Building a Two-Node Linux Cluster with Heartbeat
Commercial products from Red Hat, TurboLinux and PolyServe use the same concept of IP aliasing. When the primary server goes down, the backup server will pick up the same aliasing IP so that high availability can be achieved.
The cluster product from PolyServe is very sophisticated. It has support on SAN (server area network) and is capable of more than two nodes. It is very easy to install and easy to configure. I successfully configured the trial version without reading any documentation through a windows monitoring client. However, sophistication comes with a price tag, and the software costs more than a thousand dollars for a two-node cluster. The 30-day trial version cluster will stop after two hours, and it is not much fun for testing.
The cluster product from TurboLinux needs some fine-tuning. The installation documentation is confusing (or maybe they simply don't want people to do-it-themselves). The web configuration tool is unstable; the cgi script will crash whenever the user clicks the reload or refresh button. And of course, as a commercial product, it comes with a high price tag.
Linux is very stable and reliable, and it is quite common to have our servers up and running for a few hundred days at a time. Heartbeat works fine in my tests, and if you are looking for a product with higher availability for a small business or education institution, Heartbeat is definitely a perfect option.
email: leung@uwinnipeg.ca
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Comments
Re: defrag?
I have never even heard of running defrag for a windows disk problem and no one I know has ever run defrag for that purpose. Defrag is for consolidating data not fixing errors. Why would you even suggest doing this???? Scandisk is the standard tool that everyone uses and runs automatically most times you have a lockup or improper shutdown.
Please for anyone reading the above message do NOT run defrag if you are getting disk errors. Run scandisk. If you continue to have problems your disk may be going bad.
Re: defrag?
I try not to use Windows, but the last time I ran defrag (win98), scandisk was first invoked automatically.
I also thought this article would be about clusters (a la Beowolf), at least based on the title. Anyway, It was easy to read and I learned something new!
(linux.com wouldn't let me log in)
apache cluster on san
hi,
ok heartbeat works great - really appreciated ! and
i am amazed the way it worked perfectly.
how do we mount the san partition for that IP service in active-active apache cluster.
do i make an entry in /etc/fstab or is that a sin ?
I mea i need to mount /var/www/html on /dev/sdc1 . so i do i mak a entry in fstab file ?
gops
apache cluster on san
hi,
ok heartbeat works great - really appreciated ! and
i am amazed the way it worked perfectly.
how do we mount the san partition for that IP service in active-active apache cluster.
do i make an entry in /etc/fstab or is that a sin ?
gops
No Separate Storage?
Hi,
so it means I have two Linux computers, I can have Cluster installed. So I do not need any separate storage device right?
How shared storage work in this case?
Thanks,
Data Sheet
Mistaken config
Why do you assign in hosts file "node1" and "node2" if you will use "atm1" and "cluster1" ?
if you choose this way "auth errors" will happen, all clusters will be in master role, it is conflict, so assign as below
in ha.cf on both clusters
node node1
node node2
in haresources on both clusters (if you want node1 to be master)
node1 virtualaddress httpd
and you must set authkeys files the same on all clusters otherwise it will not start.
auth 1
1 md5 "mysecret"
and for professional HA cluster we need null modem cable, on NIC perspective SPOFs will load extra bandwidth. For storage networks that is not permittable.
Thanks,