Aniket, Do keep us posted on the results. It would be interesting to learn from your findings.
thanks mahadev On Wed, Dec 14, 2011 at 10:54 PM, Aniket Chakrabarti <[email protected]> wrote: > I'm testing the latency with different ratio of read/write request mix with > different sized ensemble. 15 is the max ensemble size I will test. > > Aniket > > > On 12/15/2011 1:35 AM, Patrick Hunt wrote: >> >> On Wed, Dec 14, 2011 at 10:31 PM, Aniket Chakrabarti >> <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>> Yes, I think whirr will work in my case. >>> >>> I am actually trying to create around 15 node replicated zookeeper group. >>> And I have to create around 10 such groups. >>> >> Interesting. Why a 15 server ensemble? >> >>> So from what I understood is I basically have to run the "whirr launch >>> cluster" command 10 times? >> >> Yes. That will do it. >> >> Patrick >> >>> On 12/15/2011 12:27 AM, Patrick Hunt wrote: >>>> >>>> Take a look at whirr. http://whirr.apache.org/ >>>> >>>> That said, it's not clear to me what you mean. "every time a new >>>> instance is spawned zk will run on it". Surely you don't mean a zk >>>> server (the max you might run is say 5 or perhaps 7 servers), however >>>> if it's a client then you'd be including the zk jar with your >>>> application code. Perhaps you could elaborate? >>>> >>>> Patrick >>>> >>>> On Wed, Dec 14, 2011 at 8:44 PM, Aniket Chakrabarti >>>> <[email protected]> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> Hi, >>>>> >>>>> I need some suggestion on how to automate zookeeper deployment on EC2 >>>>> instances. I know how to run zookeeper on a single EC2 instance >>>>> manually. >>>>> But I want to automate such that every time a new instance is spawned, >>>>> zookeeper will be run on it. There will be around 200 such instances. >>>>> >>>>> Any pointers will be helpful. >>>>> >>>>> Thanks, >>>>> Aniket
