Hi John, On Thu, Oct 9, 2014 at 12:53 PM, John R Pierce <pierce@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 10/9/2014 11:57 AM, Jason T. Slack-Moehrle wrote: > >> Just to clarify. What state is the slave in? >> >> If master goes down, how does the slave become active? Just reboot it and >> let it come up? The wording "slave copy can't be mounted until drdb is >> stopped" leads me to believe the slave is in some alternate state to be >> receiving the blocks of data. >> > > the slave is up and running, but the file systems you're replicating are > unmounted, and its services are stopped, so you could consider this to be a > 'standby' state. > > yes, to use drbd, its important that you put your email spools, databases, > etc, on dedicated file system(s), NOT on the OS root file system. I > generally use lvm for all this. > > a cluster management package, such as the ones suggested by another > poster, would take care of all this for you (once you have things setup > properly), if the master fails, it would 'activate' the slave, switch its > IP[*] over to be the 'production' system, and mount its file systems, > starting its services (mysqld, postfix, etc) per your configuration. > > [*] typically, you use THREE IP addresses for a HA cluster. a unique IP > for each system, used only for management, and a 'service' IP used for the > production accesses, which is held by the currently active system. when > the master fails, the slave adopts this service IP. Thank you for this info. This clears up a lot and is very helpful. Jason _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos