> Jokes (?) aside; Red Hat and SUSE both have paid teams that make sure the > HA software works well. So if you're new to HA, I strongly recommend > sticking with one of those two, and SUSE is what you mentioned. If you really > want to go to BSD or something else, I would recommend learning HA on > SUSE/RHEL and then, after you know what config works for you, migrate to > the target OS. That way you have only one set of variables at a time. >
I don't know how "new" I am. I've been using HA for a decade or so. Started with heartbeat V1. Deploying a Corosync+Pacemaker+DRBD cluster is pretty much a slam dunk for me these days. However, there's certainly a lot more that I DON'T know than I DO know. --Eric _______________________________________________ Users mailing list: Users@clusterlabs.org http://lists.clusterlabs.org/mailman/listinfo/users Project Home: http://www.clusterlabs.org Getting started: http://www.clusterlabs.org/doc/Cluster_from_Scratch.pdf Bugs: http://bugs.clusterlabs.org