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    |   xen-users
Re: [Xen-users] Re: Is Anybody Running Xen in Production Environment 
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On 6/29/07 8:59 PM, "Matthew Palmer" <mpalmer@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> [Please don't Cc me on posts to mailing lists -- I read the list]
> 
> On Sat, Jun 30, 2007 at 01:18:58AM +0100, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
>> Matthew Palmer wrote:
>>> On Fri, Jun 29, 2007 at 08:14:44AM -0700, Matias wrote:
>>>> If so what is maintenance like?  Are you constantl
>>>> having to keep a careful watch?  Does it crash
>>>> often?  Run out of memory? OR is has it been
>>>> a very blissful experience and your always confident
>>>> that it's up and running.
>>> 
>>> I've been quite impressed -- it's never really been a hassle.  Nagios keeps
>>> an eye on things, and we're running heartbeat on redundant machines to make
>>> sure that even if something goes pop we're still covered.  Even with all
>>> that, I can't think of a production failure (even non-customer-impacting)
>>> that has definitely been Xen's fault.
>>  
>> What are you using to configure your Nagios?
> 
> A text editor.  If you use hostgroups extensively as we do, it's really
> simple.  We've got maybe 50 object definitions for our 600 or so service
> checks.
Same here.  I've got production systems from the extreme management backend
to the customer-facing side of things running on xen machines, and they've
been totally stable.  Heartbeat adds an extra level of security for the
really mission-critical stuff.
Managing the nagios text config files has always been less of pain than
managing a config tool, for me.  70+ hosts can be boiled down to 10 or so
host groups, and then services.cfg isn't too complicated at all.
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