Rtr With Browser, Single Node, And Database; Rtr Deployed On Two Nodes - HP Reliable Transaction Router Getting Started

Reliable transaction router
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RTR Terminology
For example, you could use an underutilized system as a standby
server in certain configurations.
As you modularize your application and distribute its
components on frontends and backends, you can identify
usage bottlenecks, add new nodes, and provide redundancy to
increase availability. Adding backend nodes can help divide
the transactional load and distribute it more evenly. For
example, you could have a single node configuration as shown in
Figure 1–9, RTR with Browser, Single Node, and Database. A
single node configuration can be useful during development, but
would not normally be used when your application is deployed.
Figure 1–9 RTR with Browser, Single Node, and Database
FE
TR
BE
Database
Browser
VM-0827A-AI
When applications are deployed, often the frontend is separated
from the backend and router, as shown in Figure 1–10.
Figure 1–10 RTR Deployed on Two Nodes
FE
TR
BE
Database
Client
Server
application
application
Journal
Browser
VM-0828A-AI
Introduction 1–13

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