<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/">
<channel rdf:about="http://blogmarks.net/api/marks/link/2732182">
<title>Public marks on http://www.johnandcailin.com/blog/john/scaling-drupal-open-source-infrastructure-high-traffic-drupal-sites</title>
<description>Public marks on http://www.johnandcailin.com/blog/john/scaling-drupal-open-source-infrastructure-high-traffic-drupal-sites</description>
<link>http://blogmarks.net/marks/link/2732182</link>
<items><rdf:Seq><rdf:li resource="http://blogmarks.net/api/user/holyver/mark/1058242075"/>
<rdf:li resource="http://blogmarks.net/api/user/camel/mark/1057773305"/>
</rdf:Seq></items>
</channel>
<item rdf:about="http://blogmarks.net/api/user/holyver/mark/1058242075">
<title>scaling drupal - an open-source infrastructure for high-traffic drupal sites | johnandcailin</title>
<link>http://www.johnandcailin.com/blog/john/scaling-drupal-open-source-infrastructure-high-traffic-drupal-sites</link>
<description>in this article, i outline a step-by-step process for incrementally scaling your deployment, from a simple single-node drupal install running all components of the system, all the way to a load balanced, multi node system with database level optimization and clustering.

since you almost certainly don't want to jump straight from your single node system to the mother of all redundant clustered systems in one step, i've broken this down into 5 incremental steps, each one building on the last. each step along the way is a perfectly viable deployment. </description>
<dc:date>2009-03-16T20:57:03Z</dc:date>
<dc:author>holyver</dc:author>
<dc:subject>drupal, performance, load balancing, heartbeat, architecture, scalability</dc:subject>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="mark">
<a href="http://www.johnandcailin.com/blog/john/scaling-drupal-open-source-infrastructure-high-traffic-drupal-sites"><img border="0" src="http://blogmarks.net/screenshots/2008/04/04/81566b571b421d9a42405b37c68a7b1b.jpg" alt="" /></a>
<div class="xfolkentry">
<h4><a class="taggedlink" href="http://www.johnandcailin.com/blog/john/scaling-drupal-open-source-infrastructure-high-traffic-drupal-sites">scaling drupal - an open-source infrastructure for high-traffic drupal sites | johnandcailin</a></h4>
 
by <a href="http://blogmarks.net/user/holyver">holyver</a> 
 &amp; <a class="public" href="http://blogmarks.net/link/2732182">1 other(s)</a> 
<p class="description">in this article, i outline a step-by-step process for incrementally scaling your deployment, from a simple single-node drupal install running all components of the system, all the way to a load balanced, multi node system with database level optimization and clustering.

since you almost certainly don't want to jump straight from your single node system to the mother of all redundant clustered systems in one step, i've broken this down into 5 incremental steps, each one building on the last. each step along the way is a perfectly viable deployment. </p>
<p class="tags">
<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/drupal">drupal</a>
<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/performance">performance</a>
<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/load%2Bbalancing">load balancing</a>
<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/heartbeat">heartbeat</a>
<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/architecture">architecture</a>
<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/scalability">scalability</a>
</p>
<div class="action-bar">
<a href="http://blogmarks.net/my/marks,new?id=1058242075">Copy</a> | 
<a href="http://blogmarks.net/link/2732182">React (0)</a></div>
</div>
</div>
]]></content:encoded>
</item> <item rdf:about="http://blogmarks.net/api/user/camel/mark/1057773305">
<title>scaling drupal - an open-source infrastructure for high-traffic drupal sites | johnandcailin</title>
<link>http://www.johnandcailin.com/blog/john/scaling-drupal-open-source-infrastructure-high-traffic-drupal-sites</link>
<description></description>
<dc:date>2008-04-04T07:02:25Z</dc:date>
<dc:author>camel</dc:author>
<dc:subject>apache, mysql, optimization, performance, scalability, scaling, sysadmin</dc:subject>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="mark">
<a href="http://www.johnandcailin.com/blog/john/scaling-drupal-open-source-infrastructure-high-traffic-drupal-sites"><img border="0" src="http://blogmarks.net/screenshots/2008/04/04/81566b571b421d9a42405b37c68a7b1b.jpg" alt="" /></a>
<div class="xfolkentry">
<h4><a class="taggedlink" href="http://www.johnandcailin.com/blog/john/scaling-drupal-open-source-infrastructure-high-traffic-drupal-sites">scaling drupal - an open-source infrastructure for high-traffic drupal sites | johnandcailin</a></h4>
 
by <a href="http://blogmarks.net/user/camel">camel</a> 
 &amp; <a class="public" href="http://blogmarks.net/link/2732182">1 other(s)</a> 
<p class="tags">
<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/apache">apache</a>
<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/mysql">mysql</a>
<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/optimization">optimization</a>
<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/performance">performance</a>
<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/scalability">scalability</a>
<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/scaling">scaling</a>
<a rel="tag" class="tag public_tag" href="http://blogmarks.net/marks/tag/sysadmin">sysadmin</a>
</p>
<div class="action-bar">
<a href="http://blogmarks.net/my/marks,new?id=1057773305">Copy</a> | 
<a href="http://blogmarks.net/link/2732182">React (0)</a></div>
</div>
</div>
]]></content:encoded>
</item> </rdf:RDF>