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3.2. LVS via Direct Routing

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As mentioned in Section 1.4.2, “Direct Routing”, direct routing allows real servers to process and route packets directly to a requesting user rather than passing outgoing packets through the LVS router. Direct routing requires that the real servers be physically connected to a network segment with the LVS router and be able to process and direct outgoing packets as well.
Network Layout
In a direct routing LVS setup, the LVS router needs to receive incoming requests and route them to the proper real server for processing. The real servers then need to directly route the response to the client. So, for example, if the client is on the Internet, and sends the packet through the LVS router to a real server, the real server must be able to go directly to the client via the Internet. This can be done by configuring a gateway for the real server to pass packets to the Internet. Each real server in the server pool can have its own separate gateway (and each gateway with its own connection to the Internet), allowing for maximum throughput and scalability. For typical LVS setups, however, the real servers can communicate through one gateway (and therefore one network connection).

Important

It is not recommended to use the LVS router as a gateway for the real servers, as that adds unneeded setup complexity as well as network load on the LVS router, which reintroduces the network bottleneck that exists in NAT routing.
Hardware
The hardware requirements of an LVS system using direct routing is similar to other LVS topologies. While the LVS router needs to be running Red Hat Enterprise Linux to process the incoming requests and perform load-balancing for the real servers, the real servers do not need to be Linux machines to function correctly. The LVS routers need one or two NICs each (depending on if there is a back-up router). You can use two NICs for ease of configuration and to distinctly separate traffic — incoming requests are handled by one NIC and routed packets to real servers on the other.
Since the real servers bypass the LVS router and send outgoing packets directly to a client, a gateway to the Internet is required. For maximum performance and availability, each real server can be connected to its own separate gateway which has its own dedicated connection to the carrier network to which the client is connected (such as the Internet or an intranet).
Software
There is some configuration outside of Piranha Configuration Tool that needs to be done, especially for administrators facing ARP issues when using LVS via direct routing. Refer to Section 3.2.1, “Direct Routing and arptables_jf or Section 3.2.2, “Direct Routing and iptables for more information.

3.2.1. Direct Routing and arptables_jf

In order to configure direct routing using arptables_jf, each real server must have their virtual IP address configured, so they can directly route packets. ARP requests for the VIP are ignored entirely by the real servers, and any ARP packets that might otherwise be sent containing the VIPs are mangled to contain the real server's IP instead of the VIPs.
Using the arptables_jf method, applications may bind to each individual VIP or port that the real server is servicing. For example, the arptables_jf method allows multiple instances of Apache HTTP Server to be running bound explicitly to different VIPs on the system. There are also significant performance advantages to using arptables_jf over the iptables option.
However, using the arptables_jf method, VIPs can not be configured to start on boot using standard Red Hat Enterprise Linux system configuration tools.
To configure each real server to ignore ARP requests for each virtual IP addresses, perform the following steps:
  1. Create the ARP table entries for each virtual IP address on each real server (the real_ip is the IP the director uses to communicate with the real server; often this is the IP bound to eth0):
    arptables -A IN -d <virtual_ip> -j DROP
    arptables -A OUT -d <virtual_ip> -j mangle --mangle-ip-s <real_ip>
    
    This will cause the real servers to ignore all ARP requests for the virtual IP addresses, and change any outgoing ARP responses which might otherwise contain the virtual IP so that they contain the real IP of the server instead. The only node that should respond to ARP requests for any of the VIPs is the current active LVS node.
  2. Once this has been completed on each real server, save the ARP table entries by typing the following commands on each real server:
    service arptables_jf save
    chkconfig --level 2345 arptables_jf on
    The chkconfig command will cause the system to reload the arptables configuration on bootup — before the network is started.
  3. Configure the virtual IP address on all real servers using ifconfig to create an IP alias. For example:
    # ifconfig eth0:1 192.168.76.24 netmask 255.255.252.0 broadcast 192.168.79.255 up
    Or using the iproute2 utility ip, for example:
    # ip addr add 192.168.76.24 dev eth0
    As previously noted, the virtual IP addresses can not be configured to start on boot using the Red Hat system configuration tools. One way to work around this issue is to place these commands in /etc/rc.d/rc.local.
  4. Configure Piranha for Direct Routing. Refer to Chapter 4, Configuring the LVS Routers with Piranha Configuration Tool for more information.
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