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Date:      Mon, 14 Feb 2005 10:59:27 +0100
From:      "Gerard Meijer" <gmeijer@palmweb.nl>
To:        "Peter Risdon" <peter@circlesquared.com>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: live mirroring
Message-ID:  <041901c5127b$deb1d180$9600000a@guus>
References:  <03f501c51276$bf4f18c0$9600000a@guus> <1108374592.23699.200.camel@lorna.circlesquared.com>

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Peter,

I don't really understand this approach. Where can I read more about nfs?

Thanks
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Peter Risdon" <peter@circlesquared.com>
To: "Gerard Meijer" <gmeijer@palmweb.nl>
Cc: <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Sent: Monday, February 14, 2005 10:49 AM
Subject: Re: live mirroring


> On Mon, 2005-02-14 at 10:22 +0100, Gerard Meijer wrote:
>> Hi all,
>>
>> I have a question. I want to set-up a site on 3 identical FreeBSD 
>> servers, using Round Robin to distribute the load.
>>
>> The site will be running some .cgi and .php scripts and when those 
>> scripts make changes to the configuration files of the sites, they need 
>> to be spread automatically to the other two servers. Also when files are 
>> uploaded to one server, I need them to automatically upload to the other 
>> servers to.
>>
>> What is the best program to do this? Or am I looking at it the wrong way 
>> and should I do it different?
>
> Mirroring is one approach, but here's another:
>
> One of the servers holds the data and nfs exports it to the other two.
> The webroot is on the mounted nfs filesystem. This also eliminates
> potential data synchronisation problems if you have different
> filesystems having overlapping/incompatible changes made to them. It
> lets you invest in one really resilient storage system instead of three
> possibly inferior ones.
>
> Peter.
>
> 



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