wrote:
JK 1.2.14 with Tomcat 5.0.28 and Apache 2.0.52 on Linux RH AS4,
Tomcats are installed on different machines. I cannot get a load
balancing worker to work. mod_jk forwards request to tomcat just fine
as long as I don't try and use a load balancing worker in my
worker.list. The mod_jk.log
and balance_workers take precendence.
Steve Dodge wrote:
JK 1.2.14 with Tomcat 5.0.28 and Apache 2.0.52 on Linux RH AS4,
Tomcats are installed on different machines. I cannot get a load
balancing worker to work. mod_jk forwards request to tomcat just fine
as long as I don't try and use
Steve Dodge wrote:
JK 1.2.14 with Tomcat 5.0.28 and Apache 2.0.52 on Linux RH AS4,
Tomcats are installed on different machines. I cannot get a load
balancing worker to work. mod_jk forwards request to tomcat just fine
as long as I don't try and use a load balancing worker in my
worker.list
JK 1.2.14 with Tomcat 5.0.28 and Apache 2.0.52 on Linux RH AS4, Tomcats
are installed on different machines. I cannot get a load balancing
worker to work. mod_jk forwards request to tomcat just fine as long as I
don't try and use a load balancing worker in my worker.list. The
mod_jk.log says
I am testing a load balancing configuration with Tomcat and IIS using the
isapi_redirector. My configuration works if I have a single worker defined
in my workers.properties file but it fails if I try to add a second worker
(ie, I change the balance_workers entry near the bottom of the file
Hi,
I'm using the domain property in the same situation as the one
discussed in this thread. Any reason why I shouldn't use the domain
property and rely on the worker names instead?
Thanks in advance,
-- Edgar Alves
Rainer Jung wrote:
That should not work!
The correct way to configure
Edgar Alves wrote:
Hi,
I'm using the domain property in the same situation as the one
discussed in this thread. Any reason why I shouldn't use the domain
property and rely on the worker names instead?
Domain is supposed to be used with multiple workers sharing the
same jvmRoute having
Hi Mladen,
I've used the domain property because it seemed the more general
approach (i.e., supports clusters but can be used with a single worker).
What this thread got me curious about is if using the domain property in
this fashion is officially supported, or on the other hand if it can
only
Hi,
I thought I had this sussed but it seems I haven't :( 2 tomcats, 1 machine, JK
to balance with stick sessions. The following configuration works in that JK
routes requests to both the tomcats and so on.
The issue is that if I look in the access logs for each tomcat I can see that 1
Allistair Crossley wrote:
Hi,
I thought I had this sussed but it seems I haven't :( 2 tomcats, 1 machine, JK to balance with stick sessions. The following configuration works in that JK routes requests to both the tomcats and so on.
Did you set the jvmRoute=tomcat1 inside server.xml Engine
Hi Mladen,
Damn, no, I didn't :) Thanks very much indeed, seems to have done the trick :)
Cheers, Allistair.
-Original Message-
From: Mladen Turk [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 18 August 2005 17:17
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: load balancing 2 tomcats on 1 machine question
OK, thanks Mladen: I have to correct myself.
1) Traditional use
Until mod_jk 1.2.6 there was no concept of domains. You had to specify the
worker name to be exactly the same as the jvmRoute to make sticky sessions
work. This way of configuring stickyness is wel known to mod_jk users.
2) I
Hi -
I'm unable to get mod_jk load balancing working. The usual mod_jk setup
works just fine, but using a load balancing worker however, is not.
[Oddly, my webserver crashed during testing of this, but that could very
well be unrelated]
The problem is with user sessions. The instances
Try adding these two lines to worker.properties:
worker.bl_worker_dev.domain=dev_alexis
worker.bl_worker_noah.domain=noah_alexis
-- Edgar Alves
Mott Leroy wrote:
Hi -
I'm unable to get mod_jk load balancing working. The usual mod_jk
setup works just fine, but using a load balancing worker
:
worker.bl_worker_dev.domain=dev_alexis
worker.bl_worker_noah.domain=noah_alexis
-- Edgar Alves
Mott Leroy wrote:
Hi -
I'm unable to get mod_jk load balancing working. The usual mod_jk
setup works just fine, but using a load balancing worker however, is
not. [Oddly, my webserver crashed during
to worker.properties:
worker.bl_worker_dev.domain=dev_alexis
worker.bl_worker_noah.domain=noah_alexis
-- Edgar Alves
Mott Leroy wrote:
Hi -
I'm unable to get mod_jk load balancing working. The usual mod_jk
setup works just fine, but using a load balancing worker however, is
not. [Oddly, my webserver crashed
in a second (nother thread)..
Noah
Edgar Alves wrote:
Try adding these two lines to worker.properties:
worker.bl_worker_dev.domain=dev_alexis
worker.bl_worker_noah.domain=noah_alexis
-- Edgar Alves
Mott Leroy wrote:
Hi -
I'm unable to get mod_jk load balancing working. The usual mod_jk
setup
Hi Chaps,
If anyone is interested, I blogged last night on my experience setting up 2
tomcats on 1 server and then load balancing them with JK 1.2, and tested that
bringing 1 down, and then back up did not lose any requests.
This for my web application is an ideal way to avoid downtime
Allistair Crossley wrote:
Hi Chaps,
If anyone is interested, I blogged last night on my experience setting up ...
It would be great if you provide a link to your blog :)
Regards,
Mladen.
-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL
From one of Allistair's posts yesterday:
www.adcworks.com/blog
Mladen Turk wrote:
Allistair Crossley wrote:
Hi Chaps,
If anyone is interested, I blogged last night on my experience setting
up ...
It would be great if you provide a link to your blog :)
Regards,
Mladen.
Oops! :)
http://www.adcworks.com/blog/index.php/archives/2005/08/03/load-balancing-with-tomcat-55-and-jk-12/
Cheers, Allistair.
-Original Message-
From: Mladen Turk [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 04 August 2005 12:42
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: Blog: JK1.2 load balancing
Hi,
I hv clustered 2 Tomcat (version 5.0.18) instances on 2 physically
different machines A and B.
Individually accessible as
http://machineA:8080 http://machinea:8080/ and
http://machineB:8080 http://machineb:8080/
I have Apache 2.0.54 installed on machine A and following
is
down - for e.g. when I pull out the network cord.
With clustering enabled I expect my request sent to say machineA
(http://machineA:8080 http://machinea:8080/ ) to be served by the
other tomcat instance.
But this does not happen.
1. Am I missing something? Load balancing?
2. But how
Hi Jeevan,
1. Am I missing something? Load balancing?
Lot of ways to do load balancing :
a. U can use balancer apps, it's bundled on tomcat sample
b. U can use apache with mod_jk
So, yes, you browse to some other URL. For example, if U run the balancer
apps from tomcat, U should be redirected
clear instrcution
on how to get mod_jk working with apache. Can anyone help? I know tomcat
pretty well, but am new to load balancing with apache, so the more detail the
better..
thanks
-B
Yeah, it's a mix of load balancing and clustering.
SNIP - lots of good stuff
Regards,
Will Hartung
([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Thank you for posting that reply, Will.
What load balancing system would you recommend? (Is there some consensus,
cost issues aside, as to what the best type of load
Thanks for the tip, we will look at it.
-Mark
-Original Message-
From: Wade Chandler [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, May 11, 2005 1:40 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: Basic load balancing
Joe Plautz wrote:
From what I understand load balancing is done at the router
From: Harry Mantheakis [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2005 1:51 AM
What load balancing system would you recommend? (Is there some consensus,
cost issues aside, as to what the best type of load balancing system is?)
I wish I could say.
We use a pair of redundant BigIP's from F5
If you can afford it, go with hardware load balancing. it's easier to
setup and configure. it's also more reliable and robust. of course,
you have to open up your wallet and let the money fall out.
if you really want sophisticated load balancing that allows you to
schedule a server to go down, i
Hi,
I have an application server that maintains session and I'd like to make it
scalable. The clients and the application server are communicating using
TCP.
When a client tries to connect, I'd like the load balancer to connect to a
random AppServer node, and from that moment on - that node
Hello
I don't know if this solution is more effictive than the other one (load
balancing by using Apache server with different Tomcat instances)
But the two one don't realise a random access :
-cluster uses rules
-apache uses a simple round-robin scheduling algorithm ; so after a
disconnection
Tomcat 5.0.28
We seem to often have to make minor changes that cause us to have to restart
our tomcat server (the whole server, not just a web application) and this
has lead me to decide to research load balancing. The idea would be to have
two servers that would be exact duplicates. One
From what I understand load balancing is done at the router, where
clustering is a tomcat setup issue.
Joe
Faine, Mark wrote:
Tomcat 5.0.28
We seem to often have to make minor changes that cause us to have to restart
our tomcat server (the whole server, not just a web application) and this
has
Joe Plautz wrote:
From what I understand load balancing is done at the router, where
clustering is a tomcat setup issue.
Joe
Faine, Mark wrote:
Tomcat 5.0.28
We seem to often have to make minor changes that cause us to have to
restart
our tomcat server (the whole server, not just a web
From: Faine, Mark [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, May 11, 2005 11:24 AM
Tomcat 5.0.28
We seem to often have to make minor changes that cause us to have to
restart
our tomcat server (the whole server, not just a web application) and this
has lead me to decide to research load balancing
Am I correct that Tomcat is not setup to do load balancing without the
use of an Apache fronting? The mod_jk module is the best way to
load-balance requests on multiple servers using the Tomcat container,
either standalone or embedded in JBoss?
David L. Whitehurst
Not exactly. Apache itself can't do load balancing. You could use a
dedicated Tomcat instance to loadbalance to backend Tomcats in the same
way as you described using Apache however either way you are still left
with a single point of failure. Neither Tomcat nor Apache can
loadbalance
Filip,
Yes, That would be awesome.
Thanks,
Dan
-Original Message-
From: Filip Hanik - Dev Lists [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Fri 3/11/2005 2:11 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Cc:
Subject: Re: tomcat load-balancing maintenance strategy
:45 AM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: RE: tomcat load-balancing maintenance strategy?
Jim,
Also check the archives for my post on restarting a downed Tomcat
cluster member. This was not working well prior to Tomcat 5.5.8. When
the instance was restarted it would throw exceptions trying to
re
(qwest) [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 08, 2005 10:45 AM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: RE: tomcat load-balancing maintenance strategy?
Jim,
Also check the archives for my post on restarting a downed Tomcat
cluster member. This was not working well prior to Tomcat 5.5.8. When
:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, March 09, 2005 9:46 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: load-balancing
Sng Wee Jim wrote:
I am using IIS 5.0 on Win2k Server edition. Will jk 1.2.9 solve the
issue for IIS too?
IIS and Apache on Windows are single child systems so the runtime data
was already
I am using IIS 5.0 on Win2k Server edition. Will jk 1.2.9 solve the issue for
IIS too?
- Jim
From: Mladen Turk [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wed 3/9/2005 2:30 AM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: load-balancing
Sng Wee Jim wrote:
I am load-balancing
Sng Wee Jim wrote:
I am using IIS 5.0 on Win2k Server edition. Will jk 1.2.9 solve the issue for
IIS too?
IIS and Apache on Windows are single child systems so the runtime data
was already shared among all clients.
I speak here about 1.2.8. Previous versions have lb code broken.
You'll have to
Sng Wee Jim wrote:
1. Is it possible to pass the session information to TomcatA before
shutting down TomcatB? For eg. we want to perform servers upgrade, so we
down TomcatB, upgrade it, start TomcatB, before doing the same to
TomcatA.
This is what a cluster does. See
Hi,
I am load-balancing tomcat 5.0.28 using JK1.2/AJP1.3.
I noticed the loadbalancer virtual JK worker redirect requests to the tomcat
instances in a round-robin fashion, without taking into account which tomcat
has a higher number of active sessions.
For eg
: Monday, March 07, 2005 10:50 PM
To: tomcat-user@jakarta.apache.org
Subject: tomcat load-balancing maintenance strategy?
Hi,
I am load-balancing tomcat 5.0.28 using JK1.2 / AJP1.3.
For discussion, let's assume I have 2 tomcats (TomcatA and TomcatB)
load-balanced. When I shutdown one
I thought
/distributable
XML element in web.xml does that automatically.
-Original Message-
From: Randall Svancara [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 08, 2005 9:40 AM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: RE: tomcat load-balancing maintenance strategy?
You need to implement
element into the web.xml that makes load balancing
with session replication work.
Anyway, just my thoughts on the matter
Randall
-Original Message-
From: Ramu, Vinod [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 08, 2005 8:03 AM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: RE: tomcat load
Sng Wee Jim wrote:
I am load-balancing tomcat 5.0.28 using JK1.2/AJP1.3.
Cool ;)
I noticed the loadbalancer virtual JK worker redirect requests to the tomcat
instances in a round-robin fashion, without taking into account which tomcat
has a higher number of active sessions.
You must note what jk
Svancara [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 08, 2005 10:09 AM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: RE: tomcat load-balancing maintenance strategy?
Yeah, but you still need to uncomment the cluster element in the
server.xml. Also if you have a multi-homed server you need to bind
multicast
Hi,
I am load-balancing tomcat 5.0.28 using JK1.2 / AJP1.3.
For discussion, let's assume I have 2 tomcats (TomcatA and TomcatB)
load-balanced. When I shutdown one of the tomcats (Tomcat B), future
requests for TomcatB is correctly redirected and handled by the TomcatA.
However, the original
Hi,
I am using tomcat 5.0.28.
My question is how to setup sticky-session load-balancing and clustering
of tomcat?
Do I need to upgrade to tomcat 5.5.X? Note the requirement is on
sticky-session.
- Jim
worker.t2_ajp13.socket_timeout=5
worker.t2_ajp13.recycle_timeout=10
worker.loadbalancer.type=lb
worker.loadbalancer.balanced_workers= t1_ajp13,t2_ajp13
then, you can load-balance your virtual host like this :
JkMount /*.jsp loadbalancer
3) Conclusion :
Thanks to mod_jk, you'll have load-balancing
My gotcha was setting the jvmRoute in EACH/EVERY Engine!
-Original Message-
From: Lionel Farbos [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 01, 2005 8:20 AM
To: Tomcat Users List
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: session load-balancing and clustering of tomcat
1
Lionel Farbos wrote:
1) In server.xml :
- uncomment the AJP 1.3 Connector (on port 8009),
- set the jvmRoute in each Engine
example : Engine name=Standalone defaultHost=host1 debug=0
jvmRoute=t1_ajp13
Session route *must* consists only of alphanumeric characters.
See the:
On Tue, 01 Mar 2005 17:55:15 +0100
Mladen Turk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Lionel Farbos wrote:
2) then add the module mod_jk in apache
with jk workers defined like this :
worker.list=t1_ajp13,t2_ajp13,loadbalancer
This is not quite correct, although it will work.
You should set
Hi,
I am actually trying to get sticky session load-balancing with IIS
tomcat (not apache webserver, client's requirement).
My worker.properties:
==
worker.list=tomcat1,tomcat2
worker.tomcat1.type=ajp13
worker.tomcat1.host=localhost
worker.tomcat1.port=8009
worker.tomcat1
Hi,
Sorry for the noise. I have found the solution at
http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?l=tomcat-userm=104808785801048w=2
- Jim
-Original Message-
From: Sng Wee Jim
Sent: Wednesday, March 02, 2005 2:14 PM
To: 'Mladen Turk'; Tomcat Users List
Subject: RE: session load-balancing
may
be getting directed to a server that is not available.
Someone pls correct me if I'm wrong about that.
From: Filip Hanik - Dev Lists [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Tomcat Users List tomcat-user@jakarta.apache.org
To: Tomcat Users List tomcat-user@jakarta.apache.org
Subject: Re: Load balancing
are definitely
not supported.
Again, pls correct me if I'm wrong.
From: Filip Hanik - Dev Lists [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Tomcat Users List tomcat-user@jakarta.apache.org
To: Tomcat Users List tomcat-user@jakarta.apache.org
Subject: Re: Load balancing SSL sessions
Date: Tue, 22 Feb 2005 16:01:10 -0600
(not solid state), but I'm looking to hear from folks who
have done SSL session affinity with a S/W only approach.
Andrew
On Feb 22, 2005, at 10:24 PM, Kelly Vista wrote:
Hi -
We are looking to deploy our app, running on Tomcat 5, soon and are
exploring load balancing options. We are looking
On Feb 22, 2005, at 10:24 PM, Kelly Vista wrote:
Hi -
We are looking to deploy our app, running on Tomcat 5, soon and are
exploring load balancing options. We are looking at H/W and S/W
solutions, and I was wondering if anyone had any past
experience/advice they would like
Hi -
We are looking to deploy our app, running on Tomcat 5, soon and are
exploring load balancing options. We are looking at H/W and S/W solutions,
and I was wondering if anyone had any past experience/advice they would like
to share.
Our deployment is as pretty run-of-the-mill as it gets: 2
our app, running on Tomcat 5, soon and are
exploring load balancing options. We are looking at H/W and S/W
solutions, and I was wondering if anyone had any past
experience/advice they would like to share.
Our deployment is as pretty run-of-the-mill as it gets: 2 machines,
each running Tomcat
need it for the whole app)...
Andrew
On Feb 22, 2005, at 10:24 PM, Kelly Vista wrote:
Hi -
We are looking to deploy our app, running on Tomcat 5, soon and are
exploring load balancing options. We are looking at H/W and S/W
solutions, and I was wondering if anyone had any past
experience/advice
22, 2005, at 10:24 PM, Kelly Vista wrote:
Hi -
We are looking to deploy our app, running on Tomcat 5, soon and are
exploring load balancing options. We are looking at H/W and S/W
solutions, and I was wondering if anyone had any past
experience/advice they would like to share.
Our deployment
@jakarta.apache.org
Subject: Re: Load balancing SSL sessions
Date: Tue, 22 Feb 2005 22:40:14 +0100
We use F5 BigIPs, but they are probably overkill for your application - The
cisco probably will be as well.
A 'Cheap' software solution might be to work with redirects, and 2 separate
IP addresses.
ie: ssl1
We're using apache 1.3.33 with tomcat 5.0.16, connected via mod_jk, on
Solaris.
What I'm observing is that load-balancing isn't working. We have a
couple of machines dedicated to our XML interface, and have apache
configured to hand all such requests to loadbalancer3. In our mod_jk
We're using apache 1.3.33 with tomcat 5.0.16, connected via mod_jk, on
Solaris.
This is very outdated. You shuld update to TC 5.0.30 and mod_jk 1.2.8.
What I'm observing is that load-balancing isn't working. We have a
couple of machines dedicated to our XML interface, and have apache
Now
Hi,
I am using Apache to load balance a set of Tomcat servers. However, a
round-robin or simple load-factor algorithm is not sufficient, as some of
the requests we receive trigger very intensive operations on a tomcat
server.
I've been discussing this on the dev list, and there doesn't seem to
Thanks. I don't recall reading this in any of the documentation. Can
you explain what setting this actually does?
Derek
Mladen Turk wrote:
Derek Greer wrote:
I'm trying to use the Tomcat Connector to do load balancing through
the IIS filter, however the sessions do not seem to be 'sticky
Derek Greer wrote:
Thanks. I don't recall reading this in any of the documentation. Can
you explain what setting this actually does?
Derek
Mladen Turk wrote:
Derek Greer wrote:
I'm trying to use the Tomcat Connector to do load balancing through
the IIS filter, however the sessions do
I'm trying to use the Tomcat Connector to do load balancing through the
IIS filter, however the sessions do not seem to be 'sticky. According
to the documentation, the session is set to sticky by default. Even so,
after seeing non-sticky behavior I set my lb worker explicitly (i.e
Derek Greer wrote:
I'm trying to use the Tomcat Connector to do load balancing through the
IIS filter, however the sessions do not seem to be 'sticky. According
to the documentation, the session is set to sticky by default. Even so,
after seeing non-sticky behavior I set my lb worker
Hello , a specific jk2+lb question please.
Says that I have apache HTTP + 2 Tomcats Workers.
Each workers is defined in lb group and manage the same webapp.
- It works fine in optimal context (2 Tomcat + Apache run).
- It works fine in 1 tomcat crash.
But the problem is when the webapp is
PROTECTED]
Subject: Clustering and Load balancing
Hi All!
Can any one help me abt clustering and Loadbalancing using Tomcat 5.0/later.
We have an application, Which is run on Tomcat 4.0.
Now we are going to run this application in Tomcat 5.0.
Also we are going to implements the clustering
attribute is unique for each instance.
. Make sure your web.xml has the distributable/ element
Use, for example, Apache and the native connector JK to implement the load
balancing.
-Message d'origine-
De : Vinayagam [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Envoyé : mercredi 10 novembre 2004 05:41
À : Tomcat
Hi All!
Can any one help me abt clustering and Loadbalancing using Tomcat 5.0/later.
We have an application, Which is run on Tomcat 4.0.
Now we are going to run this application in Tomcat 5.0.
Also we are going to implements the clustering technology to our appl.
So that i need som help, How
Hallo!
My Enviroment:
Suse Linux 9.1
Tomcat 5.0.28
JK2 Connector 2.0.4
Apache2 2.0.50
I've configured the jk2-connctor to load balance. Here my
worker2.properties:
# Set a Logger
[logger.apache2]
file=/usr/local/apache2/logs/error.log
level=DEBUG
#debug=1
# config settings
[config]
Try
It has been a while since I touched jk2 but try
group=lb:balanced
PJ
Stephan Müller wrote:
Hallo!
My Enviroment:
Suse Linux 9.1
Tomcat 5.0.28
JK2 Connector 2.0.4
Apache2 2.0.50
I've configured the jk2-connctor to load balance. Here my
worker2.properties:
# Set a Logger
[logger.apache2]
Sorry, but it has the same effect.
Thanks
Stephan
Try
It has been a while since I touched jk2 but try
group=lb:balanced
PJ
Stephan Müller wrote:
Hallo!
My Enviroment:
Suse Linux 9.1
Tomcat 5.0.28
JK2 Connector 2.0.4
Apache2 2.0.50
I've configured the jk2-connctor to
Well here is what works for me (both Tomcat instances are running locally)
[workerEnv]
logger=logger.apache2
sslEnable=0
timing=1
#forwardURICompat
forwardURICompatUnparsed
#forwardURIEscaped
noRecoveryIfRequestSent
noRecoveryIfHeaderSent
disabled=0
debug=5
version=1
# Comment out in production
]: Load Balancing Configuration
I finally have IIS on two machines serving up load balanced requests to
two Tomcat machines and maintiaining Sticky Sessions.
Below I am including the workers2.properties file that did the trick in
case anyone else is having touble doing this. The only other
I finally have IIS on two machines serving up load balanced requests to
two Tomcat machines and maintiaining Sticky Sessions.
Below I am including the workers2.properties file that did the trick in
case anyone else is having touble doing this. The only other change I
had to make was to the
]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Load Balancing Configuration
-
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Found the message. Unless I am reading it wrong that is for Clustering.
I am looking at configuring Load Balancing with sticky sessions.
I have managed to get the adaptor to route requests to each of the
Tomcat instances since I originally posted yesterday, the only remaining
problem
PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Load Balancing Configuration
Found the message. Unless I am reading it wrong that is for Clustering.
I am looking at configuring Load Balancing with sticky sessions.
I have managed to get the adaptor to route requests to each of the
Tomcat instances since I originally
trying to setup load balancing with just my one
instance on my machine figuring that after I get that working it will be
easier to translate it to both instances. This is failing, also. I
believe I simply have something misconfigured, but my settings match
what the book is showing and I have tried
Hi,
does anyone have a sample workers2.properties that can enable the load balancing
between two tomat instances?
Thanks!
nyhgan
-
Do you Yahoo!?
New and Improved Yahoo! Mail - 100MB free storage!
Hi,
I got this workers2.properties from wrox.com. It claims to support load balancing by
using more than one tomcat jvms.
In their setting, they have several startup scripts for each tomcat instance. Does it
mean that I need to have a unique tomcat installation folder, and a unique
I want to implement weight based load balancing in my application. Usually
what parameters are taken into consideration in weight based LB. I have
cluster node's processor(s), RAM in my mind. And, network spped of the
cluster node also.
If you have any other in mind please share them with me
for choosing an node.
-Tim
Srinivas Rao Ch wrote:
I want to implement weight based load balancing in my application. Usually
what parameters are taken into consideration in weight based LB. I have
cluster node's processor(s), RAM in my mind. And, network spped of the
cluster node also.
If you have
of the
cluster, in the production environment.
Regards,
Srinivas
-Original Message-
From: Tim Funk [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, August 18, 2004 6:24 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: Weight based load balancing
AFAIK - There isn't anythng like this yet. But there is work
What kind of weight based load balancing are you thinking of? the
type of load balancing I've used is based on one of several.
1. ping time
2. preset load factor - usually based on hardware
3. system load - the weight is calculated using a hash of memory and cpu usage
in situations where all
environment.
Regards,
Srinivas
-Original Message-
From: Tim Funk [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, August 18, 2004 6:24 PM
To: Tomcat Users List
Subject: Re: Weight based load balancing
AFAIK - There isn't anythng like this yet. But there is work on mod_proxy
Hai,
We have an use case where each web request will be served by any one
server from a cluster of tomcat servers (non-sticky load balancing).
Session replication is not done as we maintain nothing in the session.
The following are the steps involved in form-based-login in Tomcat 5.16
Message -
From: senthilnathan thiagarajan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, July 16, 2004 8:25 AM
Subject: Tomcat non-sticky load balancing
Hai,
We have an use case where each web request will be served by any one
server from a cluster of tomcat servers (non-sticky load
Hello All,
I am really sorry for asking this question. I looked in the archives but
I couldn't get any answer. I will appreciate if someone can help me.
I have Apache 2 and tomcat 4.1 running on a machine (Server 1). I could
successfully connect them using jk2. Now I am trying to load balance
: Thursday, June 24, 2004 11:25 PM
To: 'Tomcat Users List'
Subject: Load balancing question
Hello All,
First of all, thanks Oliver and Mark for your assistance. I will follow
your suggestion and see if it works.
I have a question about Load balancing and I am writing this after a lot
Hello All,
First of all, thanks Oliver and Mark for your assistance. I will follow
your suggestion and see if it works.
I have a question about Load balancing and I am writing this after a lot
of frustration. I am trying to load balance Apache2 and 2 tomcat 4.1
servers. But I couldn't find any
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