AlwaysOn Availability Groups (SQL Server)
The AlwaysOn Availability Groups feature is a high-availability and disaster-recovery solution that provides an enterprise-level alternative to database mirroring. Introduced in SQL Server 2012, AlwaysOn Availability Groups maximizes the availability of a set of user databases for an enterprise. An availability group supports a failover environment for a discrete set of user databases, known as availability databases, that fail over together. An availability group supports a set of read-write primary databases and one to four sets of corresponding secondary databases. Optionally, secondary databases can be made available for read-only access and/or some backup operations.
An availability group fails over at the level of an availability replica. Failovers are not caused by database issues such as a database becoming suspect due to a loss of a data file, deletion of a database, or corruption of a transaction log.
In this Topic:
AlwaysOn Availability Groups provides a rich set of options that improve database availability and that enable improved resource use. The key components are as follows:
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Supports up to five availability replicas. An availability replica is an instantiation of an availability group that is hosted by a specific instance of SQL Server and maintains a local copy of each availability database that belongs to the availability group. Each availability group supports one primary replica and up to four secondary replicas. For more information, see Overview of AlwaysOn Availability Groups (SQL Server).
Important
Each availability replica must reside on a different node of a single Windows Server Failover Clustering (WSFC) cluster. For more information about prerequisites, restrictions, and recommendations for availability groups, see Prerequisites, Restrictions, and Recommendations for AlwaysOn Availability Groups (SQL Server).
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Supports alternative availability modes, as follows:
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Asynchronous-commit mode. This availability mode is a disaster-recovery solution that works well when the availability replicas are distributed over considerable distances.
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Synchronous-commit mode. This availability mode emphasizes high availability and data protection over performance, at the cost of increased transaction latency. A given availability group can support up to three synchronous-commit availability replicas, including the current primary replica.
For more information, see Availability Modes (AlwaysOn Availability Groups).
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Supports several forms of availability-group failover: automatic failover, planned manual failover (generally referred as simply "manual failover"), and forced manual failover (generally referred as simply "forced failover"). For more information, see Failover and Failover Modes (AlwaysOn Availability Groups).
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Enables you to configure a given availability replica to support either or both of the following active-secondary capabilities:
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Read-only connection access which enables read-only connections to the replica to access and read its databases when it is running as a secondary replica. For more information, see Active Secondaries: Readable Secondary Replicas (AlwaysOn Availability Groups).
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Performing backup operations on its databases when it is running as a secondary replica. For more information, see Active Secondaries: Backup on Secondary Replicas (AlwaysOn Availability Groups).
Using active secondary capabilities improves your IT efficiency and reduce cost through better resource utilization of secondary hardware. In addition, offloading read-intent applications and backup jobs to secondary replicas helps to improve performance on the primary replica.
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Supports an availability group listener for each availability group. An availability group listener is a server name to which clients can connect in order to access a database in a primary or secondary replica of an AlwaysOn availability group. Availability group listeners direct incoming connections to the primary replica or to a read-only secondary replica. The listener provides fast application failover after an availability group fails over. For more information, see Availability Group Listeners, Client Connectivity, and Application Failover (SQL Server).
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Supports a flexible failover policy for greater control over availability-group failover. For more information, see Failover and Failover Modes (AlwaysOn Availability Groups).
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Supports automatic page repair for protection against page corruption. For more information, see Automatic Page Repair (Availability Groups/Database Mirroring).
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Supports encryption and compression, which provide a secure, high performing transport.
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Provides an integrated set of tools to simplify deployment and management of availability groups, including:
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Transact-SQL DDL statements for creating and managing availability groups. For more information, see Overview of Transact-SQL Statements for AlwaysOn Availability Groups (SQL Server).
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SQL Server Management Studio tools, as follows:
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The New Availability Group Wizard creates and configures an availability group. In some environments, this wizard can also automatically prepare the secondary databases and start data synchronization for each of them. For more information, see Use the New Availability Group Dialog Box (SQL Server Management Studio).
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The Add Database to Availability Group Wizard adds one or more primary databases to an existing availability group. In some environments, this wizard can also automatically prepare the secondary databases and start data synchronization for each of them. For more information, see Use the Add Database to Availability Group Wizard (SQL Server).
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The Add Replica to Availability Group Wizard adds one or more secondary replicas to an existing availability group. In some environments, this wizard can also automatically prepare the secondary databases and start data synchronization for each of them. For more information, see Use the Add Replica to Availability Group Wizard (SQL Server Management Studio).
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The Fail Over Availability Group Wizard initiates a manual failover on an availability group. Depending on the configuration and state of the secondary replica that you specify as the failover target, the wizard can perform either a planned or forced manual failover. For more information, see Use the Fail Over Availability Group Wizard (SQL Server Management Studio).
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The AlwaysOn Dashboard monitors AlwaysOn availability groups, availability replicas, and availability databases and evaluates results for AlwaysOn policies. For more information, see Use the AlwaysOn Dashboard (SQL Server Management Studio).
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The Object Explorer Details pane displays basic information about existing availability groups. For more information, see Use the Object Explorer Details to Monitor Availability Groups (SQL Server Management Studio).
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PowerShell cmdlets. For more information, see Overview of PowerShell Cmdlets for AlwaysOn Availability Groups (SQL Server).
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AlwaysOn Availability Groups can be used with the following features or components of SQL Server:
Caution
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For information about restrictions and limitations for using other features with AlwaysOn Availability Groups, see AlwaysOn Availability Groups: Interoperability (SQL Server). |

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