On Thu, 24 Aug 2000, Shao Zhang wrote:
> We are an isp here and we would like to set up two webservers
> that are completely tranparent(rsync daily).
>
> We will only be using one webserver to server all the pages, but
> if it goes down, we would like the second webserver
On Thu, 24 Aug 2000, Shao Zhang wrote:
> We are an isp here and we would like to set up two webservers
> that are completely tranparent(rsync daily).
>
> We will only be using one webserver to server all the pages, but
> if it goes down, we would like the second webserver
You could put a linux router infront of them with an ethernet
connection to each server and then another out to your main router.
Make a bash script to check that the primary is up, if its not have it
change the route to go out the other interface, which would be the
secondary.
--
Kevin - [EMAI
We do that here. But the difference is it's not totally automated. If the
primary server goes down for whatever reason, our admin's pager will go off,
he lives 6 minutes from the office and 7 minutes from the backup server in
another building. Simply he goes and get's the backup server, restarts it
You could put a linux router infront of them with an ethernet
connection to each server and then another out to your main router.
Make a bash script to check that the primary is up, if its not have it
change the route to go out the other interface, which would be the
secondary.
--
Kevin - [EMA
We do that here. But the difference is it's not totally automated. If the
primary server goes down for whatever reason, our admin's pager will go off,
he lives 6 minutes from the office and 7 minutes from the backup server in
another building. Simply he goes and get's the backup server, restarts i
Hi,
ridgey [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> you could put the primary name record on the primary webserver and have the
> www pointing to itself, then put the secondary name record on the secondary
> sever and have its www pointing to itself, so when the primary goes down,
> the secondary will kick in,
Hi,
Yes. But I would like to know a way to let the backup server
automatically take over when the primary web server is down.
Thanks.
Shao.
Robert Davidson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> We are also a small ISP and do exactly that with one of our vital servers.
> We used rsyn
On Thu, Aug 24, 2000 at 12:30:12PM +1000, Shao Zhang wrote:
> Is there any programs out there that does this?
Take a look at:
http://www.linux-ha.org/
http://www.linuxvirtualserver.org/
http://ultramonkey.sourceforge.net/
http://www.eddieware.org/
--
Luca Filipozzi
[dpkg] We are the apt.
Shao,
We are also a small ISP and do exactly that with one of our vital servers.
We used rsync for this.
Regards,
Robert Davidson.
On Thu, Aug 24, 2000 at 12:30:12PM +1000, Shao Zhang wrote:
> Hi,
> This is not a really load balancing question, but similar sort
> of thing.
>
>
Hi,
ridgey [[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
> you could put the primary name record on the primary webserver and have the
> www pointing to itself, then put the secondary name record on the secondary
> sever and have its www pointing to itself, so when the primary goes down,
> the secondary will kick i
Hi,
Yes. But I would like to know a way to let the backup server
automatically take over when the primary web server is down.
Thanks.
Shao.
Robert Davidson [[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
> We are also a small ISP and do exactly that with one of our vital servers.
> We used r
On Thu, Aug 24, 2000 at 12:30:12PM +1000, Shao Zhang wrote:
> Is there any programs out there that does this?
Take a look at:
http://www.linux-ha.org/
http://www.linuxvirtualserver.org/
http://ultramonkey.sourceforge.net/
http://www.eddieware.org/
--
Luca Filipozzi
[dpkg] We are the apt.
Shao,
We are also a small ISP and do exactly that with one of our vital servers.
We used rsync for this.
Regards,
Robert Davidson.
On Thu, Aug 24, 2000 at 12:30:12PM +1000, Shao Zhang wrote:
> Hi,
> This is not a really load balancing question, but similar sort
> of thing.
>
>
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