Versions Compared
Key
- This line was added.
- This line was removed.
- Formatting was changed.
Introduction
Clustering in eZ Platform refers to setting up your install with several web servers for handling more load and/or for failover.
Server setup overview
This diagram illustrates how clustering of eZ Platform is typically set up, the parts illustrate the different roles needed for a successful cluster setup. The number of web servers, Memcached servers, Solr servers, Varnish servers, Database servers, NFS servers, as well as whether some servers play several of these roles (typically running Memcached across the web server) is up to you and your performance needs.
The minimal requirements are the following (with what is currently supported in italics):
- Shared HTTP cache (using Varnish)
- Shared Persistence cache and Sessions (using Memcached, or experimentally also Redis)
- Shared Database (using MySQL/MariaDB)
- Shared Filesystem (using NFS, or experimentally also S3)
For further details on requirements, see Requirements page.
While this is not a complete list, further recommendations include:
- Using Solr for better search and better search performance
- Using a CDN for improved performance and faster ping time worldwide
- Using Active/Passive Database for failover
- In general: Make sure to use later versions of PHP and MySQL/MariaDB within what is supported for your eZ Platform version to get more performance out of each server.
Binary files clustering
eZ Platform supports multi-server by means of custom IO handlers. They will make sure that files are correctly synchronized among the multiple clients that might use the data.
Configuration
DFS IO Handler
What it is meant for
The DFS IO handler (legacy_dfs_cluster)
can be used to store binary files on an NFS server. It will use a database to manipulate metadata, making up for the potential inconsistency of network based filesystems.
Configuration
You need to configure both metadata and binarydata handlers.
As the binarydata handler, create a new Flysystem local adapter configured to read/write to the NFS mount point on each local server. As metadata handler handler, create a dfs one, configured with a doctrine connection.
Tip | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Note: the default database install will now include the dfs table in the same database |
For production, we strongly recommend to create creating the DFS table in its own database, using the vendor/ezsystems/ezpublish-kernel/data/mysql/dfs_schema.sql
file.
In our example, we will use one named dfs
.
Code Block |
---|
# new doctrine connection for the dfs legacy_dfs_cluster metadata handler. doctrine: dbal: connections: dfs: driver: pdo_mysql host: 127.0.0.1 port: 3306 dbname: ezdfs user: root password: "rootpassword" charset: UTF8 # define the flysystem handler oneup_flysystem: adapters: nfs_adapter: local: directory: "/<path to nfs>/$var_dir$/$storage_dir$" # define the ez handlers ez_io: binarydata_handlers: nfs: flysystem: adapter: nfs_adapter metadata_handlers: dfs: legacy_dfs_cluster: connection: doctrine.dbal.dfs_connection # set the application handlers ezpublish: system: default: io: metadata_handler: dfs binarydata_handler: nfs |
Customizing the storage directory
eZ Publish 5.x required the NFS adapter directory to be set to $var_dir$/$storage_dir$
part for the NFS path. This is no longer required with eZ Platform, but the default prefix used to serve binary files will still match this expectation.
If you decide to change this setting, make sure you also set io.url_prefix
to a matching value. If you set the NFS adapter's directory to "/path/to/nfs/storage", use this configuration so that the files can be served by Symfony:
Code Block |
---|
ezpublish: system: default: io: url_prefix: "storage" |
/path/to/nfs/storage
as the document root, configure io.url_prefix
as follows:
Code Block |
---|
ezpublish: system: default: io: url_prefix: "http://static.example.com/" |
You can read more about that on Binary files URL handling.
Web server rewrite rules
The default eZ Platform rewrite rules will let image requests be served directly from disk. With native support, files matching ^/var/([^/]+/)?storage/images(-versioned)?/.*
have to be passed through /web/app.php
.
In any case, this specific rewrite rule must be placed without the ones that "ignore" image files and just let the web server serve the files.
Apache
Code Block |
---|
RewriteRule ^/var/([^/]+/)?storage/images(-versioned)?/.* /app.php [L] |
nginx
Code Block |
---|
rewrite "^/var/([^/]+/)?storage/images(-versioned)?/(.*)" "/app.php" break; |
In this topic:
Table of Contents | ||
---|---|---|
|