On Tue, 12 Sep 2006, Tom Kavanaugh wrote:
Hello,
I am newbie to this area, so pls excuse me if my questions are basic.
I have a bunch of VNC servers that users login to submit
jobs to a compute grid. Currently, users login to
individual login servers, and thus some login servers are
more loaded than others.
I know this isn't why you posted, but how much of a load is
a login causing on a login server, particularly when all
it's going is submitting batch jobs to a grid. Couldn't one
login server handle 1000 logins?
Now that I'm thinking about it, vnc is the program that
allows you to display a windows window on a linux client.
Are the login servers all windows, sending windowing
commands etc back to (linux?) clients? In that case the
login servers have a fair bit of work to do.
Also, users have no idea which of the VNC servers are more
loaded and hence to avoid. I am looking to build a single
login server that a user can login. And, then that virtual
I presume you mean "single login virtual server"
login server can direct the user login to another real
login server.
Can someone tell me if LVS can do this?
don't know
Has it been implemented already?
did you look in the HOWTO?
Presumably there are multiple ports involved in the vnc
connection. For LVS to work, the tcpip server end has to be
on the vnc server (windows doesn't most network stuff
peer-to-peer, rather than client-server like the internet -
Bill Gates didn't think the internet was worth bothering
about, at least till he saw that W95 would be a flop unless
he could enable it for tcpip). Or else all the packets have
to be encapsulated in a single port tcpip stream, like an
ssh connection. Can you vnc through ssh (you've got to be
able to do this)?
Do you know what ports are involved?
why are your login servers vnc/windows?
Joe
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Joseph Mack NA3T EME(B,D), FM05lw North Carolina
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Homepage http://www.austintek.com/ It's GNU/Linux!
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