Difference between revisions of "Load-balancing"
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− | A hosting company with it's own infrastructure is using so called "load balancing" to distribute the overall load between multiple servers (hardware) and “high-availability” to minimize service down-time. | + | A hosting company with it's own infrastructure is using so called "load balancing" to distribute the overall load between multiple servers (hardware nodes) and “high-availability” to minimize service down-time. |
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<p>'''Load-balancing'''<br /> | <p>'''Load-balancing'''<br /> | ||
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[[File:Nginx_load_balancing.png]] | [[File:Nginx_load_balancing.png]] | ||
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+ | Note: In the picture the load-balacer isn't redundant, therefore HA isn't enabled. The simulation has two load-balances present. | ||
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Revision as of 18:06, 17 January 2016
- Project name: Load-balancing
- Class: 4IT496 (WS 2015/2016)
- Author: Bc. Patrik Tomášek
- Model type: Discrete-event simulation
- Software used: SimProcess, trial version
Contents
Problem definition
A hosting company with it's own infrastructure is using so called "load balancing" to distribute the overall load between multiple servers (hardware nodes) and “high-availability” to minimize service down-time.
Load-balancing
In the case of web hosting service it means dividing the incoming request between multiple devices (called nodes) based on a set of rules (priority, weight, etc). The simulation is based on nginx load balancing.
Note: In the picture the load-balacer isn't redundant, therefore HA isn't enabled. The simulation has two load-balances present.
High-avaibility
Ensures that a system or component is operational for desirable time. The solution necessary to provide web hosting consists of many parts, where all of them need to be on-line for the whole to be operational.
To enable HA a provider can use failover and backups. Failover is basically a backup piece of hardware, which ensures that when a component goes off-line another takes it's place. After that it's necessary to load the backup on the component that took over. If there is a SAN (storage area network) implemented than there is no need to load a backup, because failover just uses the same data from one central storage, which is used for all the server nodes. In the simulation a SAN is implemented and failover is taken into consideration.
Anti-DoS/DDoS
Denial-of-service (DoS) attack is an incident is witch the targeted service goes down. Distributed denial-of-service means, that more than one system is used to attack a single target. There are more means of possible protection against such attack. Setting up a decent firewall rules might be a good place to start, but it isn't so effective as implementing a device, which can mitigate the attack. A Radware defencePro device is implemented in the simulation.
Method
SIMPROCESS
Model
Entities
Small request
text
Standard request
text
Large request
text
D-DoS
text
Resources
Load-balancer
text
Web server
There are two types of this resource, each with different capabilities:
Type 1
Type 2
Storage server SAN
text
Database server
text
Radware DefensePro
text
Processes
HTTP requests