On Mon, 21 May 2012 09:35:05 +0100,Brian Candler <B.Candler at pobox.com> wrote: > On Sun, May 20, 2012 at 06:09:47PM -0400, David Coulson wrote: > > >I might have to look at DRBD more carefully, but I do not think it > > >fits my needs: I need both nodes to be working (and thus doing > > >I/O) at the same time. These are basically number crunching nodes > > >and data needs to be accessible from both nodes (e.g., some jobs > > >will use MPI over the CPUs/cores of both nodes ---assuming both > > >nodes are up, of course ;-). > > DRBD will let you do read/write on both nodes, but it requires a > > clustered filesystem such as GFS2 or OCFS2 on top of it. > Or more simply, with DRBD you can just split your space into two and mirror > half in each direction. > Server A: 300GB volume replicated to server B > Server B: 300GB volume replicated to server A > If one server dies, both volumes can be mounted on the same server. > But if you need to access the *same* data on both nodes simultaneously, then > you'd end up having to share it using something like NFS, in which case you > may as well use glusterfs in the first place. OK, understood. Yes, I need access to the very same data on both nodes simultaneously. And glusterfs looks a lot simpler. Best, R. > > You are > > also limited to a max of two nodes. > Well, DRBD has to be configured in pairs (e.g. you can have one volume A->B, > another B->C, another C->A). This is what Ganeti gives you: each VM has its > own DRBD on top of two LVM volumes on two nodes of your choice. > Ganeti is primarily of benefit when doing a cluster of VMs. > You can also do VMs with an image files stored on a gluster replicated > volume. I've not tested this, but I'm told that gluster 3.2 will lock the > whole file while healing, whereas gluster 3.3 will perform much better. > Regards, > Brian. -- Ramon Diaz-Uriarte Department of Biochemistry, Lab B-25 Facultad de Medicina Universidad Aut?noma de Madrid Arzobispo Morcillo, 4 28029 Madrid Spain Phone: +34-91-497-2412 Email: rdiaz02 at gmail.com ramon.diaz at iib.uam.es http://ligarto.org/rdiaz