Thanks to everyone for all the answers I received. I haven't tested any yet, but the program "balance" sounds intriguing. Many people suggested clustering software, or hardware load balancing devices. Here are a sampling of some of the other answers... ----- Maybe the following idea could be helpful: Instead of using distinct target ip addresses, you could use dns names. There exists a software named lbnamed: load balancing nameserver. But it's no high available. There's a little timeout if one machine fails. ----- ----- I have not done this before, but i "think" I see the solution. FIrstly, a third box implies another single point of failure if it is delivering a unique service ... My take would be a follows: Setup two systems. Each has a normal IP (IP_R1 on host A and IP_R2 on host B)and a virtual IP (IP_VA and IP_VB on Host A and B respectively) IP_VA and IP_VB are not allocated at boot, but controlled from cluster ( FSTHA / Veritas Cluster / SUN Cluster / scripted - FSTHA probaly easiest, Veritas & Sun $$ and overkill ? ) Generate keys on first host. Copy to second host Now set cluster so that IP_VA fails to B and IP_VB fails to A in the event of failures. Setting up the users is now simply: Half connect to IP_VA and the other half to IP_VB. This can be manually assigned, or via DNS round robin. ----- ----- Neil Dombrowski UNIX Administration Tickets.com 714.327.5571 -----Original Message----- From: Todd Wilkinson [mailto:todd.wilkinson@gmail.com] Sent: Tuesday, November 23, 2004 6:43 PM To: Dombrowski, Neil Subject: Re: high available ssh I don't think there is anything specific to SSH on this, but if HA for SSH is needed, am I am assuming that HA is needed for the system/applications on the box then you might look at Veritas HA for UNIX to suit your needs. We use it for lots of applications, we don't specifically HA ssh, but as the failover happens ssh works. I would not though that we have nearly 1000 installs of ssh from ssh.com and I can't ever remember the SSH server specifically being a problem. It is usually related to network outages or some other system related issue. Thus Veritas HA and proper monitoring of it to trip a failover. my two cents On Tue, 23 Nov 2004 18:11:32 -0800, Dombrowski, Neil <ndombrowski@tickets.com> wrote: > I am setting up an ssh server for clients to log into, but in the case of a > failure I want a second ssh server to take over without the client noticing > the difference. I guess ideally they would share the load, and if one box > dropped any new requests would go to the box that was still standing (I'm > willing to lose sessions that are already established on the box that goes > down). Has anyone done this? I seem to be having a difficult time finding > anything at all on clustering/load balancing ssh servers in this fashion, at > least without bringing in a third box. > > Thanks, > Neil > > Neil Dombrowski > UNIX Administration > Tickets.com > 714.327.5571 > _______________________________________________ > sunmanagers mailing list > sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org > http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagers _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Mon Nov 29 13:35:17 2004
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Thu Mar 03 2016 - 06:43:40 EST