For a new website we must connect to a MySQL master-master setup. This is a .NET website using NHibernate, but the same would also apply to Java or any other language. We chose this setup because we want the site to continue working if a database would go down. We don't like downtime.
Maybe I have a complete misunderstanding of how a master-master setup works (in MySQL), but the way I see it, you connect to your database as you'd normally do, but behind the scenes, MySQL replicates the data between the two databases. If you do a write, it can go to either master 1 or master 2, you normally wouldn't know (except that the auto-increment id would return a different value). If master A would somehow fail, master B will still work, thus no downtime, master A will be ignored until it goes up again, the data is replicated, and if all is well, master A will be back in the field again.
IF this is correct, and please correct me if my above rambling is wrong, do you need to do anything special in case one master goes down? If I connect to 192.168.1.50 (which is master A), what happens if master A goes down? Will MySQL somehow automagically connect me to 192.168.1.51 (master B) so my site will continue to work?
If I was NOT correct, how does MySQL master-master replication work then? Do I have to tell each query on which master it should be executed? That would make no sense, right, since if master A goes down, then all my queries on master A would still fail and the master-master setup doesn't help me at all.
So basically, I think my question is actually:
do I still connect to a single MySQL host (I'm using NHibernate but that doesn't really matter), do I specify a single connectionstring, and will MySQL know that there are two masters, or does my code change in such a way that I need to specify connectionstrings for both masters (how?), do some special magic to balance the queries between the two servers, etcetera.
Am I missing anything else? Thanks!