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Date:      Sun, 23 Mar 2003 19:44:42 +0100
From:      Eric Veraart <eric@monkey-online.net>
To:        Len Conrad <LConrad@Go2France.com>, freebsd-isp@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Server redundancy over 2 co-locations
Message-ID:  <5.2.0.9.0.20030323193018.04836338@mail.monkey-online.net>
In-Reply-To: <5.2.0.9.0.20030323110847.03d78188@mail.go2france.com>
References:  <5.2.0.9.0.20030323164230.047f5650@mail.monkey-online.net>

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Thanks for your input.

>round-robin won't give you primary/secondary failover. It will give you 
>dumb load distribution, so when one ip is down, it will still see traffic 
>(that will time out, not a desirable "user experience")  since DNS will 
>still be passing out the RR-set of A records for the www domain name.

But what if a script checks things like HTTP, FTP etc and if a service 
fails it takes the server out of the RR-set? The only problem I see is when 
only a part of the internet fails, so the primary DNS points to location 1 
and the secondary DNS points to location 2. I want all users to go to the 
servers at the same locations.

It seems to me Linkproof is not what I'm looking for. The Web Server 
Director looks more like it, but that comes close to 3DNS of F5 Networks. 
Money is not the major problem, but I don't want to invest money in stuff I 
don't need. 



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