[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] RE: [Xen-users] Xen SAN Questions
Well, first off, ask yourself why you're using a cluster filesystem in the first place. Do you have active-active writers on the same filesystem at the same time? If the answer is no, then get rid of GFS -- you don't need it.The reason for this was so that I could have two Xen hosts using their local storage but to also have it replicating between servers for backup purposes. Maybe I was going about this the wrong way, but I wanted to have the ability to use the large storage pool (created by the cluster) as a platform for storing VMs as well as have it back everything up on two separate locations of disk. I think DRDB will work here (never used it personally), but I think I'd create a DRDB device for each VM and replicate each one separately so you could have a primary on the remote side running a vm that can be started locally if the remote site blows up and vice-versa. You don't need the added overhead of a cluster filesystem for this. DRDB will certainly add overhead for replicating writes, but this is highly tweakable (consider you're replication write rate, for example, where maybe you're writing to the disk at 100MB/s but only replicating at 10KB/s, thus saving a ton of i/o). To clarify, the disks themselves will be a RAID-5 local to each machine (1 array per machine, 2 in total) with DRBD running between to sort of RAID-1 them over the network. Does that help? I want to take the local RAID from both machines and turn it into a SAN. Cool, that's fine, but don't say "SAN" here, they're different. John -- John Madden Sr. UNIX Systems Engineer Ivy Tech Community College of Indiana jmadden@xxxxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users
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