SPELL=drbd KERNEL_BRANCH=`get_kernel_version|cut -d . -f -3` if [[ $KERNEL_BRANCH == 2.6.33 ]] || [[ $KERNEL_BRANCH == 2.6.34 ]]; then VERSION=8.3.7 SOURCE_HASH=sha512:9ea576ed6a75d80009ade0f9540535b2a65ecee6d38b1a85fa3146a97aac8cb3add31154e2921630aa75121c7115d66bdcf45adb8e0fa481bdb27c011b1c9b15 else VERSION=8.3.8.1 SOURCE_HASH=sha512:c43c6d065328058db66f708d47ce082603b766deb1530c57aa736a42b4908f780ede41f76395ca45c2691ef1dfd142147a4c98a7bcdb26ba7de73b149d8f9f5f fi BRANCH=`echo $VERSION|cut -d . -f 1,2` SOURCE=${SPELL}-${VERSION}.tar.gz SOURCE_URL[0]=http://oss.linbit.com/$SPELL/$BRANCH/$SOURCE SOURCE_DIRECTORY="${BUILD_DIRECTORY}/${SPELL}-${VERSION}" WEB_SITE=http://www.drbd.org/ ENTERED=20060630 DOCS="COPYING README" LICENSE[0]=GPL SHORT="block device which is designed to build high availability clusters" cat << EOF DRBD is a block device which is designed to build high availability clusters. This is done by mirroring a whole block device via (a dedicated) network. You could see it as a network raid-1. DRBD takes over the data, writes it to the local disk and sends it to the other host. On the other host, it takes it to the disk there. The other components needed are a cluster membership service, which is supposed to be heartbeat, and some kind of application that works on top of a block device. Examples: * A filesystem & fsck. * A journaling FS. * A database with recovery capabilities. EOF