Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Load Balancer
Top Forums Programming Load Balancer Post 302086682 by Corona688 on Saturday 26th of August 2006 04:21:26 AM
Old 08-26-2006
Load-balancing what? Disk? Network? Processor power?

Either way, I think a load-balancer is something that'd have to be part of the kernel...
 

5 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. AIX

hacmp ip load balancer failover

Hi All, How do I failover on the ip load balancer (back and forth)? It involves first to load a new config on the passive ip. If success, load the new config on the ip active (which is now passive). Any idea, please. Thanks in advance. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: itik
0 Replies

2. Red Hat

What is the Best Load Balancer for Linux?

Hi, What's the best load balancer for Linux (CentOS, SuSE) according to your personal experience? Linux Virtual Server (LVS) is a famous one, but their download site has not been updated since 2007. Their web and mailing list are so quiet. Is the Ultra Monkey project including LVS... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: aixlover
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

piranha load balancer failover

we use piranha load balancer with two nodes even the primary node is running fine and up failover happend to secondary node this happend quite few times ehy node2 cannot talk to node1 what logs are to be checked and investigate why failover occured pulse: partner dead: activating... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: robo
0 Replies

4. Linux

Server Load balancer

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:) Dont forget... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Nats
1 Replies

5. Virtualization and Cloud Computing

A load balancer for Nomachine NX

Hello, in case somebody has a NoMachine NX cluster, and is suffering from its dumb round-robin dispatcher, here is a solution: nxpub (NX Pluggable User Balancer). It should run on all LUnix OS. Scripts for install/uninstall are supplied. While tested with NX 3 (NX 3.5 is the latest), it might... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: MadeInGermany
2 Replies
hostinfo(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					       hostinfo(8)

NAME
hostinfo -- host information SYNOPSIS
hostinfo DESCRIPTION
The hostinfo command displays information about the host system on which the command is executing. The output includes a kernel version description, processor configuration data, available physical memory, and various scheduling statistics. OPTIONS
There are no options. DISPLAY
Mach kernel version: The version string compiled into the kernel executing on the host system. Processor Configuration: The maximum possible processors for which the kernel is configured, followed by the number of physical and logical processors avail- able. Note: on Intel architectures, physical processors are referred to as cores, and logical processors are referred to as hardware threads; there may be multiple logical processors per core and multiple cores per processor package. This command does not report the number of processor packages. Processor type: The host's processor type and subtype. Processor active: A list of active processors on the host system. Active processors are members of a processor set and are ready to dispatch threads. On a single processor system, the active processor, is processor 0. Primary memory available: The amount of physical memory that is configured for use on the host system. Default processor set: Displays the number of tasks currently assigned to the host processor set, the number of threads currently assigned to the host proces- sor set, and the number of processors included in the host processor set. Load average: Measures the average number of threads in the run queue. Mach factor: A variant of the load average which measures the processing resources available to a new thread. Mach factor is based on the number of CPUs divided by (1 + the number of runnablethreads) or the number of CPUs minus the number of runnable threads when the number of runnable threads is less than the number of CPUs. The closer the Mach factor value is to zero, the higher the load. On an idle system with a fixed number of active processors, the mach factor will be equal to the number of CPUs. SEE ALSO
sysctl(8) Mac OS X October 30, 2003 Mac OS X
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:01 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy