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Diffstat (limited to 'gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.html')
| -rw-r--r-- | gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.html | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.html b/gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.html index bcb6de38..32cb172e 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.html +++ b/gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.html @@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ _____|_:_:_| (o)-(o) |_:_:_|--'`-. ,--. ksh under-water (((\'/ </pre> <br /> -<span>I have always wanted a highly available setup for my personal websites. I could have used off-the-shelf hosting solutions or hosted my sites in an AWS S3 bucket. I have used technologies like BGP, LVS/IPVS, ldirectord, Pacemaker, heartbeat, heartbeat2, Corosync, keepalived, DRBD, and commercial F5 Load Balancers for high availability at work. </span><br /> +<span>I have always wanted a highly available setup for my personal websites. I could have used off-the-shelf hosting solutions or hosted my sites in an AWS S3 bucket. I have used technologies like BGP, LVS/IPVS, ldirectord, Pacemaker, STONITH, heartbeat, heartbeat2, Corosync, keepalived, DRBD, and commercial F5 Load Balancers for high availability at work. </span><br /> <br /> <span>But still, my personal sites were never highly available. All those technologies are great for professional use, but I was looking for something much more straightforward for my personal space - something as KISS (keep it simple and stupid) as possible.</span><br /> <br /> |
