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A failover system automatically prevents data loss when one of the servers Servers in the system fails.
In a failover system, the servers Servers are combined into a logical structure − —the cluster.
The The Axxon One Failover system has two types of configuration.
The basic configuration allows system supervisors to permit launching Axxon One servers (nodes) on any Servers within the system.
Info title Note While When selecting a Server to transfer a node to, the supervisor tries to keep in balance the whole cluster's performance. If If all Servers deliver more or less the same performance, the selection is performed randomly.
If Servers significantly differ in their performance, the supervisor may launch several nodes on a more capable Server, and no nodes on a less capable one.
- In the configuration with the specified backup Server, a node from the primary Server can be migrated only to the backup Server. After the primary Server is back online, the node is returned.
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This section contains the following terms:
- Server − a —a computer with Failover Server and Client configuration of Axxon One installed;
- Node −—an instance of the Server services. A Server can have multiple nodes running;
- Cluster −—logical grouping of Servers that allows migration of clusters nodes between them. A cluster may encompass nodes from different Axxon-domains;
- Supervisor − the —the service that monitors the status of nodes and their migration.
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- the system administrator should have full control over all communication channels and hardware that provides fault tolerance at all times;
- you should build a cluster from servers in the same LAN;
- use only the network archives, that are available from all servers in the cluster.
Example of a Failover system:
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You can install Axxon One Server in the Failover mode in Linux OS (see Installing from repository, Manual installation). |