I'm quite new to load balancing and I'm having some problems with getting Amazon's Elastic Load Balancer to play nice with subdomains.
I have two EC2 servers behind my load balancer. When I go to mydomain.com and www.mydomain.com, the two urls are served from different EC2 servers. I need both www.mydomain.com and mydomain.com to be served from the same server so that sessions work properly.
I have the load balancer "stickyness" set to LBCookieStickinessPolicy like so:
And my two EC2 instances are both "In Service" behind my load balancer:
I don't know if it's useful for troubleshooting, but my apache configuration looks like:
When I view the sessions in Firebug, I see the following...
For mydomain.com:
For www.mydomain.com (notice the additional "www.")
I'm not sure why, but there are actually two AWSELB cookies set when viewing the cookies for www.mydomain.com.
I'm using the Zend Framework, and I'm setting my cookie_domain like so:
Zend_Session::start(array('cookie_domain' => '.mydomain.com'));
This has worked fine in the past before moving the site to the two load balanced EC2 servers. Our site uses a few subdomains, such as api.mydomain.com and my.mydomain.com, which made the cookie_domain important. And, granted, this might be OK. It's quite possible that once we get the load balancer session "sticky" to work properly between subdomains, session variables will work as expected (hopefully!).
Any ideas why our site is being served from different servers when the "www." is added to the domain name?
Thanks!