ldirectord
ldirectord is a daemon to monitor and administer real servers in a
LVS cluster
of load balanced virtual servers. ldirectord typically used
as a resource for
Linux-HA ,
but can also be run from the command line.
A LVS cluster consists or one or more virtual services each of which
may have zero or more real servers. The IP address of a virtual service
is what end-users connect to and is typically advertised over DNS.
When a connection is made to a virtual service, it is allocated
a real server, and all packets for this connection are forwarded
to this real server. A more detailed overview of LVS can
be found here.
ldirectord has a configuration file which specifies
the virtual services and their associated real servers. When
ldirectord is initialised it creates the virtual services
for the clutster.
ldirectord monitors the health of the real servers by periodically
requesting a known URL and checking that the response contains an expected
response. If a real server fails then the server is removed and will
be reactivated once it comes back on line. If all the real servers are down
then a fall-back server is inserted into the pool, which will made
quiescent one of the real web servers comes back on line. Typically, the
fall-back server is localhost. If an HTTP virtual service is being provided
then it is useful to run an Apache HTTP server that returns a page
indicating that the service is temporarily inaccessible.
Availability:
ldirectord is included in a variety of packages
and provided with several distributions.
The latest and
greatest version is always available via Mecurial.
Snapshots are also provided as a convinience. For more
information on both the mecurial repository and snapshots,
please see the download page.
Mailing list:
Questions about, and development discussions for
ldirectord are usually carried out
on the
lvs-users mailing list.
Authors:
Jacob Rief and Horms.
Thanks to the many
people have made contributions to ldirectord.