Mladen Turk wrote:
No. It works with any protocol.
Proxy balancer://mycluster
BalancerMember ajp://hotstandby status=disabled
BalancerMember ajp://node1 redirect=hotstandby
BalancerMember ajp://node2 redirect=hotstandby
...
BalancerMember ajp://nodeN redirect=hotstandby
/Proxy
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Mladen Turk wrote:
No. It works with any protocol.
Proxy balancer://mycluster
BalancerMember ajp://hotstandby status=disabled
BalancerMember ajp://node1 redirect=hotstandby
BalancerMember ajp://node2 redirect=hotstandby
...
BalancerMember ajp://nodeN
Mladen Turk wrote:
Right, sorry :)
status=d or status=D
(a single letter).
there is additional stopped option (s), so you can
concat those, (eg. status=SD means stopped and disabled).
If you edit httpd.conf and restart apache then you add
+ or - prefixes.
For example if status was disabled you
Hello,
using Apache 2.2.0/mod_proxy_balancer, is it possible to configure a
proxy balancer with two balancer members, where one of the two only gets
the requests, if the other one fails?
In mod_jk that was possible using local_worker_only, but with
mod_proxy_balancer I have not yet understood
Actually, dev@httpd.apache.org is best, since that is where
the development of this module is being done. I have changed
the email headers accordingly.
A sort of warm standby is something that I had planned to
work into the balancer code post 2.2.1.
On Jan 24, 2006, at 11:14 AM, [EMAIL
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
using Apache 2.2.0/mod_proxy_balancer, is it possible to configure a
proxy balancer with two balancer members, where one of the two only gets
the requests, if the other one fails?
Sure, use status=disabled and redirect=xxx.
So... BalancerMember ajp://xxx