Hi
user
Admin Login:
Username:
Password:
Name:
High Availability Sprint: from the brink of disaster to the Zen of Pacemaker
--client
la
--show
lca_2012
--room T101 36 --force
Next: 1 A (Mostly) Gentle Introduction to Computer Security
show more...
Marks
Author(s):
Florian Haas
Location
T101
Date
jan Thu 19
Days Raw Files
Start
10:30
First Raw Start
error-in-template
Duration
1:50:00
Offset
None
End
12:20
Last Raw End
Chapters
Total cuts_time
None min.
http://lca2012.linux.org.au/schedule/81/view_talk
raw-playlist
raw-mp4-playlist
encoded-files-playlist
mp4
svg
png
assets
release.pdf
High_Availability_Sprint_from_the_brink_of_disaster_to_the_Zen_of_Pacemaker.json
logs
Admin:
episode
episode list
cut list
raw files day
marks day
marks day
image_files
State:
---------
borked
edit
encode
push to queue
post
richard
review 1
email
review 2
make public
tweet
to-miror
conf
done
Locked:
clear this to unlock
Locked by:
user/process that locked.
Start:
initially scheduled time from master, adjusted to match reality
Duration:
length in hh:mm:ss
Name:
Video Title (shows in video search results)
Emails:
email(s) of the presenter(s)
Released:
has someone authorised pubication
Unknown
Yes
No
Normalise:
Channelcopy:
m=mono, 01=copy left to right, 10=right to left, 00=ignore.
Thumbnail:
filename.png
Description:
markdown
Ever wonder what happens to your most important application if your server goes cactus? Does the mere thought make the hair on your neck stick up like that of a roo facing a road train going 100? And, when you think about server failure, are you as well protected as a skinny dipper on a North Queensland beach during stinger season? Relax. We're here to help. In this tutorial, three of the world's best Linux High Availability experts -- including the original author of Pacemaker -- will walk you through setting up a 2-node high availability cluster front to back. From configuring DRBD-based replicated storage, to creating a baseline Pacemaker configuration, to adding a highly available application. All in under two hours. Attendees should bring Linux laptops with KVM and libvirt installed, and will be provided with pre-installed virtual machine images. Required memory for the two virtual machines is approximately 1GB in total. The virtual machines will run on any reasonably recent hardware, but for best results, bring a laptop with virtualization CPU extensions (Intel VT or AMD SVM) available and enabled in the BIOS. Please do not bring a road train, or a roo, and do wear clothes. Co-tutors: Andrew Beekhof (Red Hat, Melbourne, Victoria) Florian Haas (hastexo, Vienna, Austria) Tim Serong (SUSE, Hobart, Tasmania)
Comment:
production notes
Rf filename:
root is .../show/dv/location/, example: 2013-03-13/13:13:30.dv
Sequence:
get this:
check and save to add this
Veyepar
Video Eyeball Processor and Review