Article Categories
» Arts & Entertainment
» Automotive
» Business
» Careers & Jobs
» Education & Reference
» Finance
» Food & Drink
» Health & Fitness
» Home & Family
» Internet & Online Businesses
» Miscellaneous
» Self Improvement
» Shopping
» Society & News
» Sports & Recreation
» Technology
» Travel & Leisure
» Writing & Speaking

  Listed Article

  Category: Articles » Technology » Computer Hardware » Article
 

Hardware Load Balancing Lightens Server Load




By Mark henry

Load balancing is the even distribution of computer processing and communication activities so that a server is not overwhelmed. Load balancing is especially important for networks where it is difficult to predict the number of requests that will be issued to a server.

Busy Web sites typically employ two or more Web servers in a load-balancing scheme. If one server starts to get swamped, requests are forwarded to another server with more capacity. Load balancing is therefore a service that is employed on more sophisticated site deployments.

Most service providers that offer managed hosting will provide load balancing services to their clients if they experience constantly heavy traffic on their Web sites. Multiplexing traffic amongst several servers permits better site availability. Load balancing therefore distributes traffic efficiently among network servers so that no individual server is overburdened.

In the early days of the technology, many load balancing solutions where implemented through customized domain name server configurations. This approach called "DNS round robin," rotated incoming requests from Web browsers to multiple Web servers. The result was that all requests to the particular Web site were evenly distributed among all of the machines in the cluster.

The advantage of this system was that it was inexpensive, as a system administrator only needed to make a few changes in order to implement it. Its major disadvantages however was that DNS round robin did not support server affinity or high availability.

Server affinity is a load-balancing system's ability to manage a user's requests, either to a specific server or any server, depending on whether session information is maintained on the server or at an underlying, database level. Without server affinity, DNS round robin could not by itself exercise control over incoming traffic without the aid of cookies, hidden fields or URL rewriting.

Due to its very nature of not being able to exercise this type of control, DNS round robin could not natively handle browser caching, since incoming requests were randomized. DNS round robin also had tremendous difficulties dealing with high availability, since the DNS system requires a large amount of time of propagate information and cache it throughout the network. As a result, DNS round robin is a more antiquated approach toward managing server load. Load balancing, however, is much more sophisticated today, because it is mainly implemented through appliances such as smart switches.

Hardware load balancers solve many of the problems faced by the round robin software solution through virtual server addressing. A load balancer shows a single, virtual server address to the outside world, which maps to the addresses of each server within the cluster. When a request comes to the load balancer, it rewrites the request's header to point to other machines in the cluster. If a machine is removed from the cluster, the request does not run the risk of hitting a dead server, since all of the machines in the cluster appear to have the same IP address. This address remains the same even if a node in the cluster is down. Moreover, cached DNS entries around the Internet are not a problem. When a response is returned, the client sees it coming from the hardware load balancer machine. In other words, the client is dealing with a single machine, the hardware load balancer.

Because one machine is dealing with the management of an entire cluster, server affinity and high availability is actually integrated into the hardware load balancer solution. Indeed, with the hardware solution, a service provider can offer fail-over services, cluster management, traffic routing and geographic load balancing across multiple sites and points of presence.

Hardware also is a much faster traffic routing solution because it is solid-state device that more efficiently processes requests than software on a server deployment can

Link load balancing is a key element in the overall network Intrusion Prevention effort. Expert Link Load Balancing guards the network against internal and external attacks such as viruses, worms, Trojans, anti-scanning and protocol anomalies. Above all hovers the ultimate link load balancing challenge and network threat – DOS - Denial of Service.
 
 
About the Author
Mark henry is the author related to Load Balancer, Dual Port Router, Multiple Gateways, Server Load Balancing Xrio provide solutions for bandwidth management, load balancing, link bonding, server load balancing, multiple gateways, global traffic management, wan p

Article Source: http://www.simplysearch4it.com/article/43622.html
 
If you wish to add the above article to your website or newsletters then please include the "Article Source: http://www.simplysearch4it.com/article/43622.html" as shown above and make it hyperlinked.



  Some other articles by Mark henry
I love my highreplica MIU MIU Coffer bag!
Hi girls! Today is the day… I just received a box from China! And guess what it is! Well it should be the MIU MIU replica bag that I ordered last ...

How to fix bad credit using Bad Credit Repair!
It is possible to fix your bad credit, with time, patience and determination. The first step in repairing poor credit is fixing any problems you may have ...

  
  Recent Articles
Notebook Buying Tips
by Roberto Sedycias

Quality Printer Supplies Online
by Mike Nicholson

Decoding the DCF-77 Radio Time Signal
by Dave Evans

System Strategy and Motherboard
by Zahir Shah

How Do You Get The Latest Printer Cartridges Without Paying Outrageous Prices?
by Click2ink.com

When, Why, and How should I reformat my Hard Drive?
by Timothy Scheiman

High Capacity Data Storage Solutions for Organizations of all Sizes.
by Mike Nicholson

The Development of the Vital IBM PC in Spite of the Corporate Culture of IBM
by Max Rubin

Leading Computer Consumables Supplier in UK.
by Mike Nicholson

Designing and testing robust industrial computing solutions
by Leon Mengot

Business RFID Strategy
by Zhen Dong

The Indian Market and Copiers
by ram

Apple FireWire Effective bandwidth of the USB 2.0
by Nivea David

Apple's SCSI Cards
by Monica Craft

Apple's New Mac Book Pro with Core 2 Duo 2.33 GHz
by Nivea David

Apple's Powerful Mac Parts
by Harry Johnson

Can't connect to database