From: (no name) (no email)
Date: Wed May 17 2000 - 02:39:45 EDT
On Tue, 16 May 2000 23:22:09 PDT, "Roeland M.J. Meyer" said:
> > What is the general feeling about running routing protocols on
> > web/dns/mail servers?
>
> Technically, not a problem. However, there is a school of thought that
> thinks that to be a bad policy. That routing functions should be on
> appliance-level systems, like routers. There is also some merit in that
> appliances are more reliable, mainly because nothing *else* can cause an
> operational interrupt. Unix systems are *real* good about process
> control. but, there are still some things that makes it advisable to
> reboot a system, at times. If that system is ALSO a critical router then
> the entire net is down until the reboot is complete. It is generally not
How about the case of a system with several network interfaces on
different subnets, and using a routing protocol to better pick which
interface to send a connection out on?
This is probably more applicable to mail servers - web and dns servers
don't have as much latitude as they sort of have to answer on the
interface they were contacted on...
Valdis Kletnieks
Operating Systems Analyst
Virginia Tech
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