Enabling Once Only And Compression; Using Active Content Verification (Acv); Using Acv - Coyote Point Systems E350GX Installation And Administration Manual

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Chapter 6: Administering Virtual Clusters
properly on the client. If, for example, a server sends an HTTP redirect using the
likely will include the
http://
For server connections that contain multiple server responses, the setting of the
Location: headers in all server responses are rewritten. This is shown in the table below.
Note that the Administrative Interface does not permit you to enable
this option combination would rewrite the
rewrite the headers in subsequent responses in the same connection. Doing so would produce errors on the client.
Of course, you can also direct Equalizer to pass responses from the server without rewriting URLs by enabling the
flag on the cluster.
no header rewrite
no header rewrite
disabled
no header rewrite
enabled

Enabling Once Only and Compression

Enabling both the
once only
options are not compatible, since setting them both would mean that only the first response in a connection would be
compressed and not the remainder of the responses, which would likely cause client errors.

Using Active Content Verification (ACV)

Active Content Verification (ACV) is a mechanism for checking the validity of a server. When you enable ACV for
a cluster, Equalizer requests data from each server in the cluster and verifies that the returned data contains a
character string that indicates that the data is valid. You can use ACV with most network services that support a text-
based request/response protocol, such as HTTP. Note, however, that you cannot use ACV with Layer 4 UDP
clusters.

Using ACV

ACV checking is performed as part of the high-level TCP probes that Equalizer sends to every server by default. To
enable ACV, you specify an
string in the first 1024 characters of the server's response to the high-level TCP probes. If the ACV response string
is not found, the server is marked down. An ACV probe (see above) can be specified if the service running on the
server's
requires input in order to respond.
probe port
How ACV works is best explained using a simple example. The HTTP protocol enables you to establish a
connection to a server, request a file, and read the result. Figure 28 illustrates the connection process when a user
requests a telnet connection to an HTTP server and requests an HTML page.
134
protocol. Equalizer rewrites this response so that the URL uses
header in only the first response in the connection, and not
Location:
once only
enabled
Not supported.
No headers are rewritten.
and
options is not allowed by the Administrative Interface. These two
compress
string for a cluster. Equalizer will then search for the
ACV response
header, this URL most
Location:
https:
flag determines whether
once only
and disable
once only
no header rewrite
once only
disabled
The Location: headers of every
response in a connection are
rewritten.
No headers are rewritten.
Equalizer Installation and Administration Guide
//.
--
The compress
option is not
available on
E250, E350, or
E450 model
Equalizers
ACV response

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