Book Image

Drupal 7 Social Networking

Book Image

Drupal 7 Social Networking

Overview of this book

Drupal is ideally equipped to serve as a base system for creating a custom social networking site like Facebook or MySpace. While these large social networks have their place, niche social networking websites can help promote businesses, products, projects, and hobbies of any nature. Drupal 7 Social Networking provides careful instructions and clear explanations to take you through the setup and management of your social network site, covering topics from users, to marketing, to maintenance. It will help you create your own social networking site, suitable for whatever audience you choose! Starting from the very basics of both Drupal and Social Networking, right through to more complicated aspects, you will progressively learn how to add to and expand your social networking site and add more features. You will learn how to secure your social network, deploy it on the Internet, and keep it running and well maintained. As social networking sites rely on the participation of their users, this book helps you to structure your site in such a way so that users can easily and enjoyably contribute, thus creating a powerful social network.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Drupal 7 Social Networking
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Adding redundancy to our setup


As DinoSpace becomes more popular, the consequences of downtime become more severe. Each second of downtime is time that new users are turned away from the site, leading them to potentially look elsewhere. It is also the time where existing users may be put off from the site, and may look into alternative sites which may be more reliable. This point is emphasised by the media coverage and public reaction each time a popular social website, such as Twitter or Facebook, goes offline.

Redundant systems should help reduce or eliminate downtime, by providing backups of everything, including the following:

  • Replicated database servers: If our primary database server goes offline, a backup server kicks in. The data on this backup is up-to-date because it would constantly replicate from the primary server.

  • Redundant network connections to the data centre: Should one particular connection become congested, or suffer failure, another provider's connection can be used.

  • Redundant...