On 2008-Aug-12 18:55:52 +0800, Eugene Grosbein <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >On Tue, Aug 12, 2008 at 12:37:15PM +0200, Marian Hettwer wrote: > >> I'm using lagg(4) on some of our servers and I'm just wondering how the >> failover is implemented.
As far as I can tell, not especially well :-(. It doesn't seem to detect much short of layer 1 failure. In particular, shutting down the switch port will not trigger a failover. >> The manpage isn't quite clear: >> >> failover Sends and receives traffic only through the master port. >> If >> the master port becomes unavailable, the next active port >> is >> used. The first interface added is the master port; any >> interfaces added after that are used as failover devices. >> >> What is meant by "becomes unavailable"? Is it just the physical link which >> needs to become unavailable to trigger a failover? It seems to be, >Yes. It seems you need lacp protocol described later in the manual. Actually, lacp and failover are used differently: lacp is primarily used to increase the bandwidth between the host and the switch whilst failover is used for redundancy. With lacp, all the physical interfaces must be connected to a single switch. With failover, the physical interfaces will normally be connected to different switches (so a failure in one switch will not cause the loss of all connectivity. -- Peter Jeremy Please excuse any delays as the result of my ISP's inability to implement an MTA that is either RFC2821-compliant or matches their claimed behaviour.
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