Quoting David Dyer-Bennet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > > On Thu, September 25, 2008 14:43, Barry Brimer wrote: > > Quoting David Dyer-Bennet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > > > >> > >> On Thu, September 25, 2008 14:13, Barry Brimer wrote: > >> > >> > Is the service itself active? > >> > > >> > Do you have a line above these that says something like: > >> > > >> > virtual example.com { > >> > active = 1 > >> > >> Yes; and it shows as active in Piranha, too, and nannys got started for > >> the three real servers. It just didn't tell ipvs to actually route to > >> them. > > > > What happens when you run the service check by hand? > > Don't know what "service check" means (guessing you mean what nanny does > to decide a service is working?). But raising the issue of whether > something below the level of what I thought I had changed was changed has > been somewhat productive. > > While I can ping the realservers, turns out I can't access the services on > them. Don't know why yet, but that's something I can investigate. (Still > don't see why it changed when it did; but if I can't access the services > from the lvs, then it can't route to them either, and the nanny checks > will fail, etc., so that must be fixed before anything can work.) I will > chase this down, and either fix it or have different questions :-). Thank > you! > > > Do you have your IP addresses for different services on different devices > > Yes, they're on separate devices, and they're set up the same was as when > it worked yesterday, so I don't think it's anything that basic that's > wrong. > > I think I've been mis-understanding the startup order. Is this what > really happens: > > 1. pulse started > > 2. lvsd started by pulse > > 3. nanny for each (active) realserver started by lvsd > > 4. When a nanny gets a successful test, either it or lvsd *then* enables > that realserver for receiving traffic > > That would explain why I have nannys running, but no realservers listed by > ipvsadm. I expected things to start out on, and only get turned off if > the nannys failed; but in fact doing what I listed above makes more sense, > it's better if you *have* a nanny to make sure the nanny reports ok > *first*.
By service check, I mean the send or send program line which "expects" the result of the "expect" line to determine that the service is "up". IME, ipvsadm does not show a host (even at startup) until it is successful from the send/send program / expect tests. Barry _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos