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)
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)
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)
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
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
uptime
UPTIME(1) User Commands UPTIME(1)NAME
uptime - Tell how long the system has been running.
SYNOPSIS
uptime [options]
DESCRIPTION
uptime gives a one line display of the following information. The current time, how long the system has been running, how many users are
currently logged on, and the system load averages for the past 1, 5, and 15 minutes.
This is the same information contained in the header line displayed by w(1).
System load averages is the average number of processes that are either in a runnable or uninterruptable state. A process in a runnable
state is either using the CPU or waiting to use the CPU. A process in uninterruptable state is waiting for some I/O access, eg waiting for
disk. The averages are taken over the three time intervals. Load averages are not normalized for the number of CPUs in a system, so a
load average of 1 means a single CPU system is loaded all the time while on a 4 CPU system it means it was idle 75% of the time.
OPTIONS -p, --pretty
show uptime in pretty format
-h, --help
display this help text
-s, --since
system up since, in yyyy-mm-dd MM:HH:SS format
-V, --version
display version information and exit
FILES
/var/run/utmp
information about who is currently logged on
/proc process information
AUTHORS
uptime was written by Larry Greenfield <greenfie@gauss.rutgers.edu> and Michael K. Johnson <johnsonm@sunsite.unc.edu>
SEE ALSO ps(1), top(1), utmp(5), w(1)REPORTING BUGS
Please send bug reports to <procps@freelists.org>
procps-ng December 2012 UPTIME(1)