Anyone? Anyone? Buehler? On Fri, Oct 17, 2014 at 9:41 AM, Alan McKay <alan.mc...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi folks, > > The manpage for relayd.conf has this basic construct in it a couple of times : > > table <service> { 192.168.1.1, 192.168.1.2, 192.168.2.3 } > table <fallback> disable { 10.1.5.1 retry 2 } > > redirect "www" { > listen on www.example.com port 80 > forward to <service> check http "/" code 200 > forward to <fallback> check http "/" code 200 > } > > And also has this to say about the "disable" attribute. > > disable > The redirection is initially disabled. It can be later enabled > through relayctl(8). > > What I don't understand from the given examples is how "<fallback>" > above is getting re-enabled. It starts out with the table disabled - > I get that. But then within the redirect we are basically saying > (correct me if I am wrong) "always use <service> unless it is not > availble, in which case use <fallback>" > > But I don't see anywhere that <fallback> was re-enabled so how can it > be used? And I search through the manpage and don't see any mention > of this. Does it automatically get re-enabled within the "redirect - > forward"? And if that is the case, what was the point of starting it > disabled in the first place? > > thanks, > -Alan > > -- > "Don't eat anything you've ever seen advertised on TV" > - Michael Pollan, author of "In Defense of Food"
-- "Don't eat anything you've ever seen advertised on TV" - Michael Pollan, author of "In Defense of Food"