Hello!
On Mon, Sep 30, 2013 at 09:16:14AM -0400, revirii wrote:
> Hi,
>
> thanks for your answer :-)
>
> > It's an implementation detail. As of now, two identical
> > upstream{} blocks will map the same ip address to the same peer's
> > number. But it's not something guaranteed.
>
> ok, this is the behaviour when the upstreams are identical, i.e. they have
> the same backends. That would be ok for me.
>
> But what if the backends are not identical? My example was:
>
> upstream one {
> server backendA;
> server backendB;
> server backendC;
> }
>
> upstream two {
> server backendA;
> server backendD;
> server backendE;
> }
>
> If a user sends a request - > upstream:one -> backendA and then makes a
> request where upstream:two is used, is he then sent to backendA as well? Ok,
> this would be nice to know, but it's not that important ;-)
As long as all servers configured map to the same number of
peers (in most simple case - each "backendX" resolves to a single
ip address) - such backends are identical for the above sentence,
and the request will be sent to "backendA" in both cases.
But, again, this isn't something guaranteed.
--
Maxim Dounin
http://nginx.org/en/donation.html
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