01-18-2016
I am new to this forum. I was looking for info on another tool we use and came across this comment about load-balancing with NoMachine. Our organization uses NM and has done for several years. I was wondering what your plugin adds to what NM is doing already. We use the heavy-weighted LB together with user/group profiles and custom scripts, and we are rather satisfied. Additionally you can also set the node load when load-balancing virtual Linux desktops. Does your plugin add further value?
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Hello Guys,
Hope you all doing well . :)
I was checking load balance command (uptime)on VM server and got below output.
# uptime
07:08:40 up 52 min, 2 users,a load average: 0.45, 0.11, 0.03
A :How we can calculate load average?
Thank you in advance !!
Cheers:)
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XR(1) Man Page XR(1)
NAME
xr - Crossroads Load Balancer & Fail Over Utility
SYNOPSIS
xr [--verbose] [--web-interface XRSERVER:PORT] --server tcp:XRSERVER:PORT --backend BACKEND:PORT [--backend BACKEND:PORT] ...
DESCRIPTION
This manual page briefly documents XR, the Crossroads Load Balancer & Fail Over Utility.
XR is an open source load balancer and fail over utility for TCP based services. It is a dae mon running in user space, and features exten-
sive configurability, polling of back ends using wake up calls, status reporting, many algorithms to select the 'right' back end for a
reques t (and user-defined algorithms for very special cases), and much more.
XR is service-independent: it is usable for any TCP service, such as HTTP(S), SSH, SMTP, dat abase connections. In the case of HTTP balanc-
ing, XR handles multiple host balancing, and can provide session stickiness for back end processes that need sessions, but aren't session-
awa re of other back ends.
XR furthermore features a management web interface and can be run as a stand-alone daemon, or via inetd.
Execute 'xr -h' to get a complete list of available command-line parameters.
EXAMPLE
xr --verbose --server tcp:0:80 --backend 10.1.1.1:80 --backend 10.1.1.2:80 --backend 10.1.1. 3:80 --web-interface 0:8001
This instructs XR to listen to port 80 and to dispatch traffic to the servers 10.1.1.1, 10.1.1.2 and 10.1.1.2, port 80. A web interface for
the balancer is started on port 8001.
Direct your browser to the server running XR. You will see the pages served by one of the three back ends. The console where XR is started,
will show what's going on (due to the presence of --verbose).
Direct your browser to the server running XR, but port 8001. You will see the web interface, which shows the status, and where you can
alter some settings.
SEE ALSO
xrctl(1)
AUTHOR
XR was written by Karel Kubat <karel@kubat.nl>. Web page: http://crossroads.e-tunity.com
This man page was written by Frederik Dannemare <frederik@dannemare.net>.
Crossroads Nov 6, 2008 XR(1)