<div style="line-height:1.7;color:#000000;font-size:14px;font-family:Arial"><div>thanks for your solution.</div><div><br></div><div>Is anybody can officially reply this topic ?</div><br><br><br><br><div style="position:relative;zoom:1"></div><div id="divNeteaseMailCard"></div><br><pre><br>At 2017-07-06 11:45:05, "Digimer" <lists@alteeve.ca> wrote:
>I'm not employed by Red Hat, so I can't speak authoritatively.
>
>My understanding, however, is that they do not distinguish as corosync
>on its own doesn't do much. The complexity comes from corosync traffic
>though, but it gets more of a concern when you add in pacemaker traffic
>and/or the CIB grows large.
>
>Again, there is no hard code limit here, just what is practical. Can I
>ask how large of a cluster you are planning to build, and what it will
>be used for?
>
>Note also; This is not related to pacemaker remote. You can have very
>large counts of remote nodes.
>
>digimer
>
>On 2017-07-05 11:27 PM, mlb_1 wrote:
>> Is RedHat limit node's number, or corosync's code?
>>
>>
>> At 2017-07-06 11:11:39, "Digimer" <lists@alteeve.ca> wrote:
>>>On 2017-07-05 09:03 PM, mlb_1 wrote:
>>>> Hi:
>>>> I heard corosync-node's number limit to 16£¿ It's true£¿ And Why?
>>>> Thanks for anyone's answer.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> https://specs.openstack.org/openstack/fuel-specs/specs/6.0/pacemaker-improvements.html
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> * Corosync 2.0 has a lot of improvements that allow to have up to 100
>>>> Controllers. Corosync 1.0 scales up to 10-16 node
>>>
>>>There is no hard limit on how many nodes can be in a cluster, but Red
>>>Hat supports up to 16. SUSE supports up to 32, iirc. The problem is that
>>>it gets harder and harder to keep things stable as the number of nodes
>>>grow. There is a lot of coordination that has to happen between the
>>>nodes and it gets ever more complex.
>>>
>>>Generally speaking, you don't want large clusters. It is always advised
>>>to break things up it separate smaller clusters whenever possible.
>
>
>--
>Digimer
>Papers and Projects: https://alteeve.com/w/
>"I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of
>Einstein¡¯s brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent
>have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops." - Stephen Jay Gould
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