Home > Linux > Apache
Enquire Search Register Secure Login
close
Login...
Please enter your username and password to gain access to the locked areas of the site:


Edit Your Details
To amend, simple re-edit your details below and click 'Update'.
Search...
Please type a keyword you would like to search for and then click 'Search...'
Search Results...
Need to Contact Us?
Please complete the boxes below and click 'Ok' to submit.

Disaster Recovery and High Availability
for Business Critical Applications

Skip Navigation Links
Home
Vacancies
What We Do
FAQs
Who We Are
Solutions
Our Customers
Contact Us
Events
sitemap
Windows
Linux
Data Replication
Disaster Recovery
Virtualisation
Scroll up
Scroll down
Articles of Interest
I Want One Of Those Lifekeeper Case Study
Lifekeeper for Linux white paper
Related Topics
Apache
Oracle
Bespoke Applications
Samba
SAP
PostGreSQL
IBM Software
MySQL
Apache Web Server application recovery
Apache with data replication
For a seamless recovery of your Apache servers, SteelEye Life Keeper from Open Minds guarantees to provide you with a complete disaster recovery solution ensuring that you maintain business continuity. Our high availability solutions will grant continuous data protection providing data replication as well as the monitoring of all your Apache servers to ensure failover through the Java GUI.

In a typical local configuration, data is replicated between the servers. Identical copies of the Apache Web Server configuration file, web documents, DSO modules (and their configuration files, if any), and the httpd executable reside in exactly the same locations on each server. MySQL databases are replicated between the active and backup servers. As there is no requirement for redundant servers, one possible scenario would be to have an active Apache server and an active MySQL server both acting as a hot backup to each other.

When the Apache hierarchy is switched over from one server to another, this particular httpd instance is stopped and the IP addresses are deactivated on the first server, then the IP addresses are reactivated and the instance started on the other server. Clients will then be automatically connected via TCP/IP to the identical web site on the other server.

Recovering Apache servers using Shared file systems
Apache web servers can be recovered using shared storage (below). The example below shows an active/active environment where the Apache server is acting as a backup for a SAMBA server. This eliminates the need to have a redundant server as a backup server.

Failover in an n+1 environment

Multiple servers can be protected simultaneously by setting up an N+1 configuration. The example below shows a typical server farm running multiple apache servers. These servers can be protected by a single backup server that will monitor all of the servers in the cluster. LifeKeeper allows up to 32 nodes in a cluster.


Disaster recovery to a remote site
To protect against a site disaster, failover to another site is achieved by recovering to server located in a separate location.

The scenario below shows data replication taking place across a WAN to a backup server in a remote location. When Apache fails over, the data is up to date.