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This patch updates the documentation files and code comments to avoid the use of gender specific phrasing in favor of "they" or "it".
1449 lines
59 KiB
Plaintext
1449 lines
59 KiB
Plaintext
-------------------
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HAProxy
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Architecture Guide
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-------------------
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version 1.1.34
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willy tarreau
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2006/01/29
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This document provides real world examples with working configurations.
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Please note that except stated otherwise, global configuration parameters
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such as logging, chrooting, limits and time-outs are not described here.
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===================================================
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1. Simple HTTP load-balancing with cookie insertion
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===================================================
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A web application often saturates the front-end server with high CPU loads,
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due to the scripting language involved. It also relies on a back-end database
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which is not much loaded. User contexts are stored on the server itself, and
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not in the database, so that simply adding another server with simple IP/TCP
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load-balancing would not work.
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+-------+
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|clients| clients and/or reverse-proxy
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+---+---+
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-+-----+--------+----
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| _|_db
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+--+--+ (___)
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| web | (___)
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+-----+ (___)
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192.168.1.1 192.168.1.2
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Replacing the web server with a bigger SMP system would cost much more than
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adding low-cost pizza boxes. The solution is to buy N cheap boxes and install
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the application on them. Install haproxy on the old one which will spread the
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load across the new boxes.
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192.168.1.1 192.168.1.11-192.168.1.14 192.168.1.2
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-------+-----------+-----+-----+-----+--------+----
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| | | | | _|_db
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+--+--+ +-+-+ +-+-+ +-+-+ +-+-+ (___)
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| LB1 | | A | | B | | C | | D | (___)
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+-----+ +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ (___)
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haproxy 4 cheap web servers
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Config on haproxy (LB1) :
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-------------------------
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listen webfarm 192.168.1.1:80
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mode http
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balance roundrobin
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cookie SERVERID insert indirect
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option httpchk HEAD /index.html HTTP/1.0
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server webA 192.168.1.11:80 cookie A check
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server webB 192.168.1.12:80 cookie B check
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server webC 192.168.1.13:80 cookie C check
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server webD 192.168.1.14:80 cookie D check
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Description :
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-------------
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- LB1 will receive clients requests.
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- if a request does not contain a cookie, it will be forwarded to a valid
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server
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- in return, a cookie "SERVERID" will be inserted in the response holding the
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server name (eg: "A").
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- when the client comes again with the cookie "SERVERID=A", LB1 will know that
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it must be forwarded to server A. The cookie will be removed so that the
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server does not see it.
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- if server "webA" dies, the requests will be sent to another valid server
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and a cookie will be reassigned.
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Flows :
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-------
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(client) (haproxy) (server A)
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>-- GET /URI1 HTTP/1.0 ------------> |
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( no cookie, haproxy forwards in load-balancing mode. )
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| >-- GET /URI1 HTTP/1.0 ---------->
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| <-- HTTP/1.0 200 OK -------------<
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( the proxy now adds the server cookie in return )
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<-- HTTP/1.0 200 OK ---------------< |
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Set-Cookie: SERVERID=A |
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>-- GET /URI2 HTTP/1.0 ------------> |
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Cookie: SERVERID=A |
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( the proxy sees the cookie. it forwards to server A and deletes it )
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| >-- GET /URI2 HTTP/1.0 ---------->
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| <-- HTTP/1.0 200 OK -------------<
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( the proxy does not add the cookie in return because the client knows it )
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<-- HTTP/1.0 200 OK ---------------< |
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>-- GET /URI3 HTTP/1.0 ------------> |
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Cookie: SERVERID=A |
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( ... )
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Limits :
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--------
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- if clients use keep-alive (HTTP/1.1), only the first response will have
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a cookie inserted, and only the first request of each session will be
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analyzed. This does not cause trouble in insertion mode because the cookie
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is put immediately in the first response, and the session is maintained to
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the same server for all subsequent requests in the same session. However,
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the cookie will not be removed from the requests forwarded to the servers,
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so the server must not be sensitive to unknown cookies. If this causes
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trouble, you can disable keep-alive by adding the following option :
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option httpclose
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- if for some reason the clients cannot learn more than one cookie (eg: the
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clients are indeed some home-made applications or gateways), and the
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application already produces a cookie, you can use the "prefix" mode (see
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below).
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- LB1 becomes a very sensible server. If LB1 dies, nothing works anymore.
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=> you can back it up using keepalived (see below)
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- if the application needs to log the original client's IP, use the
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"forwardfor" option which will add an "X-Forwarded-For" header with the
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original client's IP address. You must also use "httpclose" to ensure
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that you will rewrite every requests and not only the first one of each
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session :
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option httpclose
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option forwardfor
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- if the application needs to log the original destination IP, use the
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"originalto" option which will add an "X-Original-To" header with the
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original destination IP address. You must also use "httpclose" to ensure
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that you will rewrite every requests and not only the first one of each
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session :
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option httpclose
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option originalto
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The web server will have to be configured to use this header instead.
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For example, on apache, you can use LogFormat for this :
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LogFormat "%{X-Forwarded-For}i %l %u %t \"%r\" %>s %b " combined
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CustomLog /var/log/httpd/access_log combined
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Hints :
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-------
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Sometimes on the internet, you will find a few percent of the clients which
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disable cookies on their browser. Obviously they have troubles everywhere on
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the web, but you can still help them access your site by using the "source"
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balancing algorithm instead of the "roundrobin". It ensures that a given IP
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address always reaches the same server as long as the number of servers remains
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unchanged. Never use this behind a proxy or in a small network, because the
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distribution will be unfair. However, in large internal networks, and on the
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internet, it works quite well. Clients which have a dynamic address will not
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be affected as long as they accept the cookie, because the cookie always has
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precedence over load balancing :
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listen webfarm 192.168.1.1:80
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mode http
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balance source
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cookie SERVERID insert indirect
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option httpchk HEAD /index.html HTTP/1.0
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server webA 192.168.1.11:80 cookie A check
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server webB 192.168.1.12:80 cookie B check
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server webC 192.168.1.13:80 cookie C check
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server webD 192.168.1.14:80 cookie D check
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==================================================================
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2. HTTP load-balancing with cookie prefixing and high availability
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==================================================================
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Now you don't want to add more cookies, but rather use existing ones. The
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application already generates a "JSESSIONID" cookie which is enough to track
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sessions, so we'll prefix this cookie with the server name when we see it.
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Since the load-balancer becomes critical, it will be backed up with a second
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one in VRRP mode using keepalived under Linux.
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Download the latest version of keepalived from this site and install it
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on each load-balancer LB1 and LB2 :
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http://www.keepalived.org/
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You then have a shared IP between the two load-balancers (we will still use the
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original IP). It is active only on one of them at any moment. To allow the
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proxy to bind to the shared IP on Linux 2.4, you must enable it in /proc :
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# echo 1 >/proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_nonlocal_bind
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shared IP=192.168.1.1
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192.168.1.3 192.168.1.4 192.168.1.11-192.168.1.14 192.168.1.2
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-------+------------+-----------+-----+-----+-----+--------+----
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| | | | | | _|_db
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+--+--+ +--+--+ +-+-+ +-+-+ +-+-+ +-+-+ (___)
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| LB1 | | LB2 | | A | | B | | C | | D | (___)
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+-----+ +-----+ +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ (___)
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haproxy haproxy 4 cheap web servers
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keepalived keepalived
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Config on both proxies (LB1 and LB2) :
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--------------------------------------
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listen webfarm 192.168.1.1:80
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mode http
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balance roundrobin
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cookie JSESSIONID prefix
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option httpclose
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option forwardfor
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option httpchk HEAD /index.html HTTP/1.0
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server webA 192.168.1.11:80 cookie A check
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server webB 192.168.1.12:80 cookie B check
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server webC 192.168.1.13:80 cookie C check
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server webD 192.168.1.14:80 cookie D check
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Notes: the proxy will modify EVERY cookie sent by the client and the server,
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so it is important that it can access to ALL cookies in ALL requests for
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each session. This implies that there is no keep-alive (HTTP/1.1), thus the
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"httpclose" option. Only if you know for sure that the client(s) will never
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use keep-alive (eg: Apache 1.3 in reverse-proxy mode), you can remove this
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option.
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Configuration for keepalived on LB1/LB2 :
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-----------------------------------------
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vrrp_script chk_haproxy { # Requires keepalived-1.1.13
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script "killall -0 haproxy" # cheaper than pidof
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interval 2 # check every 2 seconds
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weight 2 # add 2 points of prio if OK
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}
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vrrp_instance VI_1 {
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interface eth0
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state MASTER
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virtual_router_id 51
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priority 101 # 101 on master, 100 on backup
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virtual_ipaddress {
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192.168.1.1
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}
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track_script {
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chk_haproxy
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}
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}
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Description :
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-------------
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- LB1 is VRRP master (keepalived), LB2 is backup. Both monitor the haproxy
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process, and lower their prio if it fails, leading to a failover to the
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other node.
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- LB1 will receive clients requests on IP 192.168.1.1.
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- both load-balancers send their checks from their native IP.
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- if a request does not contain a cookie, it will be forwarded to a valid
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server
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- in return, if a JESSIONID cookie is seen, the server name will be prefixed
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into it, followed by a delimiter ('~')
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- when the client comes again with the cookie "JSESSIONID=A~xxx", LB1 will
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know that it must be forwarded to server A. The server name will then be
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extracted from cookie before it is sent to the server.
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- if server "webA" dies, the requests will be sent to another valid server
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and a cookie will be reassigned.
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Flows :
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-------
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(client) (haproxy) (server A)
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>-- GET /URI1 HTTP/1.0 ------------> |
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( no cookie, haproxy forwards in load-balancing mode. )
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| >-- GET /URI1 HTTP/1.0 ---------->
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| X-Forwarded-For: 10.1.2.3
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| <-- HTTP/1.0 200 OK -------------<
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( no cookie, nothing changed )
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<-- HTTP/1.0 200 OK ---------------< |
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>-- GET /URI2 HTTP/1.0 ------------> |
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( no cookie, haproxy forwards in lb mode, possibly to another server. )
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| >-- GET /URI2 HTTP/1.0 ---------->
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| X-Forwarded-For: 10.1.2.3
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| <-- HTTP/1.0 200 OK -------------<
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| Set-Cookie: JSESSIONID=123
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( the cookie is identified, it will be prefixed with the server name )
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<-- HTTP/1.0 200 OK ---------------< |
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Set-Cookie: JSESSIONID=A~123 |
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>-- GET /URI3 HTTP/1.0 ------------> |
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Cookie: JSESSIONID=A~123 |
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( the proxy sees the cookie, removes the server name and forwards
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to server A which sees the same cookie as it previously sent )
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| >-- GET /URI3 HTTP/1.0 ---------->
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| Cookie: JSESSIONID=123
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| X-Forwarded-For: 10.1.2.3
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| <-- HTTP/1.0 200 OK -------------<
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( no cookie, nothing changed )
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<-- HTTP/1.0 200 OK ---------------< |
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( ... )
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Hints :
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-------
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Sometimes, there will be some powerful servers in the farm, and some smaller
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ones. In this situation, it may be desirable to tell haproxy to respect the
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difference in performance. Let's consider that WebA and WebB are two old
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P3-1.2 GHz while WebC and WebD are shiny new Opteron-2.6 GHz. If your
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application scales with CPU, you may assume a very rough 2.6/1.2 performance
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ratio between the servers. You can inform haproxy about this using the "weight"
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keyword, with values between 1 and 256. It will then spread the load the most
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smoothly possible respecting those ratios :
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server webA 192.168.1.11:80 cookie A weight 12 check
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server webB 192.168.1.12:80 cookie B weight 12 check
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server webC 192.168.1.13:80 cookie C weight 26 check
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server webD 192.168.1.14:80 cookie D weight 26 check
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========================================================
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2.1 Variations involving external layer 4 load-balancers
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========================================================
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Instead of using a VRRP-based active/backup solution for the proxies,
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they can also be load-balanced by a layer4 load-balancer (eg: Alteon)
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which will also check that the services run fine on both proxies :
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| VIP=192.168.1.1
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+----+----+
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| Alteon |
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+----+----+
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192.168.1.3 | 192.168.1.4 192.168.1.11-192.168.1.14 192.168.1.2
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-------+-----+------+-----------+-----+-----+-----+--------+----
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| | | | | | _|_db
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+--+--+ +--+--+ +-+-+ +-+-+ +-+-+ +-+-+ (___)
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| LB1 | | LB2 | | A | | B | | C | | D | (___)
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+-----+ +-----+ +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ (___)
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haproxy haproxy 4 cheap web servers
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Config on both proxies (LB1 and LB2) :
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--------------------------------------
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listen webfarm 0.0.0.0:80
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mode http
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balance roundrobin
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cookie JSESSIONID prefix
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option httpclose
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option forwardfor
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option httplog
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option dontlognull
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option httpchk HEAD /index.html HTTP/1.0
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server webA 192.168.1.11:80 cookie A check
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server webB 192.168.1.12:80 cookie B check
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server webC 192.168.1.13:80 cookie C check
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server webD 192.168.1.14:80 cookie D check
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The "dontlognull" option is used to prevent the proxy from logging the health
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checks from the Alteon. If a session exchanges no data, then it will not be
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logged.
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Config on the Alteon :
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----------------------
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/c/slb/real 11
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ena
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name "LB1"
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rip 192.168.1.3
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/c/slb/real 12
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ena
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name "LB2"
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rip 192.168.1.4
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/c/slb/group 10
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name "LB1-2"
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metric roundrobin
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health tcp
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add 11
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add 12
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/c/slb/virt 10
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ena
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vip 192.168.1.1
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/c/slb/virt 10/service http
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group 10
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Note: the health-check on the Alteon is set to "tcp" to prevent the proxy from
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forwarding the connections. It can also be set to "http", but for this the
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proxy must specify a "monitor-net" with the Alteons' addresses, so that the
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Alteon can really check that the proxies can talk HTTP but without forwarding
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the connections to the end servers. Check next section for an example on how to
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use monitor-net.
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============================================================
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2.2 Generic TCP relaying and external layer 4 load-balancers
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============================================================
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Sometimes it's useful to be able to relay generic TCP protocols (SMTP, TSE,
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VNC, etc...), for example to interconnect private networks. The problem comes
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when you use external load-balancers which need to send periodic health-checks
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to the proxies, because these health-checks get forwarded to the end servers.
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The solution is to specify a network which will be dedicated to monitoring
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systems and must not lead to a forwarding connection nor to any log, using the
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"monitor-net" keyword. Note: this feature expects a version of haproxy greater
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than or equal to 1.1.32 or 1.2.6.
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| VIP=172.16.1.1 |
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+----+----+ +----+----+
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| Alteon1 | | Alteon2 |
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+----+----+ +----+----+
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192.168.1.252 | GW=192.168.1.254 | 192.168.1.253
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| |
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------+---+------------+--+-----------------> TSE farm : 192.168.1.10
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192.168.1.1 | | 192.168.1.2
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+--+--+ +--+--+
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| LB1 | | LB2 |
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+-----+ +-----+
|
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haproxy haproxy
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Config on both proxies (LB1 and LB2) :
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--------------------------------------
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listen tse-proxy
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bind :3389,:1494,:5900 # TSE, ICA and VNC at once.
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mode tcp
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balance roundrobin
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server tse-farm 192.168.1.10
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monitor-net 192.168.1.252/31
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|
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The "monitor-net" option instructs the proxies that any connection coming from
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192.168.1.252 or 192.168.1.253 will not be logged nor forwarded and will be
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closed immediately. The Alteon load-balancers will then see the proxies alive
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without perturbating the service.
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Config on the Alteon :
|
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----------------------
|
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/c/l3/if 1
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ena
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addr 192.168.1.252
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mask 255.255.255.0
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/c/slb/real 11
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ena
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name "LB1"
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rip 192.168.1.1
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/c/slb/real 12
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ena
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name "LB2"
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rip 192.168.1.2
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/c/slb/group 10
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name "LB1-2"
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metric roundrobin
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health tcp
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add 11
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add 12
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/c/slb/virt 10
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ena
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vip 172.16.1.1
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/c/slb/virt 10/service 1494
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group 10
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/c/slb/virt 10/service 3389
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group 10
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/c/slb/virt 10/service 5900
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group 10
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Special handling of SSL :
|
|
-------------------------
|
|
Sometimes, you want to send health-checks to remote systems, even in TCP mode,
|
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in order to be able to failover to a backup server in case the first one is
|
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dead. Of course, you can simply enable TCP health-checks, but it sometimes
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happens that intermediate firewalls between the proxies and the remote servers
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acknowledge the TCP connection themselves, showing an always-up server. Since
|
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this is generally encountered on long-distance communications, which often
|
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involve SSL, an SSL health-check has been implemented to work around this issue.
|
|
It sends SSL Hello messages to the remote server, which in turns replies with
|
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SSL Hello messages. Setting it up is very easy :
|
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|
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listen tcp-syslog-proxy
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bind :1514 # listen to TCP syslog traffic on this port (SSL)
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mode tcp
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balance roundrobin
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option ssl-hello-chk
|
|
server syslog-prod-site 192.168.1.10 check
|
|
server syslog-back-site 192.168.2.10 check backup
|
|
|
|
|
|
=========================================================
|
|
3. Simple HTTP/HTTPS load-balancing with cookie insertion
|
|
=========================================================
|
|
|
|
This is the same context as in example 1 above, but the web
|
|
server uses HTTPS.
|
|
|
|
+-------+
|
|
|clients| clients
|
|
+---+---+
|
|
|
|
|
-+-----+--------+----
|
|
| _|_db
|
|
+--+--+ (___)
|
|
| SSL | (___)
|
|
| web | (___)
|
|
+-----+
|
|
192.168.1.1 192.168.1.2
|
|
|
|
|
|
Since haproxy does not handle SSL, this part will have to be extracted from the
|
|
servers (freeing even more resources) and installed on the load-balancer
|
|
itself. Install haproxy and apache+mod_ssl on the old box which will spread the
|
|
load between the new boxes. Apache will work in SSL reverse-proxy-cache. If the
|
|
application is correctly developed, it might even lower its load. However,
|
|
since there now is a cache between the clients and haproxy, some security
|
|
measures must be taken to ensure that inserted cookies will not be cached.
|
|
|
|
|
|
192.168.1.1 192.168.1.11-192.168.1.14 192.168.1.2
|
|
-------+-----------+-----+-----+-----+--------+----
|
|
| | | | | _|_db
|
|
+--+--+ +-+-+ +-+-+ +-+-+ +-+-+ (___)
|
|
| LB1 | | A | | B | | C | | D | (___)
|
|
+-----+ +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ (___)
|
|
apache 4 cheap web servers
|
|
mod_ssl
|
|
haproxy
|
|
|
|
|
|
Config on haproxy (LB1) :
|
|
-------------------------
|
|
|
|
listen 127.0.0.1:8000
|
|
mode http
|
|
balance roundrobin
|
|
cookie SERVERID insert indirect nocache
|
|
option httpchk HEAD /index.html HTTP/1.0
|
|
server webA 192.168.1.11:80 cookie A check
|
|
server webB 192.168.1.12:80 cookie B check
|
|
server webC 192.168.1.13:80 cookie C check
|
|
server webD 192.168.1.14:80 cookie D check
|
|
|
|
|
|
Description :
|
|
-------------
|
|
- apache on LB1 will receive clients requests on port 443
|
|
- it forwards it to haproxy bound to 127.0.0.1:8000
|
|
- if a request does not contain a cookie, it will be forwarded to a valid
|
|
server
|
|
- in return, a cookie "SERVERID" will be inserted in the response holding the
|
|
server name (eg: "A"), and a "Cache-control: private" header will be added
|
|
so that the apache does not cache any page containing such cookie.
|
|
- when the client comes again with the cookie "SERVERID=A", LB1 will know that
|
|
it must be forwarded to server A. The cookie will be removed so that the
|
|
server does not see it.
|
|
- if server "webA" dies, the requests will be sent to another valid server
|
|
and a cookie will be reassigned.
|
|
|
|
Notes :
|
|
-------
|
|
- if the cookie works in "prefix" mode, there is no need to add the "nocache"
|
|
option because it is an application cookie which will be modified, and the
|
|
application flags will be preserved.
|
|
- if apache 1.3 is used as a front-end before haproxy, it always disables
|
|
HTTP keep-alive on the back-end, so there is no need for the "httpclose"
|
|
option on haproxy.
|
|
- configure apache to set the X-Forwarded-For header itself, and do not do
|
|
it on haproxy if you need the application to know about the client's IP.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Flows :
|
|
-------
|
|
|
|
(apache) (haproxy) (server A)
|
|
>-- GET /URI1 HTTP/1.0 ------------> |
|
|
( no cookie, haproxy forwards in load-balancing mode. )
|
|
| >-- GET /URI1 HTTP/1.0 ---------->
|
|
| <-- HTTP/1.0 200 OK -------------<
|
|
( the proxy now adds the server cookie in return )
|
|
<-- HTTP/1.0 200 OK ---------------< |
|
|
Set-Cookie: SERVERID=A |
|
|
Cache-Control: private |
|
|
>-- GET /URI2 HTTP/1.0 ------------> |
|
|
Cookie: SERVERID=A |
|
|
( the proxy sees the cookie. it forwards to server A and deletes it )
|
|
| >-- GET /URI2 HTTP/1.0 ---------->
|
|
| <-- HTTP/1.0 200 OK -------------<
|
|
( the proxy does not add the cookie in return because the client knows it )
|
|
<-- HTTP/1.0 200 OK ---------------< |
|
|
>-- GET /URI3 HTTP/1.0 ------------> |
|
|
Cookie: SERVERID=A |
|
|
( ... )
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
========================================
|
|
3.1. Alternate solution using Stunnel
|
|
========================================
|
|
|
|
When only SSL is required and cache is not needed, stunnel is a cheaper
|
|
solution than Apache+mod_ssl. By default, stunnel does not process HTTP and
|
|
does not add any X-Forwarded-For header, but there is a patch on the official
|
|
haproxy site to provide this feature to recent stunnel versions.
|
|
|
|
This time, stunnel will only process HTTPS and not HTTP. This means that
|
|
haproxy will get all HTTP traffic, so haproxy will have to add the
|
|
X-Forwarded-For header for HTTP traffic, but not for HTTPS traffic since
|
|
stunnel will already have done it. We will use the "except" keyword to tell
|
|
haproxy that connections from local host already have a valid header.
|
|
|
|
|
|
192.168.1.1 192.168.1.11-192.168.1.14 192.168.1.2
|
|
-------+-----------+-----+-----+-----+--------+----
|
|
| | | | | _|_db
|
|
+--+--+ +-+-+ +-+-+ +-+-+ +-+-+ (___)
|
|
| LB1 | | A | | B | | C | | D | (___)
|
|
+-----+ +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ (___)
|
|
stunnel 4 cheap web servers
|
|
haproxy
|
|
|
|
|
|
Config on stunnel (LB1) :
|
|
-------------------------
|
|
|
|
cert=/etc/stunnel/stunnel.pem
|
|
setuid=stunnel
|
|
setgid=proxy
|
|
|
|
socket=l:TCP_NODELAY=1
|
|
socket=r:TCP_NODELAY=1
|
|
|
|
[https]
|
|
accept=192.168.1.1:443
|
|
connect=192.168.1.1:80
|
|
xforwardedfor=yes
|
|
|
|
|
|
Config on haproxy (LB1) :
|
|
-------------------------
|
|
|
|
listen 192.168.1.1:80
|
|
mode http
|
|
balance roundrobin
|
|
option forwardfor except 192.168.1.1
|
|
cookie SERVERID insert indirect nocache
|
|
option httpchk HEAD /index.html HTTP/1.0
|
|
server webA 192.168.1.11:80 cookie A check
|
|
server webB 192.168.1.12:80 cookie B check
|
|
server webC 192.168.1.13:80 cookie C check
|
|
server webD 192.168.1.14:80 cookie D check
|
|
|
|
Description :
|
|
-------------
|
|
- stunnel on LB1 will receive clients requests on port 443
|
|
- it forwards them to haproxy bound to port 80
|
|
- haproxy will receive HTTP client requests on port 80 and decrypted SSL
|
|
requests from Stunnel on the same port.
|
|
- stunnel will add the X-Forwarded-For header
|
|
- haproxy will add the X-Forwarded-For header for everyone except the local
|
|
address (stunnel).
|
|
|
|
|
|
========================================
|
|
4. Soft-stop for application maintenance
|
|
========================================
|
|
|
|
When an application is spread across several servers, the time to update all
|
|
instances increases, so the application seems jerky for a longer period.
|
|
|
|
HAproxy offers several solutions for this. Although it cannot be reconfigured
|
|
without being stopped, nor does it offer any external command, there are other
|
|
working solutions.
|
|
|
|
|
|
=========================================
|
|
4.1 Soft-stop using a file on the servers
|
|
=========================================
|
|
|
|
This trick is quite common and very simple: put a file on the server which will
|
|
be checked by the proxy. When you want to stop the server, first remove this
|
|
file. The proxy will see the server as failed, and will not send it any new
|
|
session, only the old ones if the "persist" option is used. Wait a bit then
|
|
stop the server when it does not receive anymore connections.
|
|
|
|
|
|
listen 192.168.1.1:80
|
|
mode http
|
|
balance roundrobin
|
|
cookie SERVERID insert indirect
|
|
option httpchk HEAD /running HTTP/1.0
|
|
server webA 192.168.1.11:80 cookie A check inter 2000 rise 2 fall 2
|
|
server webB 192.168.1.12:80 cookie B check inter 2000 rise 2 fall 2
|
|
server webC 192.168.1.13:80 cookie C check inter 2000 rise 2 fall 2
|
|
server webD 192.168.1.14:80 cookie D check inter 2000 rise 2 fall 2
|
|
option persist
|
|
redispatch
|
|
contimeout 5000
|
|
|
|
|
|
Description :
|
|
-------------
|
|
- every 2 seconds, haproxy will try to access the file "/running" on the
|
|
servers, and declare the server as down after 2 attempts (4 seconds).
|
|
- only the servers which respond with a 200 or 3XX response will be used.
|
|
- if a request does not contain a cookie, it will be forwarded to a valid
|
|
server
|
|
- if a request contains a cookie for a failed server, haproxy will insist
|
|
on trying to reach the server anyway, to let the user finish what they were
|
|
doing. ("persist" option)
|
|
- if the server is totally stopped, the connection will fail and the proxy
|
|
will rebalance the client to another server ("redispatch")
|
|
|
|
Usage on the web servers :
|
|
--------------------------
|
|
- to start the server :
|
|
# /etc/init.d/httpd start
|
|
# touch /home/httpd/www/running
|
|
|
|
- to soft-stop the server
|
|
# rm -f /home/httpd/www/running
|
|
|
|
- to completely stop the server :
|
|
# /etc/init.d/httpd stop
|
|
|
|
Limits
|
|
------
|
|
If the server is totally powered down, the proxy will still try to reach it
|
|
for those clients who still have a cookie referencing it, and the connection
|
|
attempt will expire after 5 seconds ("contimeout"), and only after that, the
|
|
client will be redispatched to another server. So this mode is only useful
|
|
for software updates where the server will suddenly refuse the connection
|
|
because the process is stopped. The problem is the same if the server suddenly
|
|
crashes. All of its users will be fairly perturbated.
|
|
|
|
|
|
==================================
|
|
4.2 Soft-stop using backup servers
|
|
==================================
|
|
|
|
A better solution which covers every situation is to use backup servers.
|
|
Version 1.1.30 fixed a bug which prevented a backup server from sharing
|
|
the same cookie as a standard server.
|
|
|
|
|
|
listen 192.168.1.1:80
|
|
mode http
|
|
balance roundrobin
|
|
redispatch
|
|
cookie SERVERID insert indirect
|
|
option httpchk HEAD / HTTP/1.0
|
|
server webA 192.168.1.11:80 cookie A check port 81 inter 2000
|
|
server webB 192.168.1.12:80 cookie B check port 81 inter 2000
|
|
server webC 192.168.1.13:80 cookie C check port 81 inter 2000
|
|
server webD 192.168.1.14:80 cookie D check port 81 inter 2000
|
|
|
|
server bkpA 192.168.1.11:80 cookie A check port 80 inter 2000 backup
|
|
server bkpB 192.168.1.12:80 cookie B check port 80 inter 2000 backup
|
|
server bkpC 192.168.1.13:80 cookie C check port 80 inter 2000 backup
|
|
server bkpD 192.168.1.14:80 cookie D check port 80 inter 2000 backup
|
|
|
|
Description
|
|
-----------
|
|
Four servers webA..D are checked on their port 81 every 2 seconds. The same
|
|
servers named bkpA..D are checked on the port 80, and share the exact same
|
|
cookies. Those servers will only be used when no other server is available
|
|
for the same cookie.
|
|
|
|
When the web servers are started, only the backup servers are seen as
|
|
available. On the web servers, you need to redirect port 81 to local
|
|
port 80, either with a local proxy (eg: a simple haproxy tcp instance),
|
|
or with iptables (linux) or pf (openbsd). This is because we want the
|
|
real web server to reply on this port, and not a fake one. Eg, with
|
|
iptables :
|
|
|
|
# /etc/init.d/httpd start
|
|
# iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp --dport 81 -j REDIRECT --to-port 80
|
|
|
|
A few seconds later, the standard server is seen up and haproxy starts to send
|
|
it new requests on its real port 80 (only new users with no cookie, of course).
|
|
|
|
If a server completely crashes (even if it does not respond at the IP level),
|
|
both the standard and backup servers will fail, so clients associated to this
|
|
server will be redispatched to other live servers and will lose their sessions.
|
|
|
|
Now if you want to enter a server into maintenance, simply stop it from
|
|
responding on port 81 so that its standard instance will be seen as failed,
|
|
but the backup will still work. Users will not notice anything since the
|
|
service is still operational :
|
|
|
|
# iptables -t nat -D PREROUTING -p tcp --dport 81 -j REDIRECT --to-port 80
|
|
|
|
The health checks on port 81 for this server will quickly fail, and the
|
|
standard server will be seen as failed. No new session will be sent to this
|
|
server, and existing clients with a valid cookie will still reach it because
|
|
the backup server will still be up.
|
|
|
|
Now wait as long as you want for the old users to stop using the service, and
|
|
once you see that the server does not receive any traffic, simply stop it :
|
|
|
|
# /etc/init.d/httpd stop
|
|
|
|
The associated backup server will in turn fail, and if any client still tries
|
|
to access this particular server, they will be redispatched to any other valid
|
|
server because of the "redispatch" option.
|
|
|
|
This method has an advantage : you never touch the proxy when doing server
|
|
maintenance. The people managing the servers can make them disappear smoothly.
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.2.1 Variations for operating systems without any firewall software
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The downside is that you need a redirection solution on the server just for
|
|
the health-checks. If the server OS does not support any firewall software,
|
|
this redirection can also be handled by a simple haproxy in tcp mode :
|
|
|
|
global
|
|
daemon
|
|
quiet
|
|
pidfile /var/run/haproxy-checks.pid
|
|
listen 0.0.0.0:81
|
|
mode tcp
|
|
dispatch 127.0.0.1:80
|
|
contimeout 1000
|
|
clitimeout 10000
|
|
srvtimeout 10000
|
|
|
|
To start the web service :
|
|
|
|
# /etc/init.d/httpd start
|
|
# haproxy -f /etc/haproxy/haproxy-checks.cfg
|
|
|
|
To soft-stop the service :
|
|
|
|
# kill $(</var/run/haproxy-checks.pid)
|
|
|
|
The port 81 will stop responding and the load-balancer will notice the failure.
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.2.2 Centralizing the server management
|
|
----------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
If one finds it preferable to manage the servers from the load-balancer itself,
|
|
the port redirector can be installed on the load-balancer itself. See the
|
|
example with iptables below.
|
|
|
|
Make the servers appear as operational :
|
|
# iptables -t nat -A OUTPUT -d 192.168.1.11 -p tcp --dport 81 -j DNAT --to-dest :80
|
|
# iptables -t nat -A OUTPUT -d 192.168.1.12 -p tcp --dport 81 -j DNAT --to-dest :80
|
|
# iptables -t nat -A OUTPUT -d 192.168.1.13 -p tcp --dport 81 -j DNAT --to-dest :80
|
|
# iptables -t nat -A OUTPUT -d 192.168.1.14 -p tcp --dport 81 -j DNAT --to-dest :80
|
|
|
|
Soft stop one server :
|
|
# iptables -t nat -D OUTPUT -d 192.168.1.12 -p tcp --dport 81 -j DNAT --to-dest :80
|
|
|
|
Another solution is to use the "COMAFILE" patch provided by Alexander Lazic,
|
|
which is available for download here :
|
|
|
|
http://w.ods.org/tools/haproxy/contrib/
|
|
|
|
|
|
4.2.3 Notes :
|
|
-------------
|
|
- Never, ever, start a fake service on port 81 for the health-checks, because
|
|
a real web service failure will not be detected as long as the fake service
|
|
runs. You must really forward the check port to the real application.
|
|
|
|
- health-checks will be sent twice as often, once for each standard server,
|
|
and once for each backup server. All this will be multiplicated by the
|
|
number of processes if you use multi-process mode. You will have to ensure
|
|
that all the checks sent to the server do not overload it.
|
|
|
|
=======================
|
|
4.3 Hot reconfiguration
|
|
=======================
|
|
|
|
There are two types of haproxy users :
|
|
- those who can never do anything in production out of maintenance periods ;
|
|
- those who can do anything at any time provided that the consequences are
|
|
limited.
|
|
|
|
The first ones have no problem stopping the server to change configuration
|
|
because they got some maintenance periods during which they can break anything.
|
|
So they will even prefer doing a clean stop/start sequence to ensure everything
|
|
will work fine upon next reload. Since those have represented the majority of
|
|
haproxy uses, there has been little effort trying to improve this.
|
|
|
|
However, the second category is a bit different. They like to be able to fix an
|
|
error in a configuration file without anyone noticing. This can sometimes also
|
|
be the case for the first category because humans are not failsafe.
|
|
|
|
For this reason, a new hot reconfiguration mechanism has been introduced in
|
|
version 1.1.34. Its usage is very simple and works even in chrooted
|
|
environments with lowered privileges. The principle is very simple : upon
|
|
reception of a SIGTTOU signal, the proxy will stop listening to all the ports.
|
|
This will release the ports so that a new instance can be started. Existing
|
|
connections will not be broken at all. If the new instance fails to start,
|
|
then sending a SIGTTIN signal back to the original processes will restore
|
|
the listening ports. This is possible without any special privileges because
|
|
the sockets will not have been closed, so the bind() is still valid. Otherwise,
|
|
if the new process starts successfully, then sending a SIGUSR1 signal to the
|
|
old one ensures that it will exit as soon as its last session ends.
|
|
|
|
A hot reconfiguration script would look like this :
|
|
|
|
# save previous state
|
|
mv /etc/haproxy/config /etc/haproxy/config.old
|
|
mv /var/run/haproxy.pid /var/run/haproxy.pid.old
|
|
|
|
mv /etc/haproxy/config.new /etc/haproxy/config
|
|
kill -TTOU $(cat /var/run/haproxy.pid.old)
|
|
if haproxy -p /var/run/haproxy.pid -f /etc/haproxy/config; then
|
|
echo "New instance successfully loaded, stopping previous one."
|
|
kill -USR1 $(cat /var/run/haproxy.pid.old)
|
|
rm -f /var/run/haproxy.pid.old
|
|
exit 1
|
|
else
|
|
echo "New instance failed to start, resuming previous one."
|
|
kill -TTIN $(cat /var/run/haproxy.pid.old)
|
|
rm -f /var/run/haproxy.pid
|
|
mv /var/run/haproxy.pid.old /var/run/haproxy.pid
|
|
mv /etc/haproxy/config /etc/haproxy/config.new
|
|
mv /etc/haproxy/config.old /etc/haproxy/config
|
|
exit 0
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
After this, you can still force old connections to end by sending
|
|
a SIGTERM to the old process if it still exists :
|
|
|
|
kill $(cat /var/run/haproxy.pid.old)
|
|
rm -f /var/run/haproxy.pid.old
|
|
|
|
Be careful with this as in multi-process mode, some pids might already
|
|
have been reallocated to completely different processes.
|
|
|
|
|
|
==================================================
|
|
5. Multi-site load-balancing with local preference
|
|
==================================================
|
|
|
|
5.1 Description of the problem
|
|
==============================
|
|
|
|
Consider a world-wide company with sites on several continents. There are two
|
|
production sites SITE1 and SITE2 which host identical applications. There are
|
|
many offices around the world. For speed and communication cost reasons, each
|
|
office uses the nearest site by default, but can switch to the backup site in
|
|
the event of a site or application failure. There also are users on the
|
|
production sites, which use their local sites by default, but can switch to the
|
|
other site in case of a local application failure.
|
|
|
|
The main constraints are :
|
|
|
|
- application persistence : although the application is the same on both
|
|
sites, there is no session synchronisation between the sites. A failure
|
|
of one server or one site can cause a user to switch to another server
|
|
or site, but when the server or site comes back, the user must not switch
|
|
again.
|
|
|
|
- communication costs : inter-site communication should be reduced to the
|
|
minimum. Specifically, in case of a local application failure, every
|
|
office should be able to switch to the other site without continuing to
|
|
use the default site.
|
|
|
|
5.2 Solution
|
|
============
|
|
- Each production site will have two haproxy load-balancers in front of its
|
|
application servers to balance the load across them and provide local HA.
|
|
We will call them "S1L1" and "S1L2" on site 1, and "S2L1" and "S2L2" on
|
|
site 2. These proxies will extend the application's JSESSIONID cookie to
|
|
put the server name as a prefix.
|
|
|
|
- Each production site will have one front-end haproxy director to provide
|
|
the service to local users and to remote offices. It will load-balance
|
|
across the two local load-balancers, and will use the other site's
|
|
load-balancers as backup servers. It will insert the local site identifier
|
|
in a SITE cookie for the local load-balancers, and the remote site
|
|
identifier for the remote load-balancers. These front-end directors will
|
|
be called "SD1" and "SD2" for "Site Director".
|
|
|
|
- Each office will have one haproxy near the border gateway which will direct
|
|
local users to their preference site by default, or to the backup site in
|
|
the event of a previous failure. It will also analyze the SITE cookie, and
|
|
direct the users to the site referenced in the cookie. Thus, the preferred
|
|
site will be declared as a normal server, and the backup site will be
|
|
declared as a backup server only, which will only be used when the primary
|
|
site is unreachable, or when the primary site's director has forwarded
|
|
traffic to the second site. These proxies will be called "OP1".."OPXX"
|
|
for "Office Proxy #XX".
|
|
|
|
|
|
5.3 Network diagram
|
|
===================
|
|
|
|
Note : offices 1 and 2 are on the same continent as site 1, while
|
|
office 3 is on the same continent as site 3. Each production
|
|
site can reach the second one either through the WAN or through
|
|
a dedicated link.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Office1 Office2 Office3
|
|
users users users
|
|
192.168 # # # 192.168 # # # # # #
|
|
.1.0/24 | | | .2.0/24 | | | 192.168.3.0/24 | | |
|
|
--+----+-+-+- --+----+-+-+- ---+----+-+-+-
|
|
| | .1 | | .1 | | .1
|
|
| +-+-+ | +-+-+ | +-+-+
|
|
| |OP1| | |OP2| | |OP3| ...
|
|
,-:-. +---+ ,-:-. +---+ ,-:-. +---+
|
|
( X ) ( X ) ( X )
|
|
`-:-' `-:-' ,---. `-:-'
|
|
--+---------------+------+----~~~( X )~~~~-------+---------+-
|
|
| `---' |
|
|
| |
|
|
+---+ ,-:-. +---+ ,-:-.
|
|
|SD1| ( X ) |SD2| ( X )
|
|
( SITE 1 ) +-+-+ `-:-' ( SITE 2 ) +-+-+ `-:-'
|
|
|.1 | |.1 |
|
|
10.1.1.0/24 | | ,---. 10.2.1.0/24 | |
|
|
-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-----+-+--( X )------+-+-+-+-+-+-+-----+-+--
|
|
| | | | | | | `---' | | | | | | |
|
|
...# # # # # |.11 |.12 ...# # # # # |.11 |.12
|
|
Site 1 +-+--+ +-+--+ Site 2 +-+--+ +-+--+
|
|
Local |S1L1| |S1L2| Local |S2L1| |S2L2|
|
|
users +-+--+ +--+-+ users +-+--+ +--+-+
|
|
| | | |
|
|
10.1.2.0/24 -+-+-+--+--++-- 10.2.2.0/24 -+-+-+--+--++--
|
|
|.1 |.4 |.1 |.4
|
|
+-+-+ +-+-+ +-+-+ +-+-+
|
|
|W11| ~~~ |W14| |W21| ~~~ |W24|
|
|
+---+ +---+ +---+ +---+
|
|
4 application servers 4 application servers
|
|
on site 1 on site 2
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5.4 Description
|
|
===============
|
|
|
|
5.4.1 Local users
|
|
-----------------
|
|
- Office 1 users connect to OP1 = 192.168.1.1
|
|
- Office 2 users connect to OP2 = 192.168.2.1
|
|
- Office 3 users connect to OP3 = 192.168.3.1
|
|
- Site 1 users connect to SD1 = 10.1.1.1
|
|
- Site 2 users connect to SD2 = 10.2.1.1
|
|
|
|
5.4.2 Office proxies
|
|
--------------------
|
|
- Office 1 connects to site 1 by default and uses site 2 as a backup.
|
|
- Office 2 connects to site 1 by default and uses site 2 as a backup.
|
|
- Office 3 connects to site 2 by default and uses site 1 as a backup.
|
|
|
|
The offices check the local site's SD proxy every 30 seconds, and the
|
|
remote one every 60 seconds.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Configuration for Office Proxy OP1
|
|
----------------------------------
|
|
|
|
listen 192.168.1.1:80
|
|
mode http
|
|
balance roundrobin
|
|
redispatch
|
|
cookie SITE
|
|
option httpchk HEAD / HTTP/1.0
|
|
server SD1 10.1.1.1:80 cookie SITE1 check inter 30000
|
|
server SD2 10.2.1.1:80 cookie SITE2 check inter 60000 backup
|
|
|
|
|
|
Configuration for Office Proxy OP2
|
|
----------------------------------
|
|
|
|
listen 192.168.2.1:80
|
|
mode http
|
|
balance roundrobin
|
|
redispatch
|
|
cookie SITE
|
|
option httpchk HEAD / HTTP/1.0
|
|
server SD1 10.1.1.1:80 cookie SITE1 check inter 30000
|
|
server SD2 10.2.1.1:80 cookie SITE2 check inter 60000 backup
|
|
|
|
|
|
Configuration for Office Proxy OP3
|
|
----------------------------------
|
|
|
|
listen 192.168.3.1:80
|
|
mode http
|
|
balance roundrobin
|
|
redispatch
|
|
cookie SITE
|
|
option httpchk HEAD / HTTP/1.0
|
|
server SD2 10.2.1.1:80 cookie SITE2 check inter 30000
|
|
server SD1 10.1.1.1:80 cookie SITE1 check inter 60000 backup
|
|
|
|
|
|
5.4.3 Site directors ( SD1 and SD2 )
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
The site directors forward traffic to the local load-balancers, and set a
|
|
cookie to identify the site. If no local load-balancer is available, or if
|
|
the local application servers are all down, it will redirect traffic to the
|
|
remote site, and report this in the SITE cookie. In order not to uselessly
|
|
load each site's WAN link, each SD will check the other site at a lower
|
|
rate. The site directors will also insert their client's address so that
|
|
the application server knows which local user or remote site accesses it.
|
|
|
|
The SITE cookie which is set by these directors will also be understood
|
|
by the office proxies. This is important because if SD1 decides to forward
|
|
traffic to site 2, it will write "SITE2" in the "SITE" cookie, and on next
|
|
request, the office proxy will automatically and directly talk to SITE2 if
|
|
it can reach it. If it cannot, it will still send the traffic to SITE1
|
|
where SD1 will in turn try to reach SITE2.
|
|
|
|
The load-balancers checks are performed on port 81. As we'll see further,
|
|
the load-balancers provide a health monitoring port 81 which reroutes to
|
|
port 80 but which allows them to tell the SD that they are going down soon
|
|
and that the SD must not use them anymore.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Configuration for SD1
|
|
---------------------
|
|
|
|
listen 10.1.1.1:80
|
|
mode http
|
|
balance roundrobin
|
|
redispatch
|
|
cookie SITE insert indirect
|
|
option httpchk HEAD / HTTP/1.0
|
|
option forwardfor
|
|
server S1L1 10.1.1.11:80 cookie SITE1 check port 81 inter 4000
|
|
server S1L2 10.1.1.12:80 cookie SITE1 check port 81 inter 4000
|
|
server S2L1 10.2.1.11:80 cookie SITE2 check port 81 inter 8000 backup
|
|
server S2L2 10.2.1.12:80 cookie SITE2 check port 81 inter 8000 backup
|
|
|
|
Configuration for SD2
|
|
---------------------
|
|
|
|
listen 10.2.1.1:80
|
|
mode http
|
|
balance roundrobin
|
|
redispatch
|
|
cookie SITE insert indirect
|
|
option httpchk HEAD / HTTP/1.0
|
|
option forwardfor
|
|
server S2L1 10.2.1.11:80 cookie SITE2 check port 81 inter 4000
|
|
server S2L2 10.2.1.12:80 cookie SITE2 check port 81 inter 4000
|
|
server S1L1 10.1.1.11:80 cookie SITE1 check port 81 inter 8000 backup
|
|
server S1L2 10.1.1.12:80 cookie SITE1 check port 81 inter 8000 backup
|
|
|
|
|
|
5.4.4 Local load-balancers S1L1, S1L2, S2L1, S2L2
|
|
-------------------------------------------------
|
|
Please first note that because SD1 and SD2 use the same cookie for both
|
|
servers on a same site, the second load-balancer of each site will only
|
|
receive load-balanced requests, but as soon as the SITE cookie will be
|
|
set, only the first LB will receive the requests because it will be the
|
|
first one to match the cookie.
|
|
|
|
The load-balancers will spread the load across 4 local web servers, and
|
|
use the JSESSIONID provided by the application to provide server persistence
|
|
using the new 'prefix' method. Soft-stop will also be implemented as described
|
|
in section 4 above. Moreover, these proxies will provide their own maintenance
|
|
soft-stop. Port 80 will be used for application traffic, while port 81 will
|
|
only be used for health-checks and locally rerouted to port 80. A grace time
|
|
will be specified to service on port 80, but not on port 81. This way, a soft
|
|
kill (kill -USR1) on the proxy will only kill the health-check forwarder so
|
|
that the site director knows it must not use this load-balancer anymore. But
|
|
the service will still work for 20 seconds and as long as there are established
|
|
sessions.
|
|
|
|
These proxies will also be the only ones to disable HTTP keep-alive in the
|
|
chain, because it is enough to do it at one place, and it's necessary to do
|
|
it with 'prefix' cookies.
|
|
|
|
Configuration for S1L1/S1L2
|
|
---------------------------
|
|
|
|
listen 10.1.1.11:80 # 10.1.1.12:80 for S1L2
|
|
grace 20000 # don't kill us until 20 seconds have elapsed
|
|
mode http
|
|
balance roundrobin
|
|
cookie JSESSIONID prefix
|
|
option httpclose
|
|
option forwardfor
|
|
option httpchk HEAD / HTTP/1.0
|
|
server W11 10.1.2.1:80 cookie W11 check port 81 inter 2000
|
|
server W12 10.1.2.2:80 cookie W12 check port 81 inter 2000
|
|
server W13 10.1.2.3:80 cookie W13 check port 81 inter 2000
|
|
server W14 10.1.2.4:80 cookie W14 check port 81 inter 2000
|
|
|
|
server B11 10.1.2.1:80 cookie W11 check port 80 inter 4000 backup
|
|
server B12 10.1.2.2:80 cookie W12 check port 80 inter 4000 backup
|
|
server B13 10.1.2.3:80 cookie W13 check port 80 inter 4000 backup
|
|
server B14 10.1.2.4:80 cookie W14 check port 80 inter 4000 backup
|
|
|
|
listen 10.1.1.11:81 # 10.1.1.12:81 for S1L2
|
|
mode tcp
|
|
dispatch 10.1.1.11:80 # 10.1.1.12:80 for S1L2
|
|
|
|
|
|
Configuration for S2L1/S2L2
|
|
---------------------------
|
|
|
|
listen 10.2.1.11:80 # 10.2.1.12:80 for S2L2
|
|
grace 20000 # don't kill us until 20 seconds have elapsed
|
|
mode http
|
|
balance roundrobin
|
|
cookie JSESSIONID prefix
|
|
option httpclose
|
|
option forwardfor
|
|
option httpchk HEAD / HTTP/1.0
|
|
server W21 10.2.2.1:80 cookie W21 check port 81 inter 2000
|
|
server W22 10.2.2.2:80 cookie W22 check port 81 inter 2000
|
|
server W23 10.2.2.3:80 cookie W23 check port 81 inter 2000
|
|
server W24 10.2.2.4:80 cookie W24 check port 81 inter 2000
|
|
|
|
server B21 10.2.2.1:80 cookie W21 check port 80 inter 4000 backup
|
|
server B22 10.2.2.2:80 cookie W22 check port 80 inter 4000 backup
|
|
server B23 10.2.2.3:80 cookie W23 check port 80 inter 4000 backup
|
|
server B24 10.2.2.4:80 cookie W24 check port 80 inter 4000 backup
|
|
|
|
listen 10.2.1.11:81 # 10.2.1.12:81 for S2L2
|
|
mode tcp
|
|
dispatch 10.2.1.11:80 # 10.2.1.12:80 for S2L2
|
|
|
|
|
|
5.5 Comments
|
|
------------
|
|
Since each site director sets a cookie identifying the site, remote office
|
|
users will have their office proxies direct them to the right site and stick
|
|
to this site as long as the user still uses the application and the site is
|
|
available. Users on production sites will be directed to the right site by the
|
|
site directors depending on the SITE cookie.
|
|
|
|
If the WAN link dies on a production site, the remote office users will not
|
|
see their site anymore, so they will redirect the traffic to the second site.
|
|
If there are dedicated inter-site links as on the diagram above, the second
|
|
SD will see the cookie and still be able to reach the original site. For
|
|
example :
|
|
|
|
Office 1 user sends the following to OP1 :
|
|
GET / HTTP/1.0
|
|
Cookie: SITE=SITE1; JSESSIONID=W14~123;
|
|
|
|
OP1 cannot reach site 1 because its external router is dead. So the SD1 server
|
|
is seen as dead, and OP1 will then forward the request to SD2 on site 2,
|
|
regardless of the SITE cookie.
|
|
|
|
SD2 on site 2 receives a SITE cookie containing "SITE1". Fortunately, it
|
|
can reach Site 1's load balancers S1L1 and S1L2. So it forwards the request
|
|
so S1L1 (the first one with the same cookie).
|
|
|
|
S1L1 (on site 1) finds "W14" in the JSESSIONID cookie, so it can forward the
|
|
request to the right server, and the user session will continue to work. Once
|
|
the Site 1's WAN link comes back, OP1 will see SD1 again, and will not route
|
|
through SITE 2 anymore.
|
|
|
|
However, when a new user on Office 1 connects to the application during a
|
|
site 1 failure, it does not contain any cookie. Since OP1 does not see SD1
|
|
because of the network failure, it will direct the request to SD2 on site 2,
|
|
which will by default direct the traffic to the local load-balancers, S2L1 and
|
|
S2L2. So only initial users will load the inter-site link, not the new ones.
|
|
|
|
|
|
===================
|
|
6. Source balancing
|
|
===================
|
|
|
|
Sometimes it may reveal useful to access servers from a pool of IP addresses
|
|
instead of only one or two. Some equipment (NAT firewalls, load-balancers)
|
|
are sensible to source address, and often need many sources to distribute the
|
|
load evenly amongst their internal hash buckets.
|
|
|
|
To do this, you simply have to use several times the same server with a
|
|
different source. Example :
|
|
|
|
listen 0.0.0.0:80
|
|
mode tcp
|
|
balance roundrobin
|
|
server from1to1 10.1.1.1:80 source 10.1.2.1
|
|
server from2to1 10.1.1.1:80 source 10.1.2.2
|
|
server from3to1 10.1.1.1:80 source 10.1.2.3
|
|
server from4to1 10.1.1.1:80 source 10.1.2.4
|
|
server from5to1 10.1.1.1:80 source 10.1.2.5
|
|
server from6to1 10.1.1.1:80 source 10.1.2.6
|
|
server from7to1 10.1.1.1:80 source 10.1.2.7
|
|
server from8to1 10.1.1.1:80 source 10.1.2.8
|
|
|
|
|
|
=============================================
|
|
7. Managing high loads on application servers
|
|
=============================================
|
|
|
|
One of the roles often expected from a load balancer is to mitigate the load on
|
|
the servers during traffic peaks. More and more often, we see heavy frameworks
|
|
used to deliver flexible and evolutive web designs, at the cost of high loads
|
|
on the servers, or very low concurrency. Sometimes, response times are also
|
|
rather high. People developing web sites relying on such frameworks very often
|
|
look for a load balancer which is able to distribute the load in the most
|
|
evenly fashion and which will be nice with the servers.
|
|
|
|
There is a powerful feature in haproxy which achieves exactly this : request
|
|
queueing associated with concurrent connections limit.
|
|
|
|
Let's say you have an application server which supports at most 20 concurrent
|
|
requests. You have 3 servers, so you can accept up to 60 concurrent HTTP
|
|
connections, which often means 30 concurrent users in case of keep-alive (2
|
|
persistent connections per user).
|
|
|
|
Even if you disable keep-alive, if the server takes a long time to respond,
|
|
you still have a high risk of multiple users clicking at the same time and
|
|
having their requests unserved because of server saturation. To work around
|
|
the problem, you increase the concurrent connection limit on the servers,
|
|
but their performance stalls under higher loads.
|
|
|
|
The solution is to limit the number of connections between the clients and the
|
|
servers. You set haproxy to limit the number of connections on a per-server
|
|
basis, and you let all the users you want connect to it. It will then fill all
|
|
the servers up to the configured connection limit, and will put the remaining
|
|
connections in a queue, waiting for a connection to be released on a server.
|
|
|
|
This ensures five essential principles :
|
|
|
|
- all clients can be served whatever their number without crashing the
|
|
servers, the only impact it that the response time can be delayed.
|
|
|
|
- the servers can be used at full throttle without the risk of stalling,
|
|
and fine tuning can lead to optimal performance.
|
|
|
|
- response times can be reduced by making the servers work below the
|
|
congestion point, effectively leading to shorter response times even
|
|
under moderate loads.
|
|
|
|
- no domino effect when a server goes down or starts up. Requests will be
|
|
queued more or less, always respecting servers limits.
|
|
|
|
- it's easy to achieve high performance even on memory-limited hardware.
|
|
Indeed, heavy frameworks often consume huge amounts of RAM and not always
|
|
all the CPU available. In case of wrong sizing, reducing the number of
|
|
concurrent connections will protect against memory shortages while still
|
|
ensuring optimal CPU usage.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Example :
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
Haproxy is installed in front of an application servers farm. It will limit
|
|
the concurrent connections to 4 per server (one thread per CPU), thus ensuring
|
|
very fast response times.
|
|
|
|
|
|
192.168.1.1 192.168.1.11-192.168.1.13 192.168.1.2
|
|
-------+-------------+-----+-----+------------+----
|
|
| | | | _|_db
|
|
+--+--+ +-+-+ +-+-+ +-+-+ (___)
|
|
| LB1 | | A | | B | | C | (___)
|
|
+-----+ +---+ +---+ +---+ (___)
|
|
haproxy 3 application servers
|
|
with heavy frameworks
|
|
|
|
|
|
Config on haproxy (LB1) :
|
|
-------------------------
|
|
|
|
listen appfarm 192.168.1.1:80
|
|
mode http
|
|
maxconn 10000
|
|
option httpclose
|
|
option forwardfor
|
|
balance roundrobin
|
|
cookie SERVERID insert indirect
|
|
option httpchk HEAD /index.html HTTP/1.0
|
|
server railsA 192.168.1.11:80 cookie A maxconn 4 check
|
|
server railsB 192.168.1.12:80 cookie B maxconn 4 check
|
|
server railsC 192.168.1.13:80 cookie C maxconn 4 check
|
|
contimeout 60000
|
|
|
|
|
|
Description :
|
|
-------------
|
|
The proxy listens on IP 192.168.1.1, port 80, and expects HTTP requests. It
|
|
can accept up to 10000 concurrent connections on this socket. It follows the
|
|
roundrobin algorithm to assign servers to connections as long as servers are
|
|
not saturated.
|
|
|
|
It allows up to 4 concurrent connections per server, and will queue the
|
|
requests above this value. The "contimeout" parameter is used to set the
|
|
maximum time a connection may take to establish on a server, but here it
|
|
is also used to set the maximum time a connection may stay unserved in the
|
|
queue (1 minute here).
|
|
|
|
If the servers can each process 4 requests in 10 ms on average, then at 3000
|
|
connections, response times will be delayed by at most :
|
|
|
|
3000 / 3 servers / 4 conns * 10 ms = 2.5 seconds
|
|
|
|
Which is not that dramatic considering the huge number of users for such a low
|
|
number of servers.
|
|
|
|
When connection queues fill up and application servers are starving, response
|
|
times will grow and users might abort by clicking on the "Stop" button. It is
|
|
very undesirable to send aborted requests to servers, because they will eat
|
|
CPU cycles for nothing.
|
|
|
|
An option has been added to handle this specific case : "option abortonclose".
|
|
By specifying it, you tell haproxy that if an input channel is closed on the
|
|
client side AND the request is still waiting in the queue, then it is highly
|
|
likely that the user has stopped, so we remove the request from the queue
|
|
before it will get served.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Managing unfair response times
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Sometimes, the application server will be very slow for some requests (eg:
|
|
login page) and faster for other requests. This may cause excessive queueing
|
|
of expectedly fast requests when all threads on the server are blocked on a
|
|
request to the database. Then the only solution is to increase the number of
|
|
concurrent connections, so that the server can handle a large average number
|
|
of slow connections with threads left to handle faster connections.
|
|
|
|
But as we have seen, increasing the number of connections on the servers can
|
|
be detrimental to performance (eg: Apache processes fighting for the accept()
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|
lock). To improve this situation, the "minconn" parameter has been introduced.
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|
When it is set, the maximum connection concurrency on the server will be bound
|
|
by this value, and the limit will increase with the number of clients waiting
|
|
in queue, till the clients connected to haproxy reach the proxy's maxconn, in
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|
which case the connections per server will reach the server's maxconn. It means
|
|
that during low-to-medium loads, the minconn will be applied, and during surges
|
|
the maxconn will be applied. It ensures both optimal response times under
|
|
normal loads, and availability under very high loads.
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|
|
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Example :
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---------
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listen appfarm 192.168.1.1:80
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mode http
|
|
maxconn 10000
|
|
option httpclose
|
|
option abortonclose
|
|
option forwardfor
|
|
balance roundrobin
|
|
# The servers will get 4 concurrent connections under low
|
|
# loads, and 12 when there will be 10000 clients.
|
|
server railsA 192.168.1.11:80 minconn 4 maxconn 12 check
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|
server railsB 192.168.1.12:80 minconn 4 maxconn 12 check
|
|
server railsC 192.168.1.13:80 minconn 4 maxconn 12 check
|
|
contimeout 60000
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|
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