> Am 01.07.2018 um 01:42 schrieb Michael Knill 
> <michael.kn...@ipcsolutions.com.au>:
> 
> Hi Group
>  
> Tell me if I am totally off track but I have been wondering for a while how I 
> can do Astlinux HA e.g. having a primary and standby box
> So what do you need for this:
>       • Monitoring of the primary Astlinux server
>       • Run a script if connectivity lost
>       • Some sort of timers to prevent flapping
>       • Email notification to indicate that it has occurred
>       • Config sync between the two
>  
> When I considered the list, isn’t 1) to 4) actually already available with 
> WAN Failover? Your monitor IP is the address of the other box?
> Can you failover to the same interface?
>  
> Interesting thought!
>  
> Regards
> Michael Knill

Hi Michael,

for "real" HA clusters usually a "Virtual IP" is used (where the SIP clients 
connect to), which is then "switched" to to real IP of the actice node.
For Linux there are a few solutions:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Address_Redundancy_Protocol
https://github.com/jedisct1/UCarp  (though the "ucarp.org" domain seem to now 
go to some Asian site)
https://serverfault.com/questions/276170/alternatives-to-heartbeat-pacemaker-and-corosync

I also got requests from a few customers a while ago, and we found it simpler 
just to use 2 identical boxes configure them the equally and put one offline in 
the shelf.
In case of problem just switch the boxes. 
The only issue is to keep the boxes in sync (because both have the same IP). 
We used rsync to a server share, switched of the actice box for a few minutes 
afterhours and occacionally synced the offline box to that (we excluded a few 
hardware/MAC related files). 
You also can give them 2 different IPs, and change the IP in case of a problem.

But to be honest: I do Asterisk/AstLinux stuff since 2007, but except an old 
water damage case (with only one net5501 under water that survived, but not the 
internal ISDN PCI card), I never had an issue that an AstLinux box broke and we 
really needed the Failover, except for testing, that it actually works as 
expected :-).
In all other problem cases either the power was down, the ISP/internet 
connection was down/had issues or the SIP provider had problems :-).

Michael

http://www.mksolutions.info




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