Virtualization

Failover Cluster Manager failed while managing one or more clusters, the error was unable to determine if the computer exists in the domain

Failover

A failover cluster is a group of independent computers that work together to increase the availability and scalability of clustered roles (formerly called clustered applications and services). The clustered servers (called nodes) are connected by physical cables and by software. If one or more of the cluster nodes fail, other nodes begin to provide service (a process known as failover). In addition, the clustered roles are proactively monitored to verify that they are working properly. If they are not working, they are restarted or moved to another node. Failover clusters also provide Cluster Shared Volume (CSV) functionality that provides a consistent, distributed namespace that clustered roles can use to access shared storage from all nodes. The Failover Clustering feature minimizes service disruptions, while iSCSI cannot achieve the associated benefits of Fiber Channel SAN.

Here are some guides you may be interested in: Initialize and format a virtual disk: How to add and remove a new virtual disk from a VM on VMware Workstation, how to scale up and scale out on Azure, how to track your device performance and health via Windows Security in Windows 10, and Unable to access files in Synology Disk station from Windows 10.

Failover Clustering has many practical applications, including:
- Highly available or continuously available file share storage for applications such as Microsoft SQL Server and Hyper-V virtual machines.
- Highly available clustered roles that run on physical servers or on virtual machines that are installed on servers running Hype.

Reason for the Cluster Registration error:

The images below show that the following error occurred: “Failover Cluster Manager failed to manage one or more clusters; it couldn’t determine if the computer exists in the domain.”Furthermore, This is because I was logged in locally without having the necessary privileges to create the Failover Cluster in Active Directory.
– I was configuring the Hyper-V Cluster using a Local Admin Account. This account didn’t have the right privileges to create a computer account in the organizational unit.

Solution: Your user account must have the correct privileges to create a computer account in the Domain where the nodes reside or the computer account must be pre-staged in that location.
– Login with your Domain account and the error will be eliminated.

Failover

However, Continue with your Cluster creation. Enter the Cluster Name and IP address as shown below. See this article on how to create a Failover Cluster” on Hyper-V.

Screenshot-2021-07-13-at-01.06.27-1

Moreover, the Cluster note was created successfully in AD and you can continue with the rest configuration steps as shown below.

In addition, the node was successfully created in AD. Kindly refer to the following related guides: How to setup a cache-only DNS server, how to locate and edit the hosts file on Windows, how to install RSAT tools: DNS manager console missing from RSAT tools on Windows 10, how to setup SPF and TXT Records in AWS, how to add and verify a custom domain name to Azure Active Directory, Active Directory: How to Setup a Domain Controller, how to locate and edit the host file on macOS, and how to know when an IP or domain has been blacklisted.

Screenshot-2021-07-13-at-02.03.48

I hope you found this blog post helpful. Nonetheless, If you have any questions, please let me know in the comment session.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x