On 11/1/2011 12:08 PM, Jesus arteche wrote:
> Sorry, maybe trhe description it is too vague...my problem it is that I
> have my servers virtualized, and I want to create and environment of high
> availability. For example in http traffic, the problem is I can create a
> load balancer that balance the traffic to the servers...but this  load
> balancer server hasta bandwidth limit, and I want to expand this limit..

Can you elaborate on what exactly is imposing this bandwidth limit?  You
need to provide a lot more detail about your setup so we can understand
what the actual problem is.  Start with the hardware involved, whether a
single machine or a group of machines, what virtual platform you use
(KVM/Xen/etc), and what application you are dealing with (http, smtp,
imap, other?).  Are you attempting to increase inbound or outbound
bandwidth, or both?

-- 
Stan



> On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at 6:05 AM, Stan Hoeppner <s...@hardwarefreak.com>wrote:
> 
>> On 10/31/2011 6:00 PM, Jesus arteche wrote:
>>> Hey guys,
>>>
>>> Do you know if it is possible to make Ethernet bonding between several
>>> machines?
>>
>> If I correctly understand what you're asking, no, it is not possible.
>>
>>> are there some way the create a high availability load balancer with
>>> several machines whit a bandwidth equal the sum of all the bandwidths ??
>>
>> It would be best at this point if you described what you're trying to
>> accomplish and allow us to give recommendations.  There are many types
>> of load balancing, from layer 2 through 7.  To properly answer your
>> question we need to know exactly what you are trying to load balance,
>> and to what end.
>>
>> For example, the most common types of load balancing are for SMTP, HTTP,
>> POP, and IMAP.  Load balancing SMTP simply requires multiple equal
>> priority MX records.  Load balancing HTTP and POP usually only requires
>> round robin DNS.  Load balancing IMAP may require a specialized director
>> server or proxy, especially in the case where the IMAP clients are
>> webmail servers.
>>
>> --
>> Stan
>>
>>
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> 


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