Am 02.06.17 um 11:35 schrieb Raphaël Enrici: > Hi, > > if you are in a simple case where you only need some kind of active/passive > solution without big scaling needs on a > Linux system, look for "haproxy keepalived" on your favorite search engine, > you'll find many articles explaining the way > to go. > > If you need HA and horizontal scaling, take a look at the article from > Vincent Bernat here: > https://vincent.bernat.im/en/blog/2013-exabgp-highavailability > > HTH, > Raph > > > Le 2017-06-02 10:34, Jiafan Zhou a écrit : >> Hi, >> >> Haproxy ensures the HA for real servers such as httpd. However, in the >> case of haproxy itself, if it fails, then it requires another instance >> of haproxy to be ready. Is there any High Availability solution for >> haproxy itself? >> >> Regards, >> Jiafan > > Hi, keepalived works very well. i have a setup with haproxy running on two VM which are connected via keepalived. the node (to be exact the virtual IP address) is switched if i stop haproxy on my master. then haproxy on my fallback node will "jump in". if i restart haproxy on master the IP is switched back... this works very stable in the last years.
the only thing which i could optimize is the healthcheck in keepalived. at the moment i do a simple "is the process running" (killall -0 haproxy) test. i think this could be optimized. Eg. don't know if it would recognise a hanging haproxy process correctly. maybe it would be better to do some http access and look at the answer (eg. do i get an "OK" back) or check the response time and switch if it tooks too long... Markus

