Difference between revisions of "FAQ"

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Yes, there is a FreeBSD port of IPVS, which supports the [[LVS/DR]] and [[LVS/TUN]] methods now. See [http://dragon.linux-vs.org/~dragonfly/htm/lvs_freebsd.htm the LVS On FreeBSD page] for more information.
 
Yes, there is a FreeBSD port of IPVS, which supports the [[LVS/DR]] and [[LVS/TUN]] methods now. See [http://dragon.linux-vs.org/~dragonfly/htm/lvs_freebsd.htm the LVS On FreeBSD page] for more information.
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=== Does LVS cluster support Linux servers only? ===
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No, real servers can almost run any operating systems in a LVS cluster, such as Linux, BSDs, Solaris, and Windows. [[LVS/NAT]] balance servers of the operating systems having TCP/IP support, [[LVS/TUN]] requires servers having IP Tunneling protocol, and [[LVS/DR]] requires servers having a non-arp device. Almost all the modern operating systems support non-arp device.
  
 
=== How is the concurrent processing performance of current LVS software? ===
 
=== How is the concurrent processing performance of current LVS software? ===
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Yes, LVS can handle much more than 1 million simultaneous connections. One connection just costs 128 bytes in the LVS box, so an LVS box with 1G memory can handle more than 8 million simultaneous connections.
 
Yes, LVS can handle much more than 1 million simultaneous connections. One connection just costs 128 bytes in the LVS box, so an LVS box with 1G memory can handle more than 8 million simultaneous connections.
  
=== Does LVS cluster support Linux servers only? ===
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=== How do I check to see if my kernel has IPVS enabled? ===
  
No, real servers can almost run any operating systems in a LVS cluster, such as Linux, BSDs, Solaris, and Windows. [[LVS/NAT]] balance servers of the operating systems having TCP/IP support, [[LVS/TUN]] requires servers having IP Tunneling protocol, and [[LVS/DR]] requires servers having a non-arp device. Almost all the modern operating systems support non-arp device.
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Try to run "modprobe ip_vs" and try to see if there is /proc/net/ip_vs. If so, your kernel has [[IPVS]] enabled. You can also run "cat /proc/net/ip_vs" or "ipvsadm -Ln" to see the version number of [[IPVS]].

Revision as of 14:54, 30 June 2005

What's LVS?

LVS stands for Linux Virtual Server, which is a highly scalable and highly available server built on a cluster of real servers, with the load balancer running on the Linux operating system. Users interact as if it were a single virtual server.

Is LVS software free?

Yes! All LVS software is released under the GNU General Public License (GPL).

Is there a FreeBSD port of LVS software?

Yes, there is a FreeBSD port of IPVS, which supports the LVS/DR and LVS/TUN methods now. See the LVS On FreeBSD page for more information.

Does LVS cluster support Linux servers only?

No, real servers can almost run any operating systems in a LVS cluster, such as Linux, BSDs, Solaris, and Windows. LVS/NAT balance servers of the operating systems having TCP/IP support, LVS/TUN requires servers having IP Tunneling protocol, and LVS/DR requires servers having a non-arp device. Almost all the modern operating systems support non-arp device.

How is the concurrent processing performance of current LVS software?

The ultimate performance of LVS depends on hardware that LVS runs on. An ordinary box with a single Pentium III processor and 100Mbps NIC card running LVS/DR can handle about 10,000 connections per second for web service. We have heard that a powerful box with good hardware and kernel tuning achieved 50,000 connections per second.

Can LVS handle more than 1 million simultaneous connections?

Yes, LVS can handle much more than 1 million simultaneous connections. One connection just costs 128 bytes in the LVS box, so an LVS box with 1G memory can handle more than 8 million simultaneous connections.

How do I check to see if my kernel has IPVS enabled?

Try to run "modprobe ip_vs" and try to see if there is /proc/net/ip_vs. If so, your kernel has IPVS enabled. You can also run "cat /proc/net/ip_vs" or "ipvsadm -Ln" to see the version number of IPVS.