Hello

In that case (failover of LDAP Server), you can use any local file system on a 
failover device (mounted only on the active node) with heartbeat or other 
cluster managers.

I was looking into OCFSv2 for failover clusters also. I expected to get rid of 
the cluster manager controling the volumes. However the OCFS' own cluster 
manager is less mature, so better go with Hearteat, Lifekeeper Redhat Cluster 
or any other established failover product. That also solves the mmap problem.

Gruss
Bernd 

-----Original Message-----
From: Hartmut Wöhrle [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, December 06, 2006 7:48 PM
To: Eckenfels. Bernd; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Ocfs2-users] OCFS2 and berkeley database files

Am Mittwoch, 6. Dezember 2006 01:04 schrieben Sie:
> It is IMHO not a good idea (not needed, less reliable, much slower) to 
> cluster LDAP servers like that. Just use a local file system on each 
> server and use replication.
>
Of course, but if you want to setup a failover cluster with an active-passive 
configuration, it is a possibility to use a setup with a shared volume without 
sync.

> Gruss
> Bernd
>

Grüsse aus dem Süden
Hartmut


--
===========================================

    Hartmut Woehrle
    EMail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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