10
Chapter 2 Scalability and Availability Overview
What is scalability?
As an administrator, you probably hear about the importance of having web servers that
scale well. But what exactly is scalability? Simply, scalability is a web server’s ability to
maintain a site’s availability, reliability, and performance as the amount of simultaneous
web traffic, or load, hitting the web server increases.
The major issues that affect website scalability include:
•
“Performance” on page 10
•
“Load management” on page 12
Performance
Performance refers to how efficiently a site responds to browser requests according to
defined benchmarks. You can design, tune, and measure application performance.
Performance can also be affected by many complex factors, including application design
and construction, database connectivity, network capacity and bandwidth, back office
services (such as mail, proxy, and security services), and hardware server resources.
Web application architects and developers must design and code an application with
performance in mind. When the application is built, administrators can tune
performance by setting specific flags and options on the database, the operating system,
and often the application itself to achieve peak performance. Following the construction
and tuning efforts, quality assurance testers should test and measure an application’s
performance prior to deployment to establish acceptable quality benchmarks. If these
efforts are performed well, you can better diagnose whether the website is operating
within established operating parameters, when reviewing the statistics generated by web
server monitoring and logging programs.
Depending on the size and complexity of your web application, it may be able to handle
from ten to thousands of concurrent users. The number of concurrent connections to
your web server(s) ultimately has a direct impact on your site’s performance. Therefore,
your performance objectives must include two dimensions:
•
Speed of a single user’s transaction
•
Amount of performance degradation related to the increasing number of concurrent
users on your web servers
Thus, you must establish response benchmarks for your site and then achieve the highest
number of concurrent users connected to your site at the response rates. By doing so, you
will be able to determine a rough number of concurrent users for each web server and
then scale your website by adding additional servers.
When your site runs on multiple web servers, you must monitor and manage the traffic
and load across the group of servers. To learn how to do these tasks, see
“Hardware
planning” on page 26
and
“Creating scalable and highly available sites” on page 28
.
Summary of Contents for COLDFUSION MX-CLUSTERCATS
Page 1: ...macromedia Using ClusterCATS...
Page 56: ...46 Chapter 3 Installing ClusterCATS...
Page 118: ...108 Chapter 4 Configuring Clusters...
Page 156: ...146 Index...