OCFS probably provides protection at the file level, but mysqld undoubtedly
keeps some critical information in its own internal memory. The two MySQL
daemons are oblivious to each other, so that memory-resident information
will not be synchronized.

Regards,

Jerry Schwartz
Global Information Incorporated
195 Farmington Ave.
Farmington, CT 06032

860.674.8796 / FAX: 860.674.8341


> -----Original Message-----
> From: Stefan Onken [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Tuesday, November 28, 2006 11:58 AM
> To: mysql@lists.mysql.com
> Subject: Re: mysql on a NAS
>
> Am Dienstag, 28. November 2006 15:21 schrieb Gerald L. Clark:
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > > Hello,
> > >
> > > We recently moved to a new "cluster" plattform, setup by one
> > > external IT company
> > >
> > > at present (early stage):
> > > 2 XEON computers with a fibre channel link to a Network
> > > Storage. The mysql directories are located on the Network
> > > storage and mounted into /var/lib/mysql on each machine. So,
> > > every machine running an own mysql server, but sharing the
> > > directory. The used file system is OCFS (Oracle Cluster File
> > > System)
> >
> > You cannot do this.
>
> Can you explain this a little bit more ? I am not the guy who set it
> up, so I would like to go back them and say "Well, You cannot do
> this, because... " :)
>
> Thanks
> stonki
>
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