Search String: Display: Description: Sort:

Results:

References: [ +subject:/^(?:^\s*(re|sv|fwd|fw)[\[\]\d]*[:>-]+\s*)*\[lvs\-users\]\s+ldirectord\s+question\s*$/: 10 ]

Total 10 documents matching your query.

1. Re: [lvs-users] ldirectord question (score: 1)
Author: Anders Henke <anders.henke@xxxxxxxx>
Date: Mon, 23 Jun 2014 15:15:04 +0200
Hi Ilo, haproxy, pound, pen or any other reverse proxy softwares do terminate the incoming connection at the loadbalancer and theoretically could enable that kind of switching at TCP level (by re-cre
/html/lvs-users/2014-06/msg00022.html (20,027 bytes)

2. Re: [lvs-users] ldirectord question (score: 1)
Author: Ilo Lorusso <IloL@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Mon, 23 Jun 2014 12:12:46 +0000
Hi Anders, Thank you for your detailed explanation, With regards to your statement regarding alternate load balancers , can I ask the names of these other load balancers ? sounds like they could help
/html/lvs-users/2014-06/msg00021.html (16,661 bytes)

3. Re: [lvs-users] ldirectord question (score: 1)
Author: Anders Henke <anders.henke@xxxxxxxx>
Date: Mon, 23 Jun 2014 12:37:13 +0200
By using connection synchronization (ipvsadm --start-daemon), you can do the very same for a loadbalancer like what firewalls do for moving TCP states between failover pairs: your "active" loadbalanc
/html/lvs-users/2014-06/msg00020.html (18,010 bytes)

4. Re: [lvs-users] ldirectord question (score: 1)
Author: Anders Henke <anders.henke@xxxxxxxx>
Date: Mon, 23 Jun 2014 12:31:27 +0200
Short answer: no way. Long answer: it's much more complicated than you think. ldirectord does "only" configure IPVS, so you're looking for the way IPVS and TCP do work, ldirectord isn't much of an is
/html/lvs-users/2014-06/msg00019.html (15,131 bytes)

5. Re: [lvs-users] ldirectord question (score: 1)
Author: Aaron West <aaron@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Fri, 20 Jun 2014 11:17:50 +0100
I'm not really sure how to achieve that. When using DR mode I'd imagine the TCP state would also need to be synchronized on the real servers for something like that to work. _________________________
/html/lvs-users/2014-06/msg00017.html (9,903 bytes)

6. Re: [lvs-users] ldirectord question (score: 1)
Author: Ilo Lorusso <IloL@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Fri, 20 Jun 2014 08:02:16 +0000
Thanks for the feedback, Once we have scheduled new connections to the new real server and we have this existing connection using quiescence , Why can't we move that existing connection to another re
/html/lvs-users/2014-06/msg00016.html (14,963 bytes)

7. Re: [lvs-users] ldirectord question (score: 1)
Author: Aaron West <aaron@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Fri, 20 Jun 2014 08:30:27 +0100
Thanks Simon, I forgot entirely about quiescence... _______________________________________________ Please read the documentation before posting - it's available at: http://www.linuxvirtualserver.org
/html/lvs-users/2014-06/msg00015.html (13,784 bytes)

8. Re: [lvs-users] ldirectord question (score: 1)
Author: Simon Horman <horms@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Fri, 20 Jun 2014 10:06:36 +0900
Hi, It is possible, though not necessarily desirable, to avoid breaking existing connections by using quiescence. On the LVS side this is implemented by setting a server weight to zero, which allows
/html/lvs-users/2014-06/msg00014.html (12,930 bytes)

9. Re: [lvs-users] ldirectord question (score: 1)
Author: Aaron West <aaron@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Thu, 19 Jun 2014 18:20:02 +0100
Hi Ilo, To my knowledge a real server failing a health check done by an agent such as ldirectord/keepalived is pulled from the LVS table. This will break any established connections to this server. A
/html/lvs-users/2014-06/msg00013.html (11,020 bytes)

10. [lvs-users] ldirectord question (score: 1)
Author: Ilo Lorusso <IloL@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Thu, 19 Jun 2014 15:42:58 +0000
Hi , I have a general question of how ldirectord works, I have setup my virtual service and real servers I have an active connection and traffic is flowing through to the real server perfectly as sho
/html/lvs-users/2014-06/msg00011.html (9,423 bytes)


This search system is powered by Namazu