If its failover you want how about using VMWARE, that would let you run Mercury in a virtual machine and set up another virtual machine, hosted on a different physical server, to take over if the first one stopped working for some reason. Both servers could obviously use the same queue hosted on a NAS device somewhere.
As soon as I can get my lot to part with £1200 for two sets of bundled virtual OS and utilities thats where all or servers hosting databases, email etc are going. Licensing is per CPU not per core so we can have two systems running virtual server for that price plus most of the monitoring and failover utilities we could need. This seems much cheaper than other automatic failover systems I have looked at in the past.
Starting Mercury on a new system is a fairly trivial task for us at least all we need do is copy of move the disk with our mail on, change to the correct IP address and start the server. We have done this a few times now when hardware fails, it takes about 2 minutes to be running with our more critical accounts already accessible, doing it manually.
<p>If its failover you want how about using VMWARE,&nbsp; that would let you run Mercury in a virtual machine and set up another virtual machine, hosted on a different physical server, to take over if the first one stopped working for some reason.&nbsp;&nbsp; Both servers could obviously use the same queue hosted on a NAS device somewhere.</p><p>&nbsp;As soon as I can get my lot to part with £1200 for two sets of bundled virtual OS and utilities thats where all or servers hosting databases, email etc are going.&nbsp;&nbsp; Licensing is per CPU not per core so we can have two systems running virtual server for that price plus most of the monitoring and failover utilities we could need.&nbsp;&nbsp; This seems much cheaper than other automatic failover systems I have looked at in the past.
</p><p>Starting Mercury on a new system is a fairly trivial task for us at least all we need do is copy of move the disk with our mail on, change to the correct IP address and start the server.&nbsp;&nbsp; We have done this a few times now when hardware fails, it takes about 2 minutes to be running with our more critical accounts already accessible, doing it manually.
&nbsp;</p>