no, that's something different. Inside the container I have single interface which is NATed to the physical one.
I wanted to run multiple instances of same service (meta node) on single machine, and using containers was first idea that came up. Finally, I've solved it by running multi-modal instances.
Many distributed applications support advertising IP, I thought that BeeGFS should have something like this.
Btw. is there any progress with making BeeGFS open-source?
Regards,but at least in 99.9% of the cases it is smart
http://www.beegfs.com/source-download
3.2.1) LICENSEE must inform users of modified versions about the fact that the software differs from the original version.
Hi Thomas,
I am curious what you want to achieve by using Beegfs Services in containers. What advantage would you expect using a system designed for high performance on bare metal in containerized environments? The only thing what makes sense to me is to virtualize Management/Admon services to get failover quickly.
In case of respawning of services or failover, one always has to consider the storage stack which will not move along with the containerized environment, so whats the benefit at all?
Thanks for clearing things up for me,
Michael
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