| About | Products | News | Press | Resources | Awards | Jobs | Contact

SecPoint® - anti-spam appliance, web filter, vulnerability scanning, wifi security

What is High Availability?

High availability is a system design protocol and associated implementation that ensures a certain absolute degree of operational continuity during a given measurement period.

Availability refers to the ability of the user community to access the system, whether to submit new work, update or alter existing work, or collect the results of previous work. If a user cannot access the system, it is said to be unavailable. Generally, the term downtime used to refer to periods when a system is unavailable.

High Availability, or HA as it is abbreviated, refers to the availability of resources in a computer system, in the wake of component failures in the system. This can be achieved in a variety of ways, spanning the entire spectrum ranging at the one end from solutions that use custom and redundant hardware ato ensure availability, to the other end to solutions that provide software solutions using off-the-shelf hardware components. The former class of solutions provide a higher degree of availability, but are significantly more expensive, than the latter class. This has led to the popularity of the latter class, with almost all vendors of computer systems offering various HA products. Typically, these products survive single points of failure in the system. 

The SecPoint® Protector (http://www.secpoint.com/secpoint-protector.html) comes fully loaded with High Availability. This allows the customer to connect an unlimited amount of Protector units together for full redundancy.

 

As more and more mission-critical applications move on the Internet, providing highly available services becomes increasingly important. One of the advantages of a clustered system is that it has hardware and software redundancy, because the cluster system consists of a number of independent nodes, and each node runs a copy of operating system and application software. High availability can be achieved by detecting node or daemon failures and reconfiguring the system appropriately, so that the workload can be taken over by the remaining nodes in the cluster.

In fact, high availability is a big field. An advanced highly available system may have a reliable group communication sub-system, membership management, quoram sub-systems, concurrent control sub-system and so on. There must be a lot of work to do. However, we can use some existing software packages to construct highly available LVS cluster systems now.

High Availability (HA for short) refers to the availability of resources in a computer system, in the wake of component failures in the system. This can be achieved in a variety of ways, spanning the entire spectrum ranging at the one end from solutions that utilize custom and redundant hardware to ensure availability, to the other end to solutions that provide software solutions using off-the-shelf hardware components. The former class of solutions provide a higher degree of availability, but are significantly more expensive, than the latter class. This has led to the popularity of the latter class, with almost all vendors of computer systems offering various HA products. Typically, these products survive single points of failure in the system,

SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - Appliance vs Software
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is Cross Site Scripting(XSS)?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is SQL Injection?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is a Routing Table?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is High Availability?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is Grey Listing?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is a Web Filter?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is a Vulnerability?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is a Proxy Server?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is a Firewall?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is a Cookie?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is a Bayesian Filter?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - Test Your Security Policy
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - Email & Spam Test Links
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is RoHS Weee?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is Vulnerability Scanning?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is Vulnerability Assessment?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is Penetration Testing?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is a Security Exploit?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is Appliance Scanning?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is Zero Day?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is Unified Threat Management?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is Intrusion Prevention?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is a Content-Filter?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is VoIP
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is Virus?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is Spyware?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is Phishing?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is P2P?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is Instant Messaging?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - What is Spam?
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - White Papers
SecPoint® - What is High Availability? - Technology Papers

© Copyright 1999-2008: SecPoint®
SecPoint ApS - Lergravsvej 53 - 2300 Copenhagen S - Phone +45 70 235 245
Privacy Statement | Link Policy | User Policy | SecPoint® Blog
SecPoint® Forum | SecPoint® Picture Archive | SecPoint® Exploit Archive

Anti-Spam Appliance - Anti-Spam Firewall - Unified Threat Management Appliance
Anti-Virus - Web Filter Appliance - Anti Spam Appliance - Anti Spam Firewall - UTM Appliance

Wifi Security - Wifi Pen Test - Wifi Crack - Wifi Hack - Wifi Audit - Wep Wpa2 Crack

Vulnerability Scanner - Vulnerability Assessment - Security Scanner - Pen Test Appliance