On Tue, Sep 1, 2009 at 1:05 PM, ESGLinux <esggrupos@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
2009/9/1 Juan Ramon Martin Blanco <robejrm@xxxxxxxxx>On Tue, Sep 1, 2009 at 12:38 PM, ESGLinux <esggrupos@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:Hi All,First, sorry if this can be considered Off Topic but my first aproach was using clustering to my problem so I suposse you could have the same problem.I have 2 computers running JBoss and I need to share a directory for the cache (I use OSCache).First I try to use a NFS service on a Red hat Cluster ( I use this reference http://www.redhat.com/docs/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/5/html/Configuration_Example_-_NFS_Over_GFS/index.html)
Do you have a shared storage? If the answer is yes, just use gfs and mount the filesystem on both machines.Nop, I haven´t but your answer makes me a new question. Can I use GFS directly without making a cluster?I mean can I attach the iSCSI devices for example, and mount a GFS filesystem on it without creating a cluster, and a service asociated to this GFS filesystem?
You should use one iscsi lun shared by both cluster nodes. You can mount a GFS filesystem without locking (lock=nolock) with (correct me if I am wrong) the node not being part of a cluster, but only in one node at a time.
You can mount a GFS filesystem created for a certain cluster without having the filesystem configured as a resource, the only requisite is that the nodes mounting the filesystem have to be part of that certain cluster.
Regards,
Juanra
You can mount a GFS filesystem created for a certain cluster without having the filesystem configured as a resource, the only requisite is that the nodes mounting the filesystem have to be part of that certain cluster.
Regards,
Juanra
ThanksESG
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