Allied Telesis Routers and Switches User Manual

How to, Introduction, The examples

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C613-16088-00 REV A

www.alliedtelesis.com

How To|

Introduction

In many Server Hosting environments, two requirements are important: maximising
throughput availability to each service, and minimising service downtime. This How To Note
contributes towards both these aims.

The Note is split into two parts. The first part illustrates both redundancy of servers and
redundancy of the load balancers themselves. The second part provides an optional
extension that enables you to control server selection without losing redundancy. This is
helpful when you prefer to have customers access a certain server, instead of balancing that
traffic. However, if that server fails, the customers need to use the alternate server instead.

The examples

The network configuration for these examples is shown in the following figure.

The Note’s first example illustrates how to load balance web services, and includes:

Load balancing of incoming web traffic to maximise throughput to web servers. It also

provides redundancy if a web server goes down.

Redundancy between two load balancing routers. In the unlikely event of a router going

down, a backup router takes over as master and continues the load balancing work for
incoming web connections. Load balancer redundancy and VRRP ensure that clients and
servers access the same public and private addresses no matter which router is the master.

A firewall to secure the LAN against attack. The firewall configuration changes

automatically if the backup router takes over the load balancing role.

Web/SFTP server 1

192.168.1.1

Web/SFTP server 2

192.168.1.2

private address
192.168.1.201

private
VLAN 3
with VRRP

virtual
address
192.168.1.202

public

VLAN 2

private address
192.168.1.200

public address

172.214.1.3

public address

172.214.1.4

redundancy
management
VLAN 4
192.168.2.2

redundant
load balancer
virtual address
172.214.1.2

Load Balancer 1

Load Balancer 2

client

redundancy
management
VLAN 4
192.168.2.1

public side

private side

lb-redundancy.eps

Configure Load Balancer Redundancy on Allied Telesis
Routers and Switches

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