multiple domain, and this is exactly why I’m super excited as it gives more flexibility when architecting complex/robust systems.

Think about the below scenario (Simplified):

win1

In the above picture, there are 3 separate domains, and before Windows Server 2016 and SQL Server 2016, there was no way to create an Always On Availability Group configuration with these 3 nodes participating.

With Windows Server 2016/SQL Server 2016 it’s possible now to add nodes from different domains to a cluster and configure an AG on top of it:

win2

 

There are some other nice benefits of Windows Server 2016, and they are:

Seamless Upgrades:

Upgrading to Win Server 2016 is going to be easy and less painful going forward. If you have an existing Win 2012 R2 cluster, then you can opt to do a rolling upgrade. Assume that it’s a 3 node cluster, then you can evict a node and install Win 2016 on it and add it back to the cluster.

If you don’t want to go through the hassle of evicting the node, upgrading and adding it back, then you can also opt for an in-place upgrade of an existing node. Cluster will work in mixed mode.

Cluster Site Awareness:

We can now set policies to allow a SQL instance to failover to a node within the same site before failing over to a node in a different site. More control and more flexibility.

Quarantine nodes:

Let’s assume that in a cluster you have a node which is in a flapping state (not stable and it’s joining in and out frequently). With Win 2016, this node will be Quarantined. Flapping nodes can impact the whole cluster negatively and quarantine will avoid this. The quarantined nodes are not allowed to join the cluster for 2 hours.

Scaling:

Win 2016/SQL 2016 supports 24 TB of memory. Yes! Let’s cache all those databases out there! (No more IO operations).

Win 2016/SQL 2016 supports 640 cores!  <Cough> license per core $ amount! </Cough>

Storage Spaces Direct:

Win 2016 support storage spaces direct and we can now run SQL FCI and AG on storage spaces direct. Storage Spaces Direct is nothing but DAS storage replicated across all nodes.

Conclusion:

If I’m running SQL 2016, then I would definitely want to run it on Win 2016. The features and capabilities are too good to ignore.

Thanks for reading, and please watch this space for more!

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