On Mon, Mar 7, 2011 at 1:36 AM, David Brian Chait <dch...@invenda.com> wrote: > >> On Mon, Mar 7, 2011 at 4:40 AM, Tim Dunphy <bluethu...@gmail.com> wrote: >> however for my purpose open and free HAProxy remains best choice!! > >> +1 for HAProxy; excellent piece of software. > > It really depends on your needs, if you are building a production ops > environment then the last thing that you would want would be an > unsupported/home grown solution. You need to consider the potential risks > involved in implementing a poorly understood / virtually unsupported solution > that in all likelihood only you would understand vs. a standard solution with > an SLA behind it and an upgrade path going forward.
Or in implementing an expensive, single point of failure third party device that requires a centralized control infrastructure. It can turn out to be a *very* expensive single point of failure, easily screwed up by a single upgrade or a single power supply issues or a failure to do failover networking to that device properly. Round-robin DNS is also, unfortunately, often mishandled. People mistake changing the ordering of listed A records for round-robin and, to quote Wikipedia: > There is no standard procedure for deciding which address will be used by the requesting application. No such procedure. Zip, zero, nada, it's all client dependent. And if one of the IP's is on the same VLAN as the requesting host, you're *especially* likely to get all the traffic locked to that host, and DNS caches when you disable an IP can take rather unpredictable amounts of time to expire because every smart aleck downstream is doing their own caching and passing it along. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos