On 07/05/2010 23:20, Smith, Mark wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Pid [mailto:p...@pidster.com]
There are a couple of linux load balancer projects that might work, if
you can ditch HTTPD. E.g. www.linuxvirtualserver.org
We use LVS to balance load across our Apache layers already, so
Mark Thomas wrote:
On 07/05/2010 23:20, Smith, Mark wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Pid [mailto:p...@pidster.com]
There are a couple of linux load balancer projects that might work, if
you can ditch HTTPD. E.g. www.linuxvirtualserver.org
We use LVS to balance load across our Apache
You are my hero. The first feature on mod_cluster's webpage I exactly
what I'm looking for. Thank you.
I'll report here after I've had some time to check it out.
-Mark
On May 9, 2010, at 2:53 AM, Mark Thomas ma...@apache.org wrote:
On 07/05/2010 23:20, Smith, Mark wrote:
-Original
I'm trying to re-architect our websites to work in EC2. One of the biggest
problems I'm running into is the dynamic nature of hostnames and IPs.
Is there a way to tell mod_jk that it has a new worker on a new hostname
without having to reload Apache? Similarly, to remove an existing worker
On May 7, 2010, at 1:16 PM, Smith, Mark wrote:
I'm trying to re-architect our websites to work in EC2. One of the biggest
problems I'm running into is the dynamic nature of hostnames and IPs.
I have the same problem on a VMware vSphere-based virtual private cloud...
Is there a way to tell
On 07/05/2010 21:28, Smith, Mark wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Jon Brisbin [mailto:jon.bris...@npcinternational.com]
On May 7, 2010, at 1:16 PM, Smith, Mark wrote:
Is there a way to tell mod_jk that it has a new worker on a new
hostname without having to reload Apache? Similarly,
-Original Message-
From: Pid [mailto:p...@pidster.com]
Another option is to configure mod_jk for static hostnames then use
either /etc/hosts or an actual DNS cluster to change the mappings.
This relies on the application in question honoring DNS TTLs (hint:
Java doesn't by
On 07/05/2010 22:58, Smith, Mark wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Pid [mailto:p...@pidster.com]
...isn't that what I just described? Or is there a part to your
suggestion I missed?
It is. :)
I hadn't grokked the whole thread before I started writing the answer
and missed the last
-Original Message-
From: Pid [mailto:p...@pidster.com]
There are a couple of linux load balancer projects that might work, if
you can ditch HTTPD. E.g. www.linuxvirtualserver.org
We use LVS to balance load across our Apache layers already, so I'm quite
familiar with it.
It does do