High-Availability Storage With GlusterFS On Debian Lenny - Automatic File Replication Across Two Storage Servers
|
Submitted by falko (Contact Author) (Forums) on Sun, 2009-06-07 17:59. :: Debian | High-Availability
High-Availability Storage With GlusterFS On Debian Lenny - Automatic File Replication (Mirror) Across Two Storage ServersVersion 1.0 This tutorial shows how to set up a high-availability storage with two storage servers (Debian Lenny) that use GlusterFS. Each storage server will be a mirror of the other storage server, and files will be replicated automatically across both storage servers. The client system (Debian Lenny as well) will be able to access the storage as if it was a local filesystem. GlusterFS is a clustered file-system capable of scaling to several peta-bytes. It aggregates various storage bricks over Infiniband RDMA or TCP/IP interconnect into one large parallel network file system. Storage bricks can be made of any commodity hardware such as x86-64 servers with SATA-II RAID and Infiniband HBA. I do not issue any guarantee that this will work for you!
1 Preliminary NoteIn this tutorial I use three systems, two servers and a client:
All three systems should be able to resolve the other systems' hostnames. If this cannot be done through DNS, you should edit the /etc/hosts file so that it looks as follows on all three systems: vi /etc/hosts
(It is also possible to use IP addresses instead of hostnames in the following setup. If you prefer to use IP addresses, you don't have to care about whether the hostnames can be resolved or not.)
2 Setting Up The GlusterFS Serversserver1.example.com/server2.example.com: GlusterFS isn't available as a Debian package for Debian Lenny, therefore we have to build it ourselves. First we install the prerequisites: aptitude install sshfs build-essential flex bison byacc libdb4.6 libdb4.6-dev Then we download the latest GlusterFS release from http://www.gluster.org/download.php and build it as follows: cd /tmp server1:/tmp/glusterfs-2.0.1# ./configure --prefix=/usr > /dev/null make && make install The command glusterfs --version should now show the GlusterFS version that you've just compiled (2.0.1 in this case): server1:/tmp/glusterfs-2.0.1# glusterfs --version Next we create a few directories: mkdir /data/ Now we create the GlusterFS server configuration file /etc/glusterfs/glusterfsd.vol which defines which directory will be exported (/data/export) and what client is allowed to connect (192.168.0.102 = client1.example.com): vi /etc/glusterfs/glusterfsd.vol
Please note that it is possible to use wildcards for the IP addresses (like 192.168.*) and that you can specify multiple IP addresses separated by comma (e.g. 192.168.0.102,192.168.0.103). Afterwards we create the system startup links for the glusterfsd init script... update-rc.d glusterfsd defaults ... and start glusterfsd: /etc/init.d/glusterfsd start
|
www.seamlessenterprise.com
One number. One voicemail. Seize the lead. Sprint Mobile Integration.
www.seamlessenterprise.com
One Number. One Voicemail.
Make it easier for clients to reach you. Turn your desk phone and mobile phone into one with Sprint Mobile Integration.
www.seamlessenterprise.com
One number. One voicemail. Sprint Mobile Integration.
www.seamlessenterprise.com
AT&T Synaptic Compute as a Service. Boost your power on demand.
Trial: IBM Cognos Express Reporting, Analysis & Planning
Learn benefits of Simpana software.
View the Gartner Video




print: 

Recent comments
7 hours 57 min ago
15 hours 38 min ago
16 hours 5 min ago
1 day 2 hours ago
1 day 2 hours ago
1 day 7 hours ago
1 day 7 hours ago
1 day 8 hours ago
1 day 12 hours ago
1 day 13 hours ago