Configure Apache load balancer with mod proxy
Server setup
The layout may look something like this (we will refer to these names through the rest of the guide).
Define Apache Load-balancer
This server will handle all HTTP requests from site visitors. As you might see, this means even though you run a load balanced system, using only a single load balancer means you still have a SPOF (single point of failure). It is also possible to configure an environment where yet another server will act as the fail-over load-balancer if the first one fails, but this is outside the scope of this guide.
To set up our load-balancer, we use the Apache web-server and its modules mod_proxy and mod_proxy_balancer. These are part of most of the Apache web-server distributions.
First, create a virtual host handling the requests for your domain: ldproxy.org
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName ldproxy.org
ServerAdmin webmaster@localhost
DocumentRoot /var/www/html
ProxyRequests Off
ProxyPreserveHost On
Header add Set-Cookie "ROUTEID=.%{BALANCER_WORKER_ROUTE}e; path=/" env=BALANCER_ROUTE_CHANGED
<Proxy balancer://mycluster>
BalancerMember "http://eva00:9080" route=1
BalancerMember "http://192.168.2.11:8080" route=2
ProxySet lbmethod=byrequests
ProxySet stickysession=ROUTEID
</Proxy>
ProxyPass / balancer://mycluster/
ProxyPassReverse / balancer://mycluster/
ErrorLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/proxy-error.log
CustomLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/proxy-access.log combined
</VirtualHost>
Configure Tomcat
You need to change the configuration of the Tomcat in logicalDOC. Generally it is a matter of modifying the file server.xml located in the /tomcat/conf folder
Tomcat config: LOGICALDOC_HOME/tomcat/conf/server.xml
In this file we are going to add the proxyName and proxyPortattributes to the Connector element
<Connector port="8082" protocol="HTTP/1.1"
connectionTimeout="20000"
redirectPort="8445"
URIEncoding="UTF-8" server="Undisclosed/8.41" proxyName="ldproxy.org" proxyPort="80" />