Implementation Guide › Planning Your Enterprise Implementation › CA Access Control Enterprise Management Deployment Architectures
CA Access Control Enterprise Management Deployment Architectures
Before you begin to implement CA Access Control Enterprise Management, you should decide with of the following implementation architectures to use:
- Default—In a default deployment, you install all the components of CA Access Control Enterprise Management on a single server. Implementing the default architecture is the fastest way to implement CA Access Control Enterprise Management. The default implementation architecture does not support high availability and disaster recovery capabilities.
- Load Balancing—the load balancing deployment architecture enables you to use a common user and data stores to distribute workload among the Enterprise Management Servers. In a load balancing deployment you deploy a primary and multiple load balancing Enterprise Management Servers.
- High Availability—the high availability deployment architecture enables you to implement CA Access Control Enterprise Management for failover and redundancy. In a high availability implementation you deploy CA Access Control Enterprise Management on multiple servers to help ensure continued access to data from endpoints in case of a server failure.
- Disaster Recovery—the disaster recovery deployment architecture enables you to implement CA Access Control Enterprise Management for disaster recovery. In a disaster recovery deployment you deploy CA Access Control Enterprise Management on multiple servers to help ensure disaster recovery capabilities.