[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-users] 2 Servers: Exact Copy
On 03/09/2010, at 5:23 PM, Jangita wrote: > On 02/09/2010 6:29 p, Greg Woods wrote: > >> >>> What you are >>> talking about is a HA (High Availability) setup >> >> If what you want is really just one server backed by a hot spare, then >> you don't need Xen at all. The easiest way to do this is using heartbeat >> for high availability and DRBD to replicate the data. Heartbeat v1 does >> this very well and is fairly easy to understand. Unfortunately, all the >> HA developers want everyone to run the latest version of heartbeat (v2 >> or v3) or corosync, with pacemaker and despite what they sometimes say, >> this is a very large basketball to swallow. It is massive overkill just >> for a pair of hot spare servers with a shared IP address. But it is >> difficult to find anyone who will help you with heartbeat v1 since it is >> "obsolete", but you may be able to figure it out yourself. >> >> The official documentation for HA on Linux is at >> http://www.linux-ha.org/ and http://www.drbd.org/ >> >> --Greg > Thanks I heard of remus http://wiki.xensource.com/xenwiki/Remus that could do > something similar. Let me look at your suggestions. Many thanks to the list. > If you want the fail over to be transparent to the end users then Remus is what you're looking for and (I think) is included in Xen 4.0.1. Kemari is a similar project. These provide the same sort of redundancy as vmware fault tolerance. Heartbeat and DRBD will provide a failover server which can start automatically if the active server fails, but it will look like a server restart to end users. This is more akin to vmware high availability, but doesn't sound like what you were after. Jeff _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users
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