Apache Module mod_proxy_balancer
Summary
This module requires the service of mod_proxy. It provides load balancing support for
HTTP, FTP and AJP13 protocols
Thus, in order to get the ability of load balancing,
mod_proxy and mod_proxy_balancer
have to be present in the server.
Warning
Do not enable proxying until you have secured your server. Open proxy
servers are dangerous both to your network and to the Internet at
large.
Directives
This module provides no
directives.
Topics
See also
At present, there are 2 load balancer scheduler algorithms available
for use: Request Counting and Weighted Traffic Counting. These are controlled
via the lbmethod value of the Balancer definition. See
the Proxy directive for
more information.

Enabled via lbmethod=byrequests, the idea behind this
scheduler is that we distribute the requests among the
various workers to ensure that each gets their configured share
of the number of requests. It works as follows:
lbfactor is how much we expect this worker
to work, or the workers's work quota. This is
a normalized value representing their "share" of the amount of
work to be done.
lbstatus is how urgent this worker has to work
to fulfill its quota of work.
The worker is a member of the load balancer,
usually a remote host serving one of the supported protocols.
We distribute each worker's work quota to the worker, and then look
which of them needs to work most urgently (biggest lbstatus). This
worker is then selected for work, and its lbstatus reduced by the
total work quota we distributed to all workers. Thus the sum of all
lbstatus does not change(*) and we distribute the requests
as desired.
If some workers are disabled, the others will
still be scheduled correctly.
for each worker in workers
worker lbstatus += worker lbfactor
total factor += worker lbfactor
if worker lbstatus > candidate lbstatus
candidate = worker
candidate lbstatus -= total factor
If a balancer is configured as follows:
| worker |
a |
b |
c |
d |
| lbfactor |
25 |
25 |
25 |
25 |
| lbstatus |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
And b gets disabled, the following schedule is produced:
| worker |
a |
b |
c |
d |
| lbstatus |
-50 |
0 |
25 |
25 |
| lbstatus |
-25 |
0 |
-25 |
50 |
| lbstatus |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| (repeat) |
That is it schedules: a c d
a c d a c
d ... Please note that:
| worker |
a |
b |
c |
d |
| lbfactor |
25 |
25 |
25 |
25 |
Has the exact same behavior as:
| worker |
a |
b |
c |
d |
| lbfactor |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
This is because all values of lbfactor are normalized
with respect to the others. For:
| worker |
a |
b |
c |
| lbfactor |
1 |
4 |
1 |
worker b will, on average, get 4 times the requests
that a and c will.
The following asymmetric configuration works as one would expect:
| worker |
a |
b |
| lbfactor |
70 |
30 |
| |
| lbstatus |
-30 |
30 |
| lbstatus |
40 |
-40 |
| lbstatus |
10 |
-10 |
| lbstatus |
-20 |
20 |
| lbstatus |
-50 |
50 |
| lbstatus |
20 |
-20 |
| lbstatus |
-10 |
10 |
| lbstatus |
-40 |
40 |
| lbstatus |
30 |
-30 |
| lbstatus |
0 |
0 |
| (repeat) |
That is after 10 schedules, the schedule repeats and 7 a
are selected with 3 b interspersed.

Enabled via lbmethod=bytraffic, the idea behind this
scheduler is very similar to the Request Counting method, with
the following changes:
lbfactor is how much traffic, in bytes, we want
this worker to handle. This is also a normalized value
representing their "share" of the amount of work to be done,
but instead of simply counting the number of requests, we take
into account the amount of traffic this worker has seen.
If a balancer is configured as follows:
| worker |
a |
b |
c |
| lbfactor |
1 |
2 |
1 |
Then we mean that we want b to process twice the
amount of bytes than a or c should. It does
not necessarily mean that b would handle twice as
many requests, but it would process twice the I/O. Thus, the
size of the request and response are applied to the weighting
and selection algorithm.

This module requires the service of
mod_status.
Balancer manager enables dynamic update of balancer
members. You can use balancer manager to change the balance
factor or a particular member, or put it in the off line
mode.
Thus, in order to get the ability of load balancer management,
mod_status and mod_proxy_balancer
have to be present in the server.
To enable load balancer management for browsers from the foo.com
domain add this code to your httpd.conf
configuration file
<Location /balancer-manager>
SetHandler balancer-manager
Order Deny,Allow
Deny from all
Allow from .foo.com
</Location>
You can now access load balancer manager by using a Web browser
to access the page
http://your.server.name/balancer-manager