Mark Smith (
mark) wrote in
dw_maintenance2013-06-18 02:45 pm
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Planned load balancer failover shortly
Hi all,
As part of our new hardware project, I'm going to be failing us over to our new load balancers. This will involve a brief downtime for the site while everything fails over, but it should be less than 60 seconds.
Thanks for your patience, and sorry for the interruption!
As part of our new hardware project, I'm going to be failing us over to our new load balancers. This will involve a brief downtime for the site while everything fails over, but it should be less than 60 seconds.
Thanks for your patience, and sorry for the interruption!
no subject
no subject
In computing, failover is switching to a redundant or standby computer server, system, hardware component or network upon the failure or abnormal termination of the previously active application, server, system, hardware component, or network. Failover and switchover are essentially the same operation, except that failover is automatic and usually operates without warning, while switchover requires human intervention.
no subject
Thanks for the link!
In my parlance (and in the industry-speak I'm used to), a failover can be "manual" or "automatic". In the manual case, it's like the switchover that article talks about.
Sorry for not being more explicit about what I was doing! We have upgraded our load balancers (the machines that are the very front of the network, they receive user traffic and send it to web servers). Anyway, we had still been sending traffic to the old load balancers, so I had to do a manual failover to the new machines.
This also involved a major upgrade of software, which is why we had the static files failing to load for a bit. That got nailed down and resolved though, and everything looks fine now as best I can see!
no subject
This is what I meant. I'm a language researcher, and I know how easy it is for people who are used to talking with colleagues and co-workers to fall into using their shoptalk with people who* aren't *familiar with it, as well. It happens in every field, not excepting my own.
Thanks for the good work, and for the explanation.
Dr. Whom: Consulting Linguist, Grammarian, Orthoëpist, and Philological Busybody
Senior Linguist, Dragon Systems, Inc. (R.I.P.), 1990-1999 (2001)