Hey Mike,
I have seen:
if you want to balance the load to the 3 addresses 10.0.0.5, 10.0.0.6 and 10.0.0.7, then you can do as follows :
# iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o eth0 -m nth --counter 7 --every 3 --packet 0 -j SNAT --to-source 10.0.0.5 # iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o eth0 -m nth --counter 7 --every 3 --packet 1 -j SNAT --to-source 10.0.0.6 # iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o eth0 -m nth --counter 7 --every 3 --packet 2 -j SNAT --to-source 10.0.0.7
Do you have a box that can act as a dedicated balance loader while FC 7 is being released
On 11/05/07, Mike McGrath mmcgrath@redhat.com wrote:
Damian Myerscough wrote:
Hey Mike,
- Proxy server upgrades. Right now our proxy servers are running stock
RHEL4. We've been meaning to upgrade them to RHEL5 for a while now but they are on a different network segment then the rest of our hardware and as such we cannot easily pxe boot them (it would involve a request to the SOC). I'm going to put a plan together to do this and minimize any risk that may come up. The main benefit being mod_proxy_balancer. I'm still hoping we can acquire some hardware balancers but this will help us limp along for this release :)
Have you looked at using iptables for load balancing? Nth module could help with this.
Honestly I didn't. I thought about using some of the RH clustering suite but it will add a bit more overhead then we want for our current environment. Do you have a link to some good documentation for iptables based load balancing?
-Mike
Fedora-infrastructure-list mailing list Fedora-infrastructure-list@redhat.com https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-infrastructure-list