org.glassfish.loadbalancer.admin.cli.create-http-lb.1 Maven / Gradle / Ivy
create-http-lb(1) asadmin Utility Subcommands create-http-lb(1)
NAME
create-http-lb - creates a load balancer
SYNOPSIS
create-http-lb [--help] --devicehost device_host_or_IP_address --deviceport device_port
[--sslproxyhost proxy_host]
[--sslproxyport proxy_port] [--target target] [--lbpolicy lbpolicy] [--lbpolicymodule lb_policy_module] [--healthcheckerurl url]
[--healthcheckerinterval 10] [--healthcheckertimeout 10]
[--lbenableallinstances=true] [--lbenableallapplications=true] [--lbweight instance=weight[:instance=weight]*] [--responsetimeout 60] [--httpsrouting=false] [--reloadinterval60][--monitor=false][--routecookie=true]
[--property (name=value)[:name=value]*
] load_balancer_name
DESCRIPTION
Use the create-http-lb subcommand to create a load balancer, including
the load balancer configuration, target reference, and health checker.
A load balancer is a representation of the actual load balancer device,
defined by its device host and port information. Once you've created
the load balancer, you can automatically apply changes made to the load
balancer configuration without running export-http-lb-config and
manually copying the generated load balancer configuration file to the
web server instance.
Note
+----------------------------------------+
| This subcommand is only |
| applicable to Oracle |
| GlassFish Server. This |
| subcommand is not applicable |
| to GlassFish Server Open |
| Source Edition. |
+----------------------------------------+
OPTIONS
--help, -?
Displays the help text for the subcommand.
--devicehost
The device host or the IP address of the load balancing device.
This host or IP is where the physical load balancer will reside.
--deviceport
The port used to communicate with the load balancing device. It
must be SSL enabled.
--sslproxyhost
The proxy host used for outbound HTTP.
--sslproxyport
The proxy port used for outbound HTTP.
--target
Specifies the target to which the load balancer applies.
Valid values are:
* cluster_name- Specifies that requests for this cluster will be
handled by the load balancer.
* stand-alone_instance_name- Specifies that requests for this
stand-alone instance will be handled by the load balancer.
--lbpolicy
The policy the load balancer follows to distribute load to the
server instances in a cluster. Valid values are round-robin,
weighted-round-robin, and user-defined. If you choose user-defined,
specify a load balancer policy module with the lbpolicymodule
option. If you choose weighted-round-robin, assign weights to the
server instances using the configure-lb-weight subcommand. The
default is round-robin.
--lbpolicymodule
If your target is a cluster and the load balancer policy is
user-defined, use this option to specify the full path and name of
the shared library of your load balancing policy module. The shared
library needs to be in a location accessible by the web server.
--healthcheckerurl
The URL to ping to determine whether the instance is healthy.
--healthcheckerinterval
The interval in seconds the health checker waits between checks of
an unhealthy instance to see whether it has become healthy. The
default value is 10 seconds. A value of 0 disables the health
checker.
--healthcheckertimeout
The interval in seconds the health checker waits to receive a
response from an instance. If the health checker has not received a
response in this interval, the instance is considered unhealthy.
The default value is 10 seconds.
--lbenableallinstances
Enables all instances in the target cluster for load balancing. If
the target is a server instance, enables that instance for load
balancing.
--lbenableallapplications
Enables all applications deployed to the target cluster or instance
for load balancing.
--lbweight
The name of the instance and the weight you are assigning it. The
weight must be an integer. The pairs of instances and weights are
separated by colons. For example instance1=1:instance2=4 means that
for every five requests, one goes to instance1 and four go to
instance2. A weight of 1 is the default.
--responsetimeout
The time in seconds within which a server instance must return a
response. If no response is received within the time period, the
server is considered unhealthy. If set to a positive number, and
the request is idempotent, the request is retried. If the request
is not idempotent, an error page is returned. If set to 0 no
timeout is used. The default is 60.
--httpsrouting
If set to true, HTTPS requests to the load balancer result in HTTPS
requests to the server instance. If set to false, HTTPS requests to
the load balancer result in HTTP requests to the server instance.
The default is false.
--reloadinterval
The time, in seconds, that the load balancer takes to check for an
updated configuration. When detected, the configuration file is
reloaded. The default value is 60 seconds. A value of 0 disables
reloading.
--monitor
If set to true, monitoring of the load balancer is switched on. The
default value is false.
--routecookie
This option is deprecated. The value is always true.
--property
Optional attribute name/value pairs for configuring the load
balancer.
OPERANDS
lb_name
The name of the new load balancer. This name must not conflict with
any other load balancers in the domain.
EXAMPLES
Example 1, Creating a Load Balancer
This example creates a load balancer named mylb.
asadmin> create-http-lb
--devicehost host1 --deviceport 5555 mylb
Command create-http-lb executed successfully.
EXIT STATUS
0
subcommand executed successfully
1
error in executing the subcommand
SEE ALSO
delete-http-lb(1), list-http-lbs(1), create-http-lb-config(1)
asadmin(1M)
Jakarta EE 10 25 Aug 2010 create-http-lb(1)
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