DOCUMENT:Q223258 24-MAR-2000 [iis] TITLE :How to Install the NTOP on MSCS 1.0 with SQL Server 6.5 or 7.0 PRODUCT :Internet Information Server PROD/VER:winnt:4.0 OPER/SYS: KEYWORDS: ====================================================================== ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The information in this article applies to: - Microsoft Internet Information Server 4.0 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SUMMARY ======= This article describes new installation instructions for installing the Windows NT Option Pack (NTOP) on a Microsoft Cluster Server (MSCS) with SQL Server 6.5 (with Windows NT SP4 or SQL Server SP5a) or SQL Server 7.0 installed. This allows for proper fail-over of the WWW and FTP services. These instructions are a supplement to the general instructions provided in the following Microsoft Knowledge Base article: Q191138 How to Install Windows NT Option Pack on Microsoft Cluster Server If the Microsoft Cluster Server has had Windows NT Service Pack 4 MSDTC, SQL Server 6.5 SP5a, or SQL Server 7.0 installed at any time, then it is necessary to use a new installation sequence to successfully install the NT Option Pack on the cluster. After following the new installation sequence provided below, you can use the remainder of article Q191138 to complete the Windows NT Option Pack installation on Microsoft Cluster Server 1.0. A slight change to the Microsoft Distributed Transaction Coordinator (MSDTC) files that are upgraded by Windows NT Service Pack 4, SQL Server SP5a and SQL Server 7.0 prevents the Windows NT Option Pack installation documented in Q191138 from installing successfully on the second node of a Microsoft Cluster Server system. This article describes the steps necessary to get the Windows NT Option Pack successfully installed on both nodes of the Cluster Server with the updated MSDTC files. Note: This issue with the newer MSDTC components and the Windows NT Option Pack Setup program has added some additional complexity to the installation sequence. Please read this entire article and make sure that you understand the instructions before beginning your Windows NT Option Pack installation on the Cluster Server system. MORE INFORMATION ================ If you have not yet attempted to install the Windows NT Option Pack onto your Microsoft Cluster Server, then you can use the following steps to determine whether you should use the standard installation sequence from Q191138 or whether you will need to use the new installation sequence documented below. 1. The Windows NT Option Pack setup for a cluster requires that setup is run on both of the nodes in the cluster. Setup must first complete on one node before setup on the second node begins. The first node that setup is run on, for the purposes of this document, will be called Node A. The second node of the cluster that setup is run will be called Node B. The designation of Node A and Node B is arbitrary as long as they are used consistently throughout this article and Q191138. On whichever node that is chosen to be Node B (the last node on which you run the Option Pack Setup program) check the version of the following two files: %windir%\system32\msdtc.exe %windir%\system32\msdtc.dll 2. If the version of both of these two files is 1997.11.532.0, then you can use the installation sequence from Q191138, as it is written. 3. If the version of either of these two files is newer than version 1997.11.532.0, then you will need to use the new installation sequence documented below. When you attempt to install the NTOP onto your Microsoft Cluster Server system that has the newer MSDTC files installed, the following error messages occur during the installation process on Node B: The command "C:\Winnt\System32\msdtc.exe" -join failed Error Code = 0xffffffff An exception occurred while installing MSDTC service. Error Code = 0x80004005 Setup of "Transaction Server Core Components" failed. The specific error code is 0x748dd88. Setup will continue but the component may not function properly. (You will receive eight of the following errors in a row.) CreateIISPackage or DeleteIISPackage, 0x80040154 Class not registered. (If you had chosen to install Index Server you will see the following error.) Setup could not set webhits OOP. (At the end of the NTOP installation you will see the following error.) Microsoft Transaction Server Setup was not completed successfully. These messages mean that the installation of the NTOP on Node B has failed and IIS, MTS, and MSDTC will not run properly on Node B. To install the NTOP properly on Node B, remove the NTOP from Node B and reinstall it. Use the following steps to properly remove the NTOP from Node B: 1. Stop the Cluster Service on Node B. 2. On Node B, click the Add/Remove icon in Control Panel. 3. Choose Windows NT 4.0 Option Pack from the list, and then click the Add/Remove button. 4. When the NTOP Setup is started, choose Remove All to uninstall the Option Pack. 5. Go to step 6 below and restart the installation process on Node B. To eliminate the chance of a failed installation of the NTOP on Microsoft Cluster Server with SQL Server, install the following products in the order they are listed for a fresh installation: - Windows NT Server 4.0 Enterprise Edition - Windows NT Service Pack 3 - Microsoft Cluster Server 1.0 - SQL Server 6.5 Enterprise Edition - SQL Server Cluster Service - Internet Explorer 4.01 - Windows NT Option Pack (OPTIONAL) - Uncluster the SQL Server Service - SQL Server Service Pack 5a - Recluster the SQL Server Service (RECOMMENDED) - Windows NT Service Pack 4 (If SQL Server SP5a or Windows NT SP4 is applied before the NTOP installation, errors will occur.) Use the following sequence for the Windows NT Option Pack and SQL Server 7.0 on Microsoft Cluster Server 1.0: - Windows NT 4.0 Server Enterprise Edition - Windows NT Service Pack 3 - Microsoft Cluster Server 1.0 - Internet Explorer 4.01 - Windows NT Option Pack - Windows NT Service Pack 4 - SQL Server 7.0 Enterprise Edition - SQL Server Cluster Service Perform the following steps for systems with newer MSDTC files: Note: Windows NT must reside in the same location on both Node A and Node B. For example, if you install Windows NT to C:\Winnt on Node A, then you need to have Windows NT installed to C:\Winnt on Node B as well. If the Windows NT %SystemRoot% folder is not identical on both Node A and Node B, you will not be able to perform fail-over of IIS. 1. Move all Cluster Resource Groups to Node A. 2. Start the Windows NT Option Pack installation on Node A. On the "Microsoft Internet Information Server" setup screen, accept the default location for the WWW, FTP, and the Application Installation Point settings. During the installation of Transaction Server, on the "Microsoft Transaction Server 2.0" screen, the Windows NT Option Pack Setup program attempts to locate the MSDTC transaction log on a cluster disk resource in any resource groups currently owned by that node. The MSDTC Resource should reside in the resource group that SQL Server is currently located in. When you are prompted for the resource group to install the MSDTC log to and the location for the MSDTC log file, choose the SQL Server Resource Group Network Name you have created from the drop-down list and place the MSDTC Log directory on the Disk Resource that belongs to that SQL Server Resource Group. For example, if your SQL Server Resource Group Network Name is called "SQLGroup" and the Disk Resource assigned to that group is assigned drive letter S:, you would specify "SQLGroup" in the Virtual Server drop-down list, and S:\MSDTCLog as the path to the MSDTC Log directory. DO NOT INSTALL ANYTHING INTO THE DEFAULT CLUSTER GROUP. 3. At the end of the Windows NT Option Pack installation, a dialog box is displayed that instructs you to start the installation on Node B and to click OK when the setup is complete. Disregard this message and click OK on this dialog box to continue running setup. 4. When you are prompted to reboot on Node A, choose No. Do not restart Node A at this point. 5. Do not move the Resource Groups from Node A to Node B. Leave the resource groups running on Node A. 6. Switch to Node B and stop the Microsoft Cluster Service by opening a command prompt and typing the following: NET STOP CLUSSVC 7. Start the Windows NT Option Pack installation on Node B. On the "Microsoft Internet Information Server" setup screen, accept the default location for the WWW, FTP, and the Application Installation Point settings. This installation does not prompt for the transaction log location. When this installation is complete, restart Node B. 8. If Windows NT Service Pack 4 is installed on Node B, then the Cluster Server service will not start after the NTOP is installed and the computer is restarted. This is a known issue. Please see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base for details: Q218922 Installing NTOP on Cluster Server with SP4 Causes Event IDs 1009 and 1058 You must re-apply SP4 on Node B and restart the computer again before the Microsoft Cluster Server service will start. 9. Move the Resource Groups from Node A to Node B. 10. Restart Node A. 11. If Windows NT Service Pack 4 is installed on Node A, then the cluster service will not start after the NTOP is installed. This is a known issue. Please see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base for details: Q218922 Installing NTOP on Cluster Server with SP4 Causes Event IDs 1009 and 1058 You must re-apply SP4 on Node A and restart the computer again before the Microsoft Cluster Server service will start. The following 7 steps are used to ensure that MSDTC is configured properly for use on a clustered system. 12. Move the resource groups from Node B to Node A. Leave the resource groups running on Node A. 13. From a command prompt on Node A, type the following: msdtc -remove 14. From a command prompt on Node B, type the following: msdtc -remove 15. If there is an MSDTC resource in any of the Cluster Server Resource Groups, please delete this resource from the group that it is in. It can be in only one resource group if it is installed. If there is no MSDTC resource in any resource groups, this is OK. 16. From a command prompt on Node A, type the following: msdtc -install -d %windir%\system32 -l -v Note: Make sure that the directory you specify for the DTC log file exists on the shared disk. For example, if you entered S:\MSDTCLog for the -l variable, check to be sure an MSDTCLog directory exists on the root of the S drive. If it does not exist, create the directory before running the above command(for example, for SQLGroup, you would type "msdtc - install -d %windir%\system32 -l S:\MSDTCLog -v SQLGroup" (without the quotation marks)) 17. From a command prompt on Node B, type the following: msdtc -join %windir%\system32 At this point, MSDTC will be properly installed on the Cluster and an MSDTC Resource will now exist in the SQL Server Resource Group in Cluster Administrator. For fail-over of the SQL Server group to function properly, make sure to do step 18. Failure to perform step 18 will cause SQL Server Group fail-over to take up to five minutes to move from one node to the other. 18. In the Cluster Administrator, highlight the MSDTC Resource in the SQL Server Resource Group you specified, right-click on it and choose Properties. Click the Dependencies tab and click the Modify button. In the left-hand frame of the Modify Dependencies Window, highlight the SQL Server Virtual Server Network Name resource and double-click on it. This should move the Virtual Server Name from the left frame to the right frame and list it as a "dependency." Click OK, click Apply, and then click OK. 19. At this point, the Web or FTP fail-over sites need to be created. Internet Information Server (IIS) virtual servers in this configuration require a resource group with an IP address at minimum; however, it is recommended that you also have a disk resource to store the Web pages on as well. DO NOT USE THE DEFAULT CLUSTER GROUP. 20. Move the Resource Group that you intend on creating the IIS Instance in to Node A, if it is not already running on Node A. If you have not created a Resource Group for your World Wide Web sites, create one now and give it a disk resource and IP address resource that your WWW site will use (for example, if your Resource Group for your Web Sites is called WWWGroup, move the WWWGroup to Node A). 21. In the Microsoft Management Console (MMC) on Node A, expand the Internet Information Server tree, right-click on the computer name, and create a new Web (or FTP) site. 22. In the properties for this new site, set the IP address of the site to be the same as the IP address resource for the resource group that this Web site will reside in (for example, if you have an "IP Address" Resource in your WWWGroup, and it is configured as 10.5.5.1, configure the new Web site to use this address in the MMC). 23. Select the directory, Universal Naming Convention (UNC) connection, or redirection that the site should use as the home directory. If you are selecting a drive, it should be a disk resource that is in the same Resource Group that the IP address is in. 24. Repeat Steps 21 through 23 for each WWW of FTP site that you want to provide fail-over capabilities to. At this point in the installation process, you can refer back to Q191138 and proceed through the rest of that article without problems, beginning at "Synchronize the IIS User Accounts." For more information, please see the following Web page: http://www.microsoft.com/ntserver/ntserverenterprise/deployment/planguide/ntoption.asp Additional query words: ====================================================================== Keywords : Technology : kbiisSearch kbiis400 Version : winnt:4.0 Issue type : kbhowto ============================================================================= THE INFORMATION PROVIDED IN THE MICROSOFT KNOWLEDGE BASE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND. MICROSOFT DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. IN NO EVENT SHALL MICROSOFT CORPORATION OR ITS SUPPLIERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER INCLUDING DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, LOSS OF BUSINESS PROFITS OR SPECIAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF MICROSOFT CORPORATION OR ITS SUPPLIERS HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. 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