diff --git a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ap-Configuration.txt b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ap-Configuration.txt
index e7805e1ac7..f8099a41b3 100644
--- a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ap-Configuration.txt
+++ b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ap-Configuration.txt
@@ -1,455 +1,454 @@
[appendix]
== Configuration Recap ==
=== Final Cluster Configuration ===
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource
Master/Slave Set: WebDataClone [WebData]
Masters: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Clone Set: dlm-clone [dlm]
Started: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Clone Set: ClusterIP-clone [ClusterIP] (unique)
ClusterIP:0 (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started
ClusterIP:1 (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started
Clone Set: WebFS-clone [WebFS]
Started: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Clone Set: WebSite-clone [WebSite]
Started: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
----
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource op defaults
timeout: 240s
----
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs stonith
impi-fencing (stonith:fence_ipmilan) Started
----
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs constraint
Location Constraints:
Ordering Constraints:
start ClusterIP-clone then start WebSite-clone (kind:Mandatory)
promote WebDataClone then start WebFS-clone (kind:Mandatory)
start WebFS-clone then start WebSite-clone (kind:Mandatory)
start dlm-clone then start WebFS-clone (kind:Mandatory)
Colocation Constraints:
WebSite-clone with ClusterIP-clone (score:INFINITY)
WebFS-clone with WebDataClone (score:INFINITY) (with-rsc-role:Master)
WebSite-clone with WebFS-clone (score:INFINITY)
WebFS-clone with dlm-clone (score:INFINITY)
----
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status
Cluster name: mycluster
-Last updated: Mon Dec 22 11:19:17 2014
-Last change: Mon Dec 22 11:03:52 2014
+Last updated: Fri Aug 14 12:05:37 2015
+Last change: Fri Aug 14 11:49:29 2015
Stack: corosync
-Current DC: pcmk-2 (2) - partition with quorum
-Version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+Current DC: pcmk-1 (1) - partition with quorum
+Version: 1.1.12-a14efad
2 Nodes configured
11 Resources configured
Online: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Full list of resources:
impi-fencing (stonith:fence_ipmilan): Started pcmk-1
Master/Slave Set: WebDataClone [WebData]
Masters: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Clone Set: dlm-clone [dlm]
Started: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Clone Set: ClusterIP-clone [ClusterIP] (unique)
ClusterIP:0 (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-2
ClusterIP:1 (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-1
Clone Set: WebFS-clone [WebFS]
Started: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Clone Set: WebSite-clone [WebSite]
Started: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
PCSD Status:
pcmk-1: Online
pcmk-2: Online
Daemon Status:
corosync: active/disabled
pacemaker: active/disabled
pcsd: active/enabled
----
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster cib
----
[source,XML]
----
-
-
+
-
+
----
=== Node List ===
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status nodes
Pacemaker Nodes:
Online: pcmk-1 pcmk-2
Standby:
Offline:
----
=== Cluster Options ===
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs property
Cluster Properties:
cluster-infrastructure: corosync
cluster-name: mycluster
- dc-version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+ dc-version: 1.1.12-a14efad
have-watchdog: false
- last-lrm-refresh: 1419129162
+ last-lrm-refresh: 1439569053
stonith-enabled: true
----
The output shows state information automatically obtained about the cluster, including:
* *cluster-infrastructure* - the cluster communications layer in use (heartbeat or corosync)
* *cluster-name* - the cluster name chosen by the administrator when the cluster was created
* *dc-version* - the version (including upstream source-code hash) of Pacemaker used on the Designated Controller
The output also shows options set by the administrator that control the way the cluster operates, including:
* *stonith-enabled=true* - whether the cluster is allowed to use STONITH resources
=== Resources ===
==== Default Options ====
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource defaults
resource-stickiness: 100
----
This shows cluster option defaults that apply to every resource that does not
explicitly set the option itself. Above:
* *resource-stickiness* - Specify the aversion to moving healthy resources to other machines
==== Fencing ====
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs stonith show
ipmi-fencing (stonith:fence_ipmilan) Started
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs stonith show ipmi-fencing
Resource: ipmi-fencing (class=stonith type=fence_ipmilan)
Attributes: ipaddr="10.0.0.1" login="testuser" passwd="acd123" pcmk_host_list="pcmk-1 pcmk-2"
Operations: monitor interval=60s (fence-monitor-interval-60s)
----
==== Service Address ====
Users of the services provided by the cluster require an unchanging
address with which to access it. Additionally, we cloned the address so
it will be active on both nodes. An iptables rule (created as part of the
resource agent) is used to ensure that each request only gets processed by one
of the two clone instances. The additional meta options tell the cluster
that we want two instances of the clone (one "request bucket" for each
node) and that if one node fails, then the remaining node should hold
both.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource show ClusterIP-clone
Clone: ClusterIP-clone
Meta Attrs: clone-max=2 clone-node-max=2 globally-unique=true
Resource: ClusterIP (class=ocf provider=heartbeat type=IPaddr2)
Attributes: ip=192.168.122.120 cidr_netmask=32 clusterip_hash=sourceip
Operations: start interval=0s timeout=20s (ClusterIP-start-timeout-20s)
stop interval=0s timeout=20s (ClusterIP-stop-timeout-20s)
monitor interval=30s (ClusterIP-monitor-interval-30s)
----
==== DRBD - Shared Storage ====
Here, we define the DRBD service and specify which DRBD resource (from
/etc/drbd.d/*.res) it should manage. We make it a master/slave resource and, in
order to have an active/active setup, allow both instances to be promoted to master
at the same time. We also set the notify option so that the
cluster will tell DRBD agent when its peer changes state.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource show WebDataClone
Master: WebDataClone
Meta Attrs: master-max=2 master-node-max=1 clone-max=2 clone-node-max=1 notify=true
Resource: WebData (class=ocf provider=linbit type=drbd)
Attributes: drbd_resource=wwwdata
Operations: start interval=0s timeout=240 (WebData-start-timeout-240)
promote interval=0s timeout=90 (WebData-promote-timeout-90)
demote interval=0s timeout=90 (WebData-demote-timeout-90)
stop interval=0s timeout=100 (WebData-stop-timeout-100)
monitor interval=60s (WebData-monitor-interval-60s)
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs constraint ref WebDataClone
Resource: WebDataClone
colocation-WebFS-WebDataClone-INFINITY
order-WebDataClone-WebFS-mandatory
----
==== Cluster Filesystem ====
The cluster filesystem ensures that files are read and written correctly.
We need to specify the block device (provided by DRBD), where we want it
mounted and that we are using GFS2. Again, it is a clone because it is
intended to be active on both nodes. The additional constraints ensure
that it can only be started on nodes with active DLM and DRBD instances.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource show WebFS-clone
Clone: WebFS-clone
Resource: WebFS (class=ocf provider=heartbeat type=Filesystem)
Attributes: device=/dev/drbd1 directory=/var/www/html fstype=gfs2
Operations: start interval=0s timeout=60 (WebFS-start-timeout-60)
stop interval=0s timeout=60 (WebFS-stop-timeout-60)
monitor interval=20 timeout=40 (WebFS-monitor-interval-20)
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs constraint ref WebFS-clone
Resource: WebFS-clone
colocation-WebFS-WebDataClone-INFINITY
colocation-WebSite-WebFS-INFINITY
colocation-WebFS-clone-dlm-clone-INFINITY
order-WebDataClone-WebFS-mandatory
order-WebFS-WebSite-mandatory
order-dlm-clone-WebFS-clone-mandatory
----
==== Apache ====
Lastly, we have the actual service, Apache. We need only tell the cluster
where to find its main configuration file and restrict it to running on
nodes that have the required filesystem mounted and the IP address active.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource show WebSite-clone
Clone: WebSite-clone
Resource: WebSite (class=ocf provider=heartbeat type=apache)
Attributes: configfile=/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf statusurl=http://localhost/server-status
Operations: start interval=0s timeout=40s (WebSite-start-timeout-40s)
stop interval=0s timeout=60s (WebSite-stop-timeout-60s)
monitor interval=1min (WebSite-monitor-interval-1min)
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs constraint ref WebSite-clone
Resource: WebSite-clone
colocation-WebSite-ClusterIP-INFINITY
colocation-WebSite-WebFS-INFINITY
order-ClusterIP-WebSite-mandatory
order-WebFS-WebSite-mandatory
----
diff --git a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Book_Info.xml b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Book_Info.xml
index d0d556712d..cf24b7f423 100644
--- a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Book_Info.xml
+++ b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Book_Info.xml
@@ -1,67 +1,67 @@
%BOOK_ENTITIES;
]>
Clusters from Scratch
Step-by-Step Instructions for Building Your First High-Availability Cluster
Pacemaker
1.1
- 8
- 1
+ 9
+ 0
The purpose of this document is to provide a start-to-finish guide to building an example active/passive cluster with Pacemaker and show how it can be converted to an active/active one.
The example cluster will use:
&DISTRO; &DISTRO_VERSION; as the host operating system
Corosync to provide messaging and membership services,
Pacemaker to perform resource management,
DRBD as a cost-effective alternative to shared storage,
GFS2 as the cluster filesystem (in active/active mode)
Given the graphical nature of the install process, a number of screenshots are included. However the guide is primarily composed of commands, the reasons for executing them and their expected outputs.
diff --git a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Active-Active.txt b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Active-Active.txt
index 05f31e24d0..334267a44e 100644
--- a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Active-Active.txt
+++ b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Active-Active.txt
@@ -1,382 +1,382 @@
= Convert Cluster to Active/Active =
The primary requirement for an Active/Active cluster is that the data
required for your services is available, simultaneously, on both
machines. Pacemaker makes no requirement on how this is achieved; you
could use a SAN if you had one available, but since DRBD supports
multiple Primaries, we can continue to use it here.
== Install Cluster Filesystem Software ==
The only hitch is that we need to use a cluster-aware filesystem. The
one we used earlier with DRBD, xfs, is not one of those. Both OCFS2
and GFS2 are supported; here, we will use GFS2.
On both nodes, install the GFS2 command-line utilities and the
Distributed Lock Manager (DLM) required by cluster filesystems:
----
# yum install -y gfs2-utils dlm
----
== Configure the Cluster for the DLM ==
The DLM needs to run on both nodes, so we'll start by creating a resource for
it (using the *ocf:pacemaker:controld* resource script), and clone it:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster cib dlm_cfg
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f dlm_cfg resource create dlm ocf:pacemaker:controld op monitor interval=60s
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f dlm_cfg resource clone dlm clone-max=2 clone-node-max=1
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f dlm_cfg resource show
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started
WebSite (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Started
Master/Slave Set: WebDataClone [WebData]
Masters: [ pcmk-2 ]
Slaves: [ pcmk-1 ]
WebFS (ocf::heartbeat:Filesystem): Started
Clone Set: dlm-clone [dlm]
Stopped: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
----
Activate our new configuration, and see how the cluster responds:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster cib-push dlm_cfg
CIB updated
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status
Cluster name: mycluster
-Last updated: Sat Dec 20 21:53:44 2014
-Last change: Sat Dec 20 21:53:40 2014
+Last updated: Fri Aug 14 11:19:36 2015
+Last change: Fri Aug 14 11:19:28 2015
Stack: corosync
Current DC: pcmk-1 (1) - partition with quorum
-Version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+Version: 1.1.12-a14efad
2 Nodes configured
8 Resources configured
Online: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Full list of resources:
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-2
WebSite (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Started pcmk-2
Master/Slave Set: WebDataClone [WebData]
Masters: [ pcmk-2 ]
Slaves: [ pcmk-1 ]
WebFS (ocf::heartbeat:Filesystem): Started pcmk-2
ipmi-fencing (stonith:fence_ipmilan): Started pcmk-1
Clone Set: dlm-clone [dlm]
Started: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
PCSD Status:
pcmk-1: Online
pcmk-2: Online
Daemon Status:
corosync: active/disabled
pacemaker: active/disabled
pcsd: active/enabled
----
[[GFS2_prep]]
== Create and Populate GFS2 Filesystem ==
Before we do anything to the existing partition, we need to make sure it
is unmounted. We do this by telling the cluster to stop the WebFS resource.
This will ensure that other resources (in our case, Apache) using WebFS
are not only stopped, but stopped in the correct order.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource disable WebFS
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started
WebSite (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Stopped
Master/Slave Set: WebDataClone [WebData]
Masters: [ pcmk-2 ]
Slaves: [ pcmk-1 ]
WebFS (ocf::heartbeat:Filesystem): Stopped
Clone Set: dlm-clone [dlm]
Started: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
----
You can see that both Apache and WebFS have been stopped,
and that *pcmk-2* is the current master for the DRBD device.
Now we can create a new GFS2 filesystem on the DRBD device.
[WARNING]
=========
This will erase all previous content stored on the DRBD device. Ensure
you have a copy of any important data.
=========
[IMPORTANT]
===========
Run the next command on whichever node has the DRBD Primary role.
Otherwise, you will receive the message:
-----
/dev/drbd1: Read-only file system
-----
===========
-----
[root@pcmk-2 ~]# mkfs.gfs2 -p lock_dlm -j 2 -t mycluster:web /dev/drbd1
It appears to contain an existing filesystem (xfs)
This will destroy any data on /dev/drbd1
Are you sure you want to proceed? [y/n]y
Device: /dev/drbd1
Block size: 4096
Device size: 1.00 GB (262127 blocks)
Filesystem size: 1.00 GB (262126 blocks)
Journals: 2
Resource groups: 5
Locking protocol: "lock_dlm"
Lock table: "mycluster:web"
UUID: 9a72c488-d8a7-24c9-ceee-add7a8ca52c2
-----
The `mkfs.gfs2` command required a number of additional parameters:
* `-p lock_dlm` specifies that we want to use the
kernel's DLM.
* `-j 2` indicates that the filesystem should reserve enough
space for two journals (one for each node that will access the filesystem).
* `-t mycluster:web` specifies the lock table name. The format for
this field is +pass:[clustername:fsname]+. For
+pass:[clustername]+, we need to use the same
value we specified originally with `pcs cluster setup --name` (which is also
the value of *cluster_name* in +/etc/corosync/corosync.conf+).
If you are unsure what your cluster name is, you can look in
+/etc/corosync/corosync.conf+ or execute the command
`pcs cluster corosync pcmk-1 | grep cluster_name`.
Now we can (re-)populate the new filesystem with data
(web pages). We'll create yet another variation on our home page.
-----
[root@pcmk-2 ~]# mount /dev/drbd1 /mnt
[root@pcmk-2 ~]# cat <<-END >/mnt/index.html
My Test Site - GFS2
END
[root@pcmk-2 ~]# chcon -R --reference=/var/www/html /mnt
[root@pcmk-2 ~]# umount /dev/drbd1
[root@pcmk-2 ~]# drbdadm verify wwwdata
-----
== Reconfigure the Cluster for GFS2 ==
With the WebFS resource stopped, let's update the configuration.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource show WebFS
Resource: WebFS (class=ocf provider=heartbeat type=Filesystem)
Attributes: device=/dev/drbd1 directory=/var/www/html fstype=xfs
Meta Attrs: target-role=Stopped
Operations: start interval=0s timeout=60 (WebFS-start-timeout-60)
stop interval=0s timeout=60 (WebFS-stop-timeout-60)
monitor interval=20 timeout=40 (WebFS-monitor-interval-20)
----
The fstype option needs to be updated to *gfs2* instead of *xfs*.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource update WebFS fstype=gfs2
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource show WebFS
Resource: WebFS (class=ocf provider=heartbeat type=Filesystem)
Attributes: device=/dev/drbd1 directory=/var/www/html fstype=gfs2
Meta Attrs: target-role=Stopped
Operations: start interval=0s timeout=60 (WebFS-start-timeout-60)
stop interval=0s timeout=60 (WebFS-stop-timeout-60)
monitor interval=20 timeout=40 (WebFS-monitor-interval-20)
----
GFS2 requires that DLM be running, so we also need to set up new colocation
and ordering constraints for it:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs constraint colocation add WebFS with dlm-clone INFINITY
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs constraint order dlm-clone then WebFS
Adding dlm-clone WebFS (kind: Mandatory) (Options: first-action=start then-action=start)
----
== Clone the IP address ==
There's no point making the services active on both locations if we can't
reach them both, so let's clone the IP address.
The *IPaddr2* resource agent has built-in intelligence for when it is configured
as a clone. It will utilize a multicast MAC address to have the local switch
send the relevant packets to all nodes in the cluster, together with *iptables
clusterip* rules on the nodes so that any given packet will be grabbed by
exactly one node. This will give us a simple but effective form of
load-balancing requests between our two nodes.
Let's start a new config, and clone our IP:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster cib loadbalance_cfg
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f loadbalance_cfg resource clone ClusterIP \
clone-max=2 clone-node-max=2 globally-unique=true
----
* `clone-max=2` tells the resource agent to split packets this many ways. This
should equal the number of nodes that can host the IP.
* `clone-node-max=2` says that one node can run up to 2 instances
of the clone. This should also equal the number of nodes that can
host the IP, so that if any node goes down, another node can take over
the failed node's "request bucket". Otherwise, requests intended for
the failed node would be discarded.
* `globally-unique=true` tells the cluster that one clone isn't identical
to another (each handles a different "bucket"). This also tells the resource
agent to insert *iptables* rules so each host only processes packets in its
bucket(s).
Notice that when the ClusterIP becomes a clone, the constraints
referencing ClusterIP now reference the clone. This is
done automatically by pcs.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f loadbalance_cfg constraint
Location Constraints:
Ordering Constraints:
start ClusterIP-clone then start WebSite (kind:Mandatory)
promote WebDataClone then start WebFS (kind:Mandatory)
start WebFS then start WebSite (kind:Mandatory)
start dlm-clone then start WebFS (kind:Mandatory)
Colocation Constraints:
WebSite with ClusterIP-clone (score:INFINITY)
WebFS with WebDataClone (score:INFINITY) (with-rsc-role:Master)
WebSite with WebFS (score:INFINITY)
WebFS with dlm-clone (score:INFINITY)
----
Now we must tell the resource how to decide which requests are
processed by which hosts. To do this, we specify the *clusterip_hash* parameter.
The value of *sourceip* means that the source IP address of incoming packets
will be hashed; each node will process a certain range of hashes.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f loadbalance_cfg resource update ClusterIP clusterip_hash=sourceip
----
Load our configuration to the cluster, and see how it responds.
-----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster cib-push loadbalance_cfg
CIB updated
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status
Cluster name: mycluster
-Last updated: Sat Dec 20 22:05:48 2014
-Last change: Sat Dec 20 22:05:34 2014
+Last updated: Fri Aug 14 11:32:07 2015
+Last change: Fri Aug 14 11:32:04 2015
Stack: corosync
Current DC: pcmk-1 (1) - partition with quorum
-Version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+Version: 1.1.12-a14efad
2 Nodes configured
9 Resources configured
Online: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Full list of resources:
WebSite (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Stopped
Master/Slave Set: WebDataClone [WebData]
Masters: [ pcmk-1 ]
Slaves: [ pcmk-2 ]
WebFS (ocf::heartbeat:Filesystem): Stopped
ipmi-fencing (stonith:fence_ipmilan): Started pcmk-1
Clone Set: dlm-clone [dlm]
Started: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Clone Set: ClusterIP-clone [ClusterIP] (unique)
ClusterIP:0 (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-1
ClusterIP:1 (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-2
PCSD Status:
pcmk-1: Online
pcmk-2: Online
Daemon Status:
corosync: active/disabled
pacemaker: active/disabled
pcsd: active/enabled
-----
If desired, you can demonstrate that all request buckets are working
by using a tool such as `arping` from several source hosts
to see which host responds to each.
== Clone the Filesystem and Apache Resources ==
Now that we have a cluster filesystem ready to go,
and our nodes can load-balance requests to a shared IP address,
we can configure the cluster so both nodes mount the filesystem
and respond to web requests.
Clone the filesystem and Apache resources in a new configuration.
Notice how pcs automatically updates the relevant constraints again.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster cib active_cfg
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f active_cfg resource clone WebFS
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f active_cfg resource clone WebSite
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f active_cfg constraint
Location Constraints:
Ordering Constraints:
start ClusterIP-clone then start WebSite-clone (kind:Mandatory)
promote WebDataClone then start WebFS-clone (kind:Mandatory)
start WebFS-clone then start WebSite-clone (kind:Mandatory)
start dlm-clone then start WebFS-clone (kind:Mandatory)
Colocation Constraints:
WebSite-clone with ClusterIP-clone (score:INFINITY)
WebFS-clone with WebDataClone (score:INFINITY) (with-rsc-role:Master)
WebSite-clone with WebFS-clone (score:INFINITY)
WebFS-clone with dlm-clone (score:INFINITY)
----
Tell the cluster that it is now allowed to promote both instances to be DRBD
Primary (aka. master).
-----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f active_cfg resource update WebDataClone master-max=2
-----
Finally, load our configuration to the cluster, and re-enable the WebFS resource
(which we disabled earlier).
-----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster cib-push active_cfg
CIB updated
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource enable WebFS
-----
After all the processes are started, the status should look similar to this.
-----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource
Master/Slave Set: WebDataClone [WebData]
Masters: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Clone Set: dlm-clone [dlm]
Started: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Clone Set: ClusterIP-clone [ClusterIP] (unique)
ClusterIP:0 (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started
ClusterIP:1 (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started
Clone Set: WebFS-clone [WebFS]
Started: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Clone Set: WebSite-clone [WebSite]
Started: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
-----
== Test Failover ==
Testing failover is left as an exercise for the reader.
For example, you can put one node into standby mode,
use `pcs status` to confirm that its ClusterIP clone was
moved to the other node, and use `arping` to verify that
packets are not being lost from any source host.
[NOTE]
====
You may find that when a failed node rejoins the cluster,
both ClusterIP clones stay on one node, due to the
resource stickiness. While this works fine, it effectively eliminates
load-balancing and returns the cluster to an active-passive setup again.
You can avoid this by disabling stickiness for the IP address resource:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource meta ClusterIP resource-stickiness=0
----
====
diff --git a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Active-Passive.txt b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Active-Passive.txt
index b6f3ab6e08..8ceccd1d9f 100644
--- a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Active-Passive.txt
+++ b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Active-Passive.txt
@@ -1,426 +1,423 @@
= Create an Active/Passive Cluster =
== Explore the Existing Configuration ==
When Pacemaker starts up, it automatically records the number and details
of the nodes in the cluster, as well as which stack is being used and the
version of Pacemaker being used.
The first few lines of output should look like this:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status
Cluster name: mycluster
WARNING: no stonith devices and stonith-enabled is not false
Last updated: Tue Dec 16 16:15:29 2014
Last change: Tue Dec 16 15:49:47 2014
Stack: corosync
Current DC: pcmk-2 (2) - partition with quorum
-Version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+Version: 1.1.12-a14efad
2 Nodes configured
0 Resources configured
Online: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
----
For those who are not of afraid of XML, you can see the raw cluster
configuration and status by using the `pcs cluster cib` command.
.The last XML you'll see in this document
======
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster cib
----
[source,XML]
----
-
+
-
+
----
======
Before we make any changes, it's a good idea to check the validity of
the configuration.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# crm_verify -L -V
error: unpack_resources: Resource start-up disabled since no STONITH resources have been defined
error: unpack_resources: Either configure some or disable STONITH with the stonith-enabled option
error: unpack_resources: NOTE: Clusters with shared data need STONITH to ensure data integrity
Errors found during check: config not valid
----
As you can see, the tool has found some errors.
In order to guarantee the safety of your data,
footnote:[If the data is corrupt, there is little point in continuing to make it available]
the default for STONITH
footnote:[A common node fencing mechanism. Used to ensure data integrity by powering off "bad" nodes]
in Pacemaker is *enabled*. However, it also knows when no STONITH configuration has been
supplied and reports this as a problem (since the cluster would not be
able to make progress if a situation requiring node fencing arose).
We will disable this feature for now and configure it later.
To disable STONITH, set the *stonith-enabled* cluster option to
false:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs property set stonith-enabled=false
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# crm_verify -L
----
With the new cluster option set, the configuration is now valid.
[WARNING]
=========
The use of `stonith-enabled=false` is completely inappropriate for a
production cluster. It tells the cluster to simply pretend that failed nodes
are safely powered off. Some vendors will refuse to support clusters that have
STONITH disabled.
We disable STONITH here only to defer the discussion of its
configuration, which can differ widely from one installation to the
next. See <<_what_is_stonith>> for information on why STONITH is important
and details on how to configure it.
=========
== Add a Resource ==
Our first resource will be a unique IP address that the cluster can bring up on
either node. Regardless of where any cluster service(s) are running, end
users need a consistent address to contact them on. Here, I will choose
192.168.122.120 as the floating address, give it the imaginative name ClusterIP
and tell the cluster to check whether it is running every 30 seconds.
[WARNING]
===========
The chosen address must not already be in use on the network.
Do not reuse an IP address one of the nodes already has configured.
===========
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource create ClusterIP ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2 \
ip=192.168.122.120 cidr_netmask=32 op monitor interval=30s
----
Another important piece of information here is *ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2*.
This tells Pacemaker three things about the resource you want to add:
* The first field (*ocf* in this case) is the standard to which the resource
script conforms and where to find it.
* The second field (*heartbeat* in this case) is standard-specific; for OCF
resources, it tells the cluster which OCF namespace the resource script is in.
* The third field (*IPaddr2* in this case) is the name of the resource script.
To obtain a list of the available resource standards (the *ocf* part of
*ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2*), run:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource standards
ocf
lsb
service
systemd
stonith
----
To obtain a list of the available OCF resource providers (the *heartbeat*
part of *ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2*), run:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource providers
heartbeat
+openstack
pacemaker
----
Finally, if you want to see all the resource agents available for
a specific OCF provider (the *IPaddr2* part of *ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2*), run:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource agents ocf:heartbeat
-AoEtarget
-AudibleAlarm
CTDB
-ClusterMon
Delay
Dummy
-.
-. (skipping lots of resources to save space)
-.
+Filesystem
+IPaddr
IPaddr2
.
+. (skipping lots of resources to save space)
.
-.
+rsyncd
+slapd
+symlink
tomcat
-varnish
-vmware
-zabbixserver
----
Now, verify that the IP resource has been added, and display the cluster's
status to see that it is now active:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status
Cluster name: mycluster
Last updated: Tue Dec 16 17:44:40 2014
Last change: Tue Dec 16 17:44:26 2014
Stack: corosync
Current DC: pcmk-1 (1) - partition with quorum
-Version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+Version: 1.1.12-a14efad
2 Nodes configured
1 Resources configured
Online: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Full list of resources:
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-1
PCSD Status:
pcmk-1: Online
pcmk-2: Online
Daemon Status:
corosync: active/disabled
pacemaker: active/disabled
pcsd: active/enabled
----
== Perform a Failover ==
Since our ultimate goal is high availability, we should test failover of
our new resource before moving on.
First, find the node on which the IP address is running.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status
Cluster name: mycluster
Last updated: Tue Dec 16 17:44:40 2014
Last change: Tue Dec 16 17:44:26 2014
Stack: corosync
Current DC: pcmk-1 (1) - partition with quorum
-Version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+Version: 1.1.12-a14efad
2 Nodes configured
1 Resources configured
Online: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Full list of resources:
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-1
----
You can see that the status of the *ClusterIP* resource
is *Started* on a particular node (in this example, *pcmk-1*).
Shut down Pacemaker and Corosync on that machine to trigger a failover.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster stop pcmk-1
Stopping Cluster...
----
[NOTE]
======
A cluster command such as +pcs cluster stop pass:[nodename]+ can be run
from any node in the cluster, not just the affected node.
======
Verify that pacemaker and corosync are no longer running:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status
Error: cluster is not currently running on this node
----
Go to the other node, and check the cluster status.
----
[root@pcmk-2 ~]# pcs status
Cluster name: mycluster
Last updated: Wed Dec 17 10:30:56 2014
Last change: Tue Dec 16 17:44:26 2014
Stack: corosync
Current DC: pcmk-2 (2) - partition with quorum
-Version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+Version: 1.1.12-a14efad
2 Nodes configured
1 Resources configured
Online: [ pcmk-2 ]
OFFLINE: [ pcmk-1 ]
Full list of resources:
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-2
PCSD Status:
pcmk-1: Online
pcmk-2: Online
Daemon Status:
corosync: active/disabled
pacemaker: active/disabled
pcsd: active/enabled
----
Notice that *pcmk-1* is *OFFLINE* for cluster purposes (its *PCSD* is still
*Online*, allowing it to receive `pcs` commands, but it is not participating in
the cluster).
Also notice that *ClusterIP* is now running on *pcmk-2* -- failover happened
automatically, and no errors are reported.
[IMPORTANT]
.Quorum
====
If a cluster splits into two (or more) groups of nodes that can no longer
communicate with each other (aka. _partitions_), _quorum_ is used to prevent
resources from starting on more nodes than desired, which would risk
data corruption.
A cluster has quorum when more than half of all known nodes are online in
the same partition, or for the mathematically inclined, whenever the following
equation is true:
....
total_nodes < 2 * active_nodes
....
For example, if a 5-node cluster split into 3- and 2-node paritions,
the 3-node partition would have quorum and could continue serving resources.
If a 6-node cluster split into two 3-node partitions, neither partition
would have quorum; pacemaker's default behavior in such cases is to
stop all resources, in order to prevent data corruption.
Two-node clusters are a special case. By the above definition,
a two-node cluster would only have quorum when both nodes are
running. This would make the creation of a two-node cluster pointless,
footnote:[Some would argue that two-node clusters are always pointless, but that is an argument for another time]
but corosync has the ability to treat two-node clusters as if only one node
is required for quorum.
The `pcs cluster setup` command will automatically configure *two_node: 1*
in +corosync.conf+, so a two-node cluster will "just work".
If you are using a different cluster shell, you will have to configure
+corosync.conf+ appropriately yourself. If you are using older versions of
corosync, you will have to ignore quorum at the pacemaker level, using `pcs
property set no-quorum-policy=ignore` (or the equivalent command if you are
using a different cluster shell).
====
Now, simulate node recovery by restarting the cluster stack on *pcmk-1*, and
check the cluster's status. (It may take a little while before the cluster
gets going on the node, but it eventually will look like the below.)
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster start pcmk-1
pcmk-1: Starting Cluster...
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status
Cluster name: mycluster
Last updated: Wed Dec 17 10:50:11 2014
Last change: Tue Dec 16 17:44:26 2014
Stack: corosync
Current DC: pcmk-2 (2) - partition with quorum
-Version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+Version: 1.1.12-a14efad
2 Nodes configured
1 Resources configured
Online: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Full list of resources:
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-2
PCSD Status:
pcmk-1: Online
pcmk-2: Online
Daemon Status:
corosync: active/disabled
pacemaker: active/disabled
pcsd: active/enabled
----
[NOTE]
======
With older versions of pacemaker, the cluster might move the IP back to its
original location (*pcmk-1*). Usually, this is no longer the case.
======
== Prevent Resources from Moving after Recovery ==
In most circumstances, it is highly desirable to prevent healthy
resources from being moved around the cluster. Moving resources almost
always requires a period of downtime. For complex services such as
databases, this period can be quite long.
To address this, Pacemaker has the concept of resource _stickiness_,
which controls how strongly a service prefers to stay running where it
is. You may like to think of it as the "cost" of any downtime. By
default, Pacemaker assumes there is zero cost associated with moving
resources and will do so to achieve "optimal"
footnote:[Pacemaker's definition of optimal may not always agree with that of a
human's. The order in which Pacemaker processes lists of resources and nodes
creates implicit preferences in situations where the administrator has not
explicitly specified them.]
resource placement. We can specify a different stickiness for every
resource, but it is often sufficient to change the default.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource defaults resource-stickiness=100
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource defaults
resource-stickiness: 100
----
[NOTE]
======
Older versions of `pcs` required that `rsc` be added after `resource` in the
above commands.
======
diff --git a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Apache.txt b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Apache.txt
index 87f761aa88..5d9dbeb77d 100644
--- a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Apache.txt
+++ b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Apache.txt
@@ -1,430 +1,430 @@
= Add Apache as a Cluster Service =
Now that we have a basic but functional active/passive two-node cluster,
we're ready to add some real services. We're going to start with Apache
because it is a feature of many clusters and relatively simple to
configure.
== Install Apache ==
Before continuing, we need to make sure Apache is installed on both
hosts. We also need the wget tool in order for the cluster to be able to check
the status of the Apache server.
----
# yum install -y httpd wget
# firewall-cmd --permanent --add-service=http
# firewall-cmd --reload
----
[IMPORTANT]
====
Do *not* enable the httpd service. Services that are intended to
be managed via the cluster software should never be managed by the OS.
It is often useful, however, to manually start the service, verify that
it works, then stop it again, before adding it to the cluster. This
allows you to resolve any non-cluster-related problems before continuing.
Since this is a simple example, we'll skip that step here.
====
== Create Website Documents ==
We need to create a page for Apache to serve. On &DISTRO; &DISTRO_VERSION;, the
default Apache document root is /var/www/html, so we'll create an index file
there. For the moment, we will simplify things by serving a static site
and manually synchronizing the data between the two nodes, so run this command
on both nodes:
-----
# cat <<-END >/var/www/html/index.html
My Test Site - $(hostname)
END
-----
== Enable the Apache status URL ==
In order to monitor the health of your Apache instance, and recover it if
it fails, the resource agent used by Pacemaker assumes the server-status
URL is available. On both nodes, enable the URL with:
----
# cat <<-END >/etc/httpd/conf.d/status.conf
SetHandler server-status
Order deny,allow
Deny from all
Allow from 127.0.0.1
END
----
[NOTE]
======
If you are using a different operating system, server-status may already be
enabled or may be configurable in a different location.
======
== Configure the Cluster ==
At this point, Apache is ready to go, and all that needs to be done is to
add it to the cluster. Let's call the resource WebSite. We need to use
an OCF resource script called apache in the heartbeat namespace.
footnote:[Compare the key used here, *ocf:heartbeat:apache*, with the one we
used earlier for the IP address, *ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2*]
The script's only required parameter is the path to the main Apache
configuration file, and we'll tell the cluster to check once a
minute that Apache is still running.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource create WebSite ocf:heartbeat:apache \
configfile=/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf \
statusurl="http://localhost/server-status" \
op monitor interval=1min
----
By default, the operation timeout for all resources' start, stop, and monitor
operations is 20 seconds. In many cases, this timeout period is less than
a particular resource's advised timeout period. For the purposes of this
tutorial, we will adjust the global operation timeout default to 240 seconds.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource op defaults timeout=240s
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs resource op defaults
timeout: 240s
----
[NOTE]
======
In a production cluster, it is usually better to adjust each resource's
start, stop, and monitor timeouts to values that are appropriate to
the behavior observed in your environment, rather than adjust
the global default.
======
After a short delay, we should see the cluster start Apache.
-----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status
Cluster name: mycluster
Last updated: Wed Dec 17 12:40:41 2014
Last change: Wed Dec 17 12:40:05 2014
Stack: corosync
Current DC: pcmk-2 (2) - partition with quorum
-Version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+Version: 1.1.12-a14efad
2 Nodes configured
2 Resources configured
Online: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Full list of resources:
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-2
WebSite (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Started pcmk-1
PCSD Status:
pcmk-1: Online
pcmk-2: Online
Daemon Status:
corosync: active/disabled
pacemaker: active/disabled
pcsd: active/enabled
-----
Wait a moment, the WebSite resource isn't running on the same host as our
IP address!
[NOTE]
======
If, in the `pcs status` output, you see the WebSite resource has
failed to start, then you've likely not enabled the status URL correctly.
You can check whether this is the problem by running:
....
wget -O - http://127.0.0.1/server-status
....
If you see *Connection refused* in the output, then this is likely the
problem. Ensure that *Allow from 127.0.0.1* is present for
the ** block.
======
== Ensure Resources Run on the Same Host ==
To reduce the load on any one machine, Pacemaker will generally try to
spread the configured resources across the cluster nodes. However, we
can tell the cluster that two resources are related and need to run on
the same host (or not at all). Here, we instruct the cluster that
WebSite can only run on the host that ClusterIP is active on.
To achieve this, we use a _colocation constraint_ that indicates it is
mandatory for WebSite to run on the same node as ClusterIP. The
"mandatory" part of the colocation constraint is indicated by using a
score of INFINITY. The INFINITY score also means that if ClusterIP is not
active anywhere, WebSite will not be permitted to run.
[NOTE]
=======
If ClusterIP is not active anywhere, WebSite will not be permitted to run
anywhere.
=======
[IMPORTANT]
===========
Colocation constraints are "directional", in that they imply certain
things about the order in which the two resources will have a location
chosen. In this case, we're saying that *WebSite* needs to be placed on the
same machine as *ClusterIP*, which implies that the cluster must know the
location of *ClusterIP* before choosing a location for *WebSite*.
===========
-----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs constraint colocation add WebSite with ClusterIP INFINITY
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs constraint
Location Constraints:
Ordering Constraints:
Colocation Constraints:
WebSite with ClusterIP (score:INFINITY)
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status
Cluster name: mycluster
Last updated: Wed Dec 17 13:57:58 2014
Last change: Wed Dec 17 13:57:22 2014
Stack: corosync
Current DC: pcmk-2 (2) - partition with quorum
-Version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+Version: 1.1.12-a14efad
2 Nodes configured
2 Resources configured
Online: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Full list of resources:
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-2
WebSite (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Started pcmk-2
PCSD Status:
pcmk-1: Online
pcmk-2: Online
Daemon Status:
corosync: active/disabled
pacemaker: active/disabled
pcsd: active/enabled
-----
== Ensure Resources Start and Stop in Order ==
Like many services, Apache can be configured to bind to specific
IP addresses on a host or to the wildcard IP address. If Apache
binds to the wildcard, it doesn't matter whether an IP address
is added before or after Apache starts; Apache will respond on
that IP just the same. However, if Apache binds only to certain IP
address(es), the order matters: If the address is added after Apache
starts, Apache won't respond on that address.
To be sure our WebSite responds regardless of Apache's address configuration,
we need to make sure ClusterIP not only runs on the same node,
but starts before WebSite. A colocation constraint only ensures the
resources run together, not the order in which they are started and stopped.
We do this by adding an ordering constraint. By default, all order constraints
are mandatory, which means that the recovery of ClusterIP will also trigger the
recovery of WebSite.
-----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs constraint order ClusterIP then WebSite
Adding ClusterIP WebSite (kind: Mandatory) (Options: first-action=start then-action=start)
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs constraint
Location Constraints:
Ordering Constraints:
start ClusterIP then start WebSite (kind:Mandatory)
Colocation Constraints:
WebSite with ClusterIP (score:INFINITY)
-----
== Prefer One Node Over Another ==
Pacemaker does not rely on any sort of hardware symmetry between nodes,
so it may well be that one machine is more powerful than the other. In
such cases, it makes sense to host the resources on the more powerful node if
it is available. To do this, we create a location constraint.
In the location constraint below, we are saying the WebSite resource
prefers the node pcmk-1 with a score of 50. Here, the score indicates
how badly we'd like the resource to run at this location.
-----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs constraint location WebSite prefers pcmk-1=50
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs constraint
Location Constraints:
Resource: WebSite
Enabled on: pcmk-1 (score:50)
Ordering Constraints:
start ClusterIP then start WebSite (kind:Mandatory)
Colocation Constraints:
WebSite with ClusterIP (score:INFINITY)
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status
Cluster name: mycluster
Last updated: Wed Dec 17 14:11:49 2014
Last change: Wed Dec 17 14:11:20 2014
Stack: corosync
Current DC: pcmk-2 (2) - partition with quorum
-Version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+Version: 1.1.12-a14efad
2 Nodes configured
2 Resources configured
Online: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Full list of resources:
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-2
WebSite (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Started pcmk-2
PCSD Status:
pcmk-1: Online
pcmk-2: Online
Daemon Status:
corosync: active/disabled
pacemaker: active/disabled
pcsd: active/enabled
-----
Wait a minute, the resources are still on pcmk-2!
Even though WebSite now prefers to run on pcmk-1, that preference is
(intentionally) less than the resource stickiness (how much we
preferred not to have unnecessary downtime).
To see the current placement scores, you can use a tool called crm_simulate.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# crm_simulate -sL
Current cluster status:
Online: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-2
WebSite (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Started pcmk-2
Allocation scores:
native_color: ClusterIP allocation score on pcmk-1: 50
native_color: ClusterIP allocation score on pcmk-2: 200
native_color: WebSite allocation score on pcmk-1: -INFINITY
native_color: WebSite allocation score on pcmk-2: 100
Transition Summary:
----
== Move Resources Manually ==
There are always times when an administrator needs to override the
cluster and force resources to move to a specific location. In this example,
we will force the WebSite to move to pcmk-1 by
updating our previous location constraint with a score of INFINITY.
-----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs constraint location WebSite prefers pcmk-1=INFINITY
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs constraint
Location Constraints:
Resource: WebSite
Enabled on: pcmk-1 (score:INFINITY)
Ordering Constraints:
start ClusterIP then start WebSite (kind:Mandatory)
Colocation Constraints:
WebSite with ClusterIP (score:INFINITY)
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status
Cluster name: mycluster
Last updated: Wed Dec 17 14:19:34 2014
Last change: Wed Dec 17 14:18:37 2014
Stack: corosync
Current DC: pcmk-2 (2) - partition with quorum
-Version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+Version: 1.1.12-a14efad
2 Nodes configured
2 Resources configured
Online: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Full list of resources:
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-1
WebSite (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Started pcmk-1
PCSD Status:
pcmk-1: Online
pcmk-2: Online
Daemon Status:
corosync: active/disabled
pacemaker: active/disabled
pcsd: active/enabled
-----
Once we've finished whatever activity required us to move the
resources to pcmk-1 (in our case nothing), we can then allow the cluster
to resume normal operation by removing the new constraint. Since we previously
configured a default stickiness, the resources will remain on pcmk-1.
First, use the `--full` option to get the constraint's ID:
-----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs constraint --full
Location Constraints:
Resource: WebSite
Enabled on: pcmk-1 (score:INFINITY) (id:location-WebSite-pcmk-1-INFINITY)
Ordering Constraints:
start ClusterIP then start WebSite (kind:Mandatory) (id:order-ClusterIP-WebSite-mandatory)
Colocation Constraints:
WebSite with ClusterIP (score:INFINITY) (id:colocation-WebSite-ClusterIP-INFINITY)
-----
Then remove the desired contraint using its ID:
-----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs constraint remove location-WebSite-pcmk-1-INFINITY
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs constraint
Location Constraints:
Ordering Constraints:
start ClusterIP then start WebSite (kind:Mandatory)
Colocation Constraints:
WebSite with ClusterIP (score:INFINITY)
-----
Note that the location constraint is now gone. If we check the cluster
status, we can also see that (as expected) the resources are still active
on pcmk-1.
-----
# pcs status
Cluster name: mycluster
Last updated: Wed Dec 17 14:25:21 2014
Last change: Wed Dec 17 14:24:29 2014
Stack: corosync
Current DC: pcmk-2 (2) - partition with quorum
-Version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+Version: 1.1.12-a14efad
2 Nodes configured
2 Resources configured
Online: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Full list of resources:
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-1
WebSite (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Started pcmk-1
PCSD Status:
pcmk-1: Online
pcmk-2: Online
Daemon Status:
corosync: active/disabled
pacemaker: active/disabled
pcsd: active/enabled
-----
diff --git a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Installation.txt b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Installation.txt
index 41f32c4526..851fc08c94 100644
--- a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Installation.txt
+++ b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Installation.txt
@@ -1,508 +1,489 @@
= Installation =
== Install &DISTRO; &DISTRO_VERSION; ==
-Detailed instructions for installing Fedora are available at
-http://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/21/html/Installation_Guide/ in a number of
-languages. The abbreviated version is as follows:
+=== Boot the Install Image ===
-Point your browser to https://getfedora.org/,
-choose a flavor (Server is an appropriate choice),
-and download the installation image appropriate to your hardware.
-
-Burn the installation image to a DVD or USB drive
-footnote:[http://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/21/html/Installation_Guide/sect-preparing-boot-media.html]
-and boot from it, or use the image to boot a virtual machine.
+Download the 4GB
+http://isoredirect.centos.org/centos/7/isos/x86_64/CentOS-7-x86_64-DVD-1503-01.iso[&DISTRO;
+&DISTRO_VERSION; DVD ISO]. Use the image to boot a virtual machine, or
+burn it to a DVD or USB drive and boot a physical server from that.
After starting the installation, select your language and keyboard layout at
the welcome screen.
-footnote:[http://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/21/html/Installation_Guide/sect-installation-graphical-mode.html]
+
+.&DISTRO; &DISTRO_VERSION; Installation Welcome Screen
+image::images/Welcome.png["Welcome to &DISTRO; &DISTRO_VERSION;",align="center",scaledwidth="100%"]
+
+=== Installation Options ===
At this point, you get a chance to tweak the default installation options.
-In the *NETWORK & HOSTNAME* section you'll want to:
+.&DISTRO; &DISTRO_VERSION; Installation Summary Screen
+image::images/Installer.png["&DISTRO; &DISTRO_VERSION; Installation Summary",align="center",scaledwidth="100%"]
+
+Ignore the *SOFTWARE SELECTION* section (try saying that 10 times quickly). The
+*Infrastructure Server* environment does have add-ons with much of the software
+we need, but we will leave it as a *Minimal Install* here, so that we can see
+exactly what software is required later.
+
+=== Configure Network ===
+
+In the *NETWORK & HOSTNAME* section:
-- Assign your machine a host name.
- I happen to control the clusterlabs.org domain name, so I will use
- pcmk-1.clusterlabs.org here.
-- Assign a fixed IPv4 address. In this example, I'll use 192.168.122.101.
+- Edit *Host Name:* as desired. For this example, we will use
+ *pcmk-1.localdomain*.
+- Select your network device, press *Configure...*, and manually assign a fixed
+ IP address. For this example, we'll use 192.168.122.101 under *IPv4 Settings*
+ (with an appropriate netmask, gateway and DNS server).
+- Flip the switch to turn your network device on.
[IMPORTANT]
===========
Do not accept the default network settings.
Cluster machines should never obtain an IP address via DHCP, because
DHCP's periodic address renewal will interfere with corosync.
-
-If you miss this step during installation, it can easily be fixed later. You will have
-to navigate to *system settings* and select *network*. From there, you can select
-what device to configure.
===========
-In the *Software Selection* section (try saying that 10 times
-quickly), leave all *Add-Ons* unchecked so that we see everything that gets
-installed. We'll install any extra software we need later.
+=== Configure Disk ===
-[IMPORTANT]
-===========
+By default, the installer's automatic partitioning will use LVM (which allows
+us to dynamically change the amount of space allocated to a given partition).
+However, it allocates all free space to the +/+ (aka. *root*) partition, which
+cannot be reduced in size later (dynamic increases are fine).
-By default Fedora uses LVM for partitioning which allows us to
-dynamically change the amount of space allocated to a given partition.
+In order to follow the DRBD and GFS2 portions of this guide, we need to reserve
+space on each machine for a replicated volume.
-However, by default it also allocates all free space to the +/+
-(aka. *root*) partition, which cannot be dynamically _reduced_ in size
-(dynamic increases are fine, by the way).
+Enter the *INSTALLATION DESTINATION* section, ensure the hard drive you want to
+install to is selected, select *I will configure partitioning*, and press *Done*.
-So if you plan on following the DRBD or GFS2 portions of this guide,
-you should reserve at least 1GiB of space on each machine from which to
-create a shared volume. To do so, enter the *Installation
-Destination* section where you are be given an opportunity to reduce
-the size of the *root* partition (after choosing which hard drive you
-wish to install to). If you want the reserved space to be available
-within an LVM volume group, be sure to select *Modify...* next to
-the volume group name and change the *Size policy:* to *Fixed*
-or *As large as possible*.
+In the *MANUAL PARTITIONING* screen that comes next, click the option to create
+mountpoints automatically. Select the +/+ mountpoint, and reduce the desired
+capacity by 1GiB or so. Select *Modify...* by the volume group name, and change
+the *Size policy:* to *As large as possible*, to make the reclaimed space
+available inside the LVM volume group. We'll add the additional volume later.
-===========
+=== Configure Time Synchronization ===
It is highly recommended to enable NTP on your cluster nodes. Doing so
ensures all nodes agree on the current time and makes reading log files
-significantly easier. You can do this in the *DATE & TIME* section.
-footnote:[http://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/21/html/Installation_Guide/sect-installation-gui-date-and-time.html]
+significantly easier.
+
+&DISTRO; will enable NTP automatically. If you want to change any time-related
+settings (such as time zone or NTP server), you can do this in the
+*TIME & DATE* section.
+
+=== Finish Install ===
-Once you've completed the installation, set a root password as instructed.
-For the purposes of this document, it is not necessary to create any additional
-users. After the node reboots, you'll see a (possibly mangled) login prompt on
+Select *Begin Installation*. Once it completes, set a root password, and reboot
+as instructed. For the purposes of this document, it is not necessary to create
+any additional users. After the node reboots, you'll see a login prompt on
the console. Login using *root* and the password you created earlier.
-image::images/Console.png["Initial Console",align="center",scaledwidth="65%"]
+.&DISTRO; &DISTRO_VERSION; Console Prompt
+image::images/Console.png["&DISTRO; &DISTRO_VERSION; Console",align="center",scaledwidth="100%"]
[NOTE]
======
From here on, we're going to be working exclusively from the terminal.
======
== Configure the OS ==
=== Verify Networking ===
Ensure that the machine has the static IP address you configured earlier.
-----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# ip addr
-1: lo: mtu 65536 qdisc noqueue state UNKNOWN group default
+1: lo: mtu 65536 qdisc noqueue state UNKNOWN
link/loopback 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd 00:00:00:00:00:00
inet 127.0.0.1/8 scope host lo
inet6 ::1/128 scope host
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
-2: eth0: mtu 1500 qdisc pfifo_fast state UP group default qlen 1000
+2: eth0: mtu 1500 qdisc pfifo_fast state UP qlen 1000
link/ether 52:54:00:d7:d6:08 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
inet 192.168.122.101/24 brd 192.168.122.255 scope global eth0
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
inet6 fe80::5054:ff:fed7:d608/64 scope link
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
-----
[NOTE]
=====
If you ever need to change the node's IP address from the command line, follow
these instructions, replacing *${device}* with the name of your network device:
....
-[root@pcmk-1 ~]# vim /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-${device} # manually edit as desired
+[root@pcmk-1 ~]# vi /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-${device} # manually edit as desired
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# nmcli dev disconnect ${device}
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# nmcli con reload ${device}
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# nmcli con up ${device}
....
This makes *NetworkManager* aware that a change was made on the config file.
=====
Next, ensure that the routes are as expected:
-----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# ip route
-default via 192.168.122.1 dev eth0 proto static metric 1024
-192.168.122.0/24 dev eth0 proto kernel scope link src 192.168.122.101
+default via 192.168.122.1 dev eth0 proto static metric 100
+192.168.122.0/24 dev eth0 proto kernel scope link src 192.168.122.101 metric 100
-----
If there is no line beginning with *default via*, then you may need to add a line such as
[source,Bash]
GATEWAY="192.168.122.1"
to the device configuration using the same process as described above for
changing the IP address.
Now, check for connectivity to the outside world. Start small by
testing whether we can reach the gateway we configured.
-----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# ping -c 1 192.168.122.1
PING 192.168.122.1 (192.168.122.1) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from 192.168.122.1: icmp_req=1 ttl=64 time=0.249 ms
--- 192.168.122.1 ping statistics ---
1 packets transmitted, 1 received, 0% packet loss, time 0ms
rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 0.249/0.249/0.249/0.000 ms
-----
Now try something external; choose a location you know should be available.
-----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# ping -c 1 www.google.com
PING www.l.google.com (173.194.72.106) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from tf-in-f106.1e100.net (173.194.72.106): icmp_req=1 ttl=41 time=167 ms
--- www.l.google.com ping statistics ---
1 packets transmitted, 1 received, 0% packet loss, time 0ms
rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 167.618/167.618/167.618/0.000 ms
-----
=== Login Remotely ===
The console isn't a very friendly place to work from, so we will now
switch to accessing the machine remotely via SSH where we can
use copy and paste, etc.
From another host, check whether we can see the new host at all:
-----
beekhof@f16 ~ # ping -c 1 192.168.122.101
PING 192.168.122.101 (192.168.122.101) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from 192.168.122.101: icmp_req=1 ttl=64 time=1.01 ms
--- 192.168.122.101 ping statistics ---
1 packets transmitted, 1 received, 0% packet loss, time 0ms
rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 1.012/1.012/1.012/0.000 ms
-----
Next, login as root via SSH.
-----
beekhof@f16 ~ # ssh -l root 192.168.122.101
The authenticity of host '192.168.122.101 (192.168.122.101)' can't be established.
ECDSA key fingerprint is 6e:b7:8f:e2:4c:94:43:54:a8:53:cc:20:0f:29:a4:e0.
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes
Warning: Permanently added '192.168.122.101' (ECDSA) to the list of known hosts.
root@192.168.122.101's password:
Last login: Tue Aug 11 13:14:39 2015
[root@pcmk-1 ~]#
-----
=== Apply Updates ===
Apply any package updates released since your installation image was created:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# yum update
----
=== Use Short Node Names ===
During installation, we filled in the machine's fully qualified domain
name (FQDN), which can be rather long when it appears in cluster logs and
status output. See for yourself how the machine identifies itself:
(((Nodes, short name)))
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# uname -n
-pcmk-1.clusterlabs.org
-[root@pcmk-1 ~]# dnsdomainname
-clusterlabs.org
+pcmk-1.localdomain
----
(((Nodes, Domain name (Query))))
-The output from the second command is fine, but we really don't need the
-domain name included in the basic host details. To address this, we need
-to use the `hostnamectl` tool to strip off the domain name.
+We can use the `hostnamectl` tool to strip off the domain name:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# hostnamectl set-hostname $(uname -n | sed s/\\..*//)
----
(((Nodes, Domain name (Remove from host name))))
-Now check the machine is using the correct names
-
+Now, check that the machine is using the correct name:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# uname -n
pcmk-1
-[root@pcmk-1 ~]# dnsdomainname
-clusterlabs.org
----
== Repeat for Second Node ==
Repeat the Installation steps so far, so that you have two
nodes ready to have the cluster software installed.
For the purposes of this document, the additional node is called
pcmk-2 with address 192.168.122.102.
== Configure Communication Between Nodes ==
=== Configure Host Name Resolution ===
Confirm that you can communicate between the two new nodes:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# ping -c 3 192.168.122.102
PING 192.168.122.102 (192.168.122.102) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from 192.168.122.102: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=0.343 ms
64 bytes from 192.168.122.102: icmp_seq=2 ttl=64 time=0.402 ms
64 bytes from 192.168.122.102: icmp_seq=3 ttl=64 time=0.558 ms
--- 192.168.122.102 ping statistics ---
3 packets transmitted, 3 received, 0% packet loss, time 2000ms
rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 0.343/0.434/0.558/0.092 ms
----
Now we need to make sure we can communicate with the machines by their
name. If you have a DNS server, add additional entries for the two
machines. Otherwise, you'll need to add the machines to +/etc/hosts+
on both nodes. Below are the entries for my cluster nodes:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# grep pcmk /etc/hosts
192.168.122.101 pcmk-1.clusterlabs.org pcmk-1
192.168.122.102 pcmk-2.clusterlabs.org pcmk-2
----
We can now verify the setup by again using ping:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# ping -c 3 pcmk-2
PING pcmk-2.clusterlabs.org (192.168.122.101) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from pcmk-1.clusterlabs.org (192.168.122.101): icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=0.164 ms
64 bytes from pcmk-1.clusterlabs.org (192.168.122.101): icmp_seq=2 ttl=64 time=0.475 ms
64 bytes from pcmk-1.clusterlabs.org (192.168.122.101): icmp_seq=3 ttl=64 time=0.186 ms
--- pcmk-2.clusterlabs.org ping statistics ---
3 packets transmitted, 3 received, 0% packet loss, time 2001ms
rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 0.164/0.275/0.475/0.141 ms
----
=== Configure SSH ===
SSH is a convenient and secure way to copy files and perform commands
remotely. For the purposes of this guide, we will create a key without a
password (using the -N option) so that we can perform remote actions
without being prompted.
(((SSH)))
[WARNING]
=========
Unprotected SSH keys (those without a password) are not recommended for servers exposed to the outside world.
We use them here only to simplify the demo.
=========
Create a new key and allow anyone with that key to log in:
.Creating and Activating a new SSH Key
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# ssh-keygen -t dsa -f ~/.ssh/id_dsa -N ""
Generating public/private dsa key pair.
Your identification has been saved in /root/.ssh/id_dsa.
Your public key has been saved in /root/.ssh/id_dsa.pub.
The key fingerprint is:
91:09:5c:82:5a:6a:50:08:4e:b2:0c:62:de:cc:74:44 root@pcmk-1.clusterlabs.org
The key's randomart image is:
+--[ DSA 1024]----+
|==.ooEo.. |
|X O + .o o |
| * A + |
| + . |
| . S |
| |
| |
| |
| |
+-----------------+
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# cp ~/.ssh/id_dsa.pub ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
----
(((Creating and Activating a new SSH Key)))
Install the key on the other node:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# scp -r ~/.ssh pcmk-2:
The authenticity of host 'pcmk-2 (192.168.122.102)' can't be established.
ECDSA key fingerprint is a4:f5:b2:34:9d:86:2b:34:a2:87:37:b9:ca:68:52:ec.
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes
Warning: Permanently added 'pcmk-2,192.168.122.102' (ECDSA) to the list of known hosts.
root@pcmk-2's password:
id_dsa.pub 100% 616 0.6KB/s 00:00
id_dsa 100% 672 0.7KB/s 00:00
known_hosts 100% 400 0.4KB/s 00:00
authorized_keys 100% 616 0.6KB/s 00:00
----
Test that you can now run commands remotely, without being prompted:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# ssh pcmk-2 -- uname -n
pcmk-2
----
== Install the Cluster Software ==
Fire up a shell on both nodes and run the following to install pacemaker, and while
we're at it, some command-line tools to make our lives easier:
----
-# yum install -y pacemaker pcs psmisc
+# yum install -y pacemaker pcs psmisc policycoreutils-python
----
[IMPORTANT]
===========
This document will show commands that need to be executed on both nodes
with a simple `#` prompt. Be sure to run them on each node individually.
===========
[NOTE]
===========
This document uses `pcs` for cluster management. Other alternatives,
such as `crmsh`, are available, but their syntax
will differ from the examples used here.
===========
== Configure the Cluster Software ==
=== Allow cluster services through firewall ===
On each node, allow cluster-related services through the local firewall:
----
# firewall-cmd --permanent --add-service=high-availability
success
# firewall-cmd --reload
success
----
[NOTE]
======
If you are using iptables directly, or some other firewall solution besides
firewalld, simply open the following ports, which can be used by various
clustering components: TCP ports 2224, 3121, and 21064, and UDP port 5405.
If you run into any problems during testing, you might want to disable
the firewall and SELinux entirely until you have everything working.
This may create significant security issues and should not be performed on
machines that will be exposed to the outside world, but may be appropriate
during development and testing on a protected host.
To disable security measures:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# setenforce 0
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# sed -i.bak "s/SELINUX=enforcing/SELINUX=permissive/g" /etc/selinux/config
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# systemctl disable firewalld.service
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# systemctl stop firewalld.service
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# iptables --flush
----
======
=== Enable pcs Daemon ===
Before the cluster can be configured, the pcs daemon must be started and enabled
to start at boot time on each node. This daemon works with the pcs command-line interface
to manage synchronizing the corosync configuration across all nodes in the cluster.
Start and enable the daemon by issuing the following commands on each node:
----
# systemctl start pcsd.service
# systemctl enable pcsd.service
ln -s '/usr/lib/systemd/system/pcsd.service' '/etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/pcsd.service'
----
The installed packages will create a *hacluster* user with a disabled password.
While this is fine for running `pcs` commands locally,
the account needs a login password in order to perform such tasks as syncing
the corosync configuration, or starting and stopping the cluster on other nodes.
This tutorial will make use of such commands,
so now we will set a password for the *hacluster* user, using the same password
on both nodes:
----
# passwd hacluster
Changing password for user hacluster.
New password:
Retype new password:
passwd: all authentication tokens updated successfully.
----
[NOTE]
===========
Alternatively, to script this process or set the password on a
different machine from the one you're logged into, you can use
the `--stdin` option for `passwd`:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# ssh pcmk-2 -- 'echo redhat1 | passwd --stdin hacluster'
----
===========
=== Configure Corosync ===
On either node, use `pcs cluster auth` to authenticate as the *hacluster* user:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster auth pcmk-1 pcmk-2
Username: hacluster
Password:
pcmk-1: Authorized
pcmk-2: Authorized
----
-[IMPORTANT]
-===========
-The version of pcs shipped with Fedora 21 will bind only to
-the host's IPv6 address in some circumstances. If you get errors
-with `pcs cluster auth`, add this line before the first *server.run* line in
-+/usr/lib/pcsd/ssl.rb+ to bind to IPv4 only:
-
-----
-webrick_options[:BindAddress] = '0.0.0.0'
-----
-
-And restart pcsd:
-----
-[root@pcmk-1 ~]# systemctl restart pcsd
-----
-
-This is a temporary workaround that will get removed if the pcsd
-package is later updated.
-===========
-
-Next, use `pcs cluster setup` to generate and synchronize the corosync
-configuration:
+Next, use `pcs cluster setup` on the same node to generate and synchronize the
+corosync configuration:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster setup --name mycluster pcmk-1 pcmk-2
Shutting down pacemaker/corosync services...
Redirecting to /bin/systemctl stop pacemaker.service
Redirecting to /bin/systemctl stop corosync.service
Killing any remaining services...
Removing all cluster configuration files...
pcmk-1: Succeeded
pcmk-2: Succeeded
----
If you received an authorization error for either of those commands, make
sure you configured the *hacluster* user account on each node
with the same password.
[NOTE]
======
Early versions of pcs required that `--name` be omitted from the above command.
If you are not using `pcs` for cluster administration,
follow whatever procedures are appropriate for your tools
to create a corosync.conf and copy it to all nodes.
The `pcs` command will configure corosync to use UDP unicast transport; if you
choose to use multicast instead, choose a multicast address carefully.
footnote:[For some subtle issues, see the now-defunct http://web.archive.org/web/20101211210054/http://29west.com/docs/THPM/multicast-address-assignment.html or the more detailed treatment in
http://www.cisco.com/c/dam/en/us/support/docs/ip/ip-multicast/ipmlt_wp.pdf[Cisco's
Guidelines for Enterprise IP Multicast Address Allocation] paper.]
======
The final /etc/corosync.conf configuration on each node should look
something like the sample in <>.
diff --git a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Shared-Storage.txt b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Shared-Storage.txt
index 7cea792111..124fbb60eb 100644
--- a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Shared-Storage.txt
+++ b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Shared-Storage.txt
@@ -1,538 +1,564 @@
= Replicate Storage Using DRBD =
Even if you're serving up static websites, having to manually synchronize
the contents of that website to all the machines in the cluster is not
ideal. For dynamic websites, such as a wiki, it's not even an option. Not
everyone care afford network-attached storage, but somehow the data needs
to be kept in sync.
Enter DRBD, which can be thought of as network-based RAID-1.
footnote:[See http://www.drbd.org/ for details.]
== Install the DRBD Packages ==
-DRBD itself is included in the upstream kernel,
-footnote:[Since version 2.6.33]
-but we do need some utilities to use it effectively. On both nodes, run:
+DRBD itself is included in the upstream kernel,footnote:[Since version 2.6.33]
+but we do need some utilities to use it effectively.
+
+CentOS does not ship these utilities, so we need to enable a third-party
+repository to get them. Supported packages for many OSes are available from
+DRBD's maker http://www.linbit.com/[LINBIT], but here we'll use the free
+http://elrepo.org/[ELRepo] repository.
+
+On both nodes, import the ELRepo package signing key, and enable the
+repository:
+----
+# rpm --import https://www.elrepo.org/RPM-GPG-KEY-elrepo.org
+# rpm -Uvh http://www.elrepo.org/elrepo-release-7.0-2.el7.elrepo.noarch.rpm
+----
+
+Now, we can install the DRBD kernel module and utilities:
+----
+# yum install -y kmod-drbd84 drbd84-utils
+----
+
+[IMPORTANT]
+===========
+The version of drbd84-utils shipped with CentOS 7.1 has a bug in the
+Pacemaker integration script. Until a fix is packaged, download the
+affected script directly from the upstream, on both nodes:
+----
+# curl -o /usr/lib/ocf/resource.d/linbit/drbd 'http://git.linbit.com/gitweb.cgi?p=drbd-utils.git;a=blob_plain;f=scripts/drbd.ocf;h=cf6b966341377a993d1bf5f585a5b9fe72eaa5f2;hb=c11ba026bbbbc647b8112543df142f2185cb4b4b'
+----
+This is a temporary fix that will be overwritten if the package
+is upgraded.
+===========
DRBD will not be able to run under the default SELinux security policies.
If you are familiar with SELinux, you can modify the policies in a more
fine-grained manner, but here we will simply exempt DRBD processes from SELinux
control:
----
-# yum install -y drbd-pacemaker drbd-udev
# semanage permissive -a drbd_t
----
We will configure DRBD to use port 7789, so allow that port from each host to
the other:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# firewall-cmd --permanent --add-rich-rule='rule family="ipv4" source address="192.168.122.102" port port="7789" protocol="tcp" accept'
success
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# firewall-cmd --reload
success
----
----
[root@pcmk-2 ~]# firewall-cmd --permanent --add-rich-rule='rule family="ipv4" source address="192.168.122.101" port port="7789" protocol="tcp" accept'
success
[root@pcmk-2 ~]# firewall-cmd --reload
success
----
[NOTE]
======
In this example, we have only two nodes, and all network traffic is on the same LAN.
In production, it is recommended to use a dedicated, isolated network for cluster-related traffic,
so the firewall configuration would likely be different; one approach would be to
add the dedicated network interfaces to the trusted zone.
======
== Allocate a Disk Volume for DRBD ==
DRBD will need its own block device on each node. This can be
a physical disk partition or logical volume, of whatever size
you need for your data. For this document, we will use a
1GiB logical volume, which is more than sufficient for a single HTML file and
(later) GFS2 metadata.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# vgdisplay | grep -e Name -e Free
- VG Name fedora-server_pcmk-1
- Free PE / Size 511 / 2.00 GiB
-[root@pcmk-1 ~]# lvcreate --name drbd-demo --size 1G fedora-server_pcmk-1
+ VG Name centos_pcmk-1
+ Free PE / Size 382 / 1.49 GiB
+[root@pcmk-1 ~]# lvcreate --name drbd-demo --size 1G centos_pcmk-1
Logical volume "drbd-demo" created
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# lvs
- LV VG Attr LSize Pool Origin Data% Meta% Move Log Cpy%Sync Convert
- drbd-demo fedora-server_pcmk-1 -wi-a----- 1.00g
- root fedora-server_pcmk-1 -wi-ao---- 5.00g
- swap fedora-server_pcmk-1 -wi-ao---- 1.00g
+ LV VG Attr LSize Pool Origin Data% Meta% Move Log Cpy%Sync Convert
+ drbd-demo centos_pcmk-1 -wi-a----- 1.00g
+ root centos_pcmk-1 -wi-ao---- 5.00g
+ swap centos_pcmk-1 -wi-ao---- 1.00g
----
Repeat for the second node, making sure to use the same size:
----
-[root@pcmk-1 ~]# ssh pcmk-2 -- lvcreate --name drbd-demo --size 1G fedora-server_pcmk-2
+[root@pcmk-1 ~]# ssh pcmk-2 -- lvcreate --name drbd-demo --size 1G centos_pcmk-2
Logical volume "drbd-demo" created
----
== Configure DRBD ==
There is no series of commands for building a DRBD configuration, so simply
run this on both nodes to use this sample configuration:
----
# cat </etc/drbd.d/wwwdata.res
resource wwwdata {
protocol C;
meta-disk internal;
device /dev/drbd1;
syncer {
verify-alg sha1;
}
net {
allow-two-primaries;
}
on pcmk-1 {
- disk /dev/fedora-server_pcmk-1/drbd-demo;
+ disk /dev/centos_pcmk-1/drbd-demo;
address 192.168.122.101:7789;
}
on pcmk-2 {
- disk /dev/fedora-server_pcmk-2/drbd-demo;
+ disk /dev/centos_pcmk-2/drbd-demo;
address 192.168.122.102:7789;
}
}
END
----
[IMPORTANT]
=========
Edit the file to use the hostnames, IP addresses and logical volume paths
of your nodes if they differ from the ones used in this guide.
=========
[NOTE]
=======
Detailed information on the directives used in this configuration (and
other alternatives) is available at
http://www.drbd.org/users-guide/ch-configure.html
The *allow-two-primaries* option would not normally be used in
an active/passive cluster. We are adding it here for the convenience
of changing to an active/active cluster later.
=======
== Initialize DRBD ==
With the configuration in place, we can now get DRBD running.
These commands create the local metadata for the DRBD resource,
ensure the DRBD kernel module is loaded, and bring up the DRBD resource.
Run them on one node:
----
-# drbdadm create-md wwwdata
+[root@pcmk-1 ~]# drbdadm create-md wwwdata
initializing activity log
NOT initializing bitmap
Writing meta data...
New drbd meta data block successfully created.
-# modprobe drbd
-# drbdadm up wwwdata
+[root@pcmk-1 ~]# modprobe drbd
+[root@pcmk-1 ~]# drbdadm up wwwdata
----
We can confirm DRBD's status on this node:
----
-# cat /proc/drbd
-version: 8.4.5 (api:1/proto:86-101)
-srcversion: 153833F4A69E341D3F3E707
+[root@pcmk-1 ~]# cat /proc/drbd
+version: 8.4.6 (api:1/proto:86-101)
+GIT-hash: 833d830e0152d1e457fa7856e71e11248ccf3f70 build by phil@Build64R7, 2015-04-10 05:13:52
1: cs:WFConnection ro:Secondary/Unknown ds:Inconsistent/DUnknown C r----s
ns:0 nr:0 dw:0 dr:0 al:0 bm:0 lo:0 pe:0 ua:0 ap:0 ep:1 wo:f oos:1048508
----
Because we have not yet initialized the data, this node's data
is marked as *Inconsistent*. Because we have not yet initialized
the second node, the local state is *WFConnection* (waiting for connection),
and the partner node's status is marked as *Unknown*.
Now, repeat the above commands on the second node. This time,
when we check the status, it shows:
----
-# cat /proc/drbd
-version: 8.4.5 (api:1/proto:86-101)
-srcversion: 153833F4A69E341D3F3E707
+[root@pcmk-2 ~]# cat /proc/drbd
+version: 8.4.6 (api:1/proto:86-101)
+GIT-hash: 833d830e0152d1e457fa7856e71e11248ccf3f70 build by phil@Build64R7, 2015-04-10 05:13:52
1: cs:Connected ro:Secondary/Secondary ds:Inconsistent/Inconsistent C r-----
ns:0 nr:0 dw:0 dr:0 al:0 bm:0 lo:0 pe:0 ua:0 ap:0 ep:1 wo:f oos:1048508
----
You can see the state has changed to *Connected*, meaning the two DRBD nodes
are communicating properly, and both nodes are in *Secondary* role
with *Inconsistent* data.
To make the data consistent, we need to tell DRBD which node should be
considered to have the correct data. In this case, since we are creating
a new resource, both have garbage, so we'll just pick pcmk-1
and run this command on it:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# drbdadm primary --force wwwdata
----
[NOTE]
======
If you are using an older version of DRBD, the required syntax may be different.
See the documentation for your version for how to perform these commands.
======
If we check the status immediately, we'll see something like this:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# cat /proc/drbd
-version: 8.4.5 (api:1/proto:86-101)
-srcversion: 153833F4A69E341D3F3E707
+version: 8.4.6 (api:1/proto:86-101)
+GIT-hash: 833d830e0152d1e457fa7856e71e11248ccf3f70 build by phil@Build64R7, 2015-04-10 05:13:52
1: cs:SyncSource ro:Primary/Secondary ds:UpToDate/Inconsistent C r-----
ns:2872 nr:0 dw:0 dr:3784 al:0 bm:0 lo:0 pe:0 ua:0 ap:0 ep:1 wo:f oos:1045636
[>....................] sync'ed: 0.4% (1045636/1048508)K
finish: 0:10:53 speed: 1,436 (1,436) K/sec
----
We can see that this node has the *Primary* role, the partner node has
the *Secondary* role, this node's data is now considered *UpToDate*,
the partner node's data is still *Inconsistent*, and a progress bar
shows how far along the partner node is in synchronizing the data.
After a while, the sync should finish, and you'll see something like:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# cat /proc/drbd
-version: 8.4.5 (api:1/proto:86-101)
-srcversion: 153833F4A69E341D3F3E707
+version: 8.4.6 (api:1/proto:86-101)
+GIT-hash: 833d830e0152d1e457fa7856e71e11248ccf3f70 build by phil@Build64R7, 2015-04-10 05:13:52
1: cs:Connected ro:Primary/Secondary ds:UpToDate/UpToDate C r-----
ns:1048508 nr:0 dw:0 dr:1049420 al:0 bm:0 lo:0 pe:0 ua:0 ap:0 ep:1 wo:f oos:0
----
Both sets of data are now *UpToDate*, and we can proceed to creating
and populating a filesystem for our WebSite resource's documents.
== Populate the DRBD Disk ==
On the node with the primary role (pcmk-1 in this example),
create a filesystem on the DRBD device:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# mkfs.xfs /dev/drbd1
meta-data=/dev/drbd1 isize=256 agcount=4, agsize=65532 blks
= sectsz=512 attr=2, projid32bit=1
= crc=0 finobt=0
data = bsize=4096 blocks=262127, imaxpct=25
= sunit=0 swidth=0 blks
naming =version 2 bsize=4096 ascii-ci=0 ftype=0
log =internal log bsize=4096 blocks=853, version=2
= sectsz=512 sunit=0 blks, lazy-count=1
realtime =none extsz=4096 blocks=0, rtextents=0
----
[NOTE]
====
In this example, we create an xfs filesystem with no special options.
In a production environment, you should choose a filesystem type and
options that are suitable for your application.
====
Mount the newly created filesystem, populate it with our web document,
give it the same SELinux policy as the web document root,
then unmount it (the cluster will handle mounting and unmounting it later):
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# mount /dev/drbd1 /mnt
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# cat <<-END >/mnt/index.html
My Test Site - DRBD
END
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# chcon -R --reference=/var/www/html /mnt
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# umount /dev/drbd1
----
== Configure the Cluster for the DRBD device ==
One handy feature `pcs` has is the ability to queue up several changes
into a file and commit those changes atomically. To do this, start by
populating the file with the current raw XML config from the CIB.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster cib drbd_cfg
----
Using the `pcs -f` option, make changes to the configuration saved
in the +drbd_cfg+ file. These changes will not be seen by the cluster until
the +drbd_cfg+ file is pushed into the live cluster's CIB later.
Here, we create a cluster resource for the DRBD device, and an additional _clone_
resource to allow the resource to run on both nodes at the same time.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f drbd_cfg resource create WebData ocf:linbit:drbd \
drbd_resource=wwwdata op monitor interval=60s
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f drbd_cfg resource master WebDataClone WebData \
master-max=1 master-node-max=1 clone-max=2 clone-node-max=1 \
notify=true
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f drbd_cfg resource show
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started
WebSite (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Started
Master/Slave Set: WebDataClone [WebData]
Stopped: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
----
After you are satisfied with all the changes, you can commit
them all at once by pushing the drbd_cfg file into the live CIB.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster cib-push drbd_cfg
CIB updated
----
[NOTE]
====
Early versions of `pcs` required `push cib` in place of `cib-push` above.
====
Let's see what the cluster did with the new configuration:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status
Cluster name: mycluster
-Last updated: Wed Dec 17 16:39:43 2014
-Last change: Wed Dec 17 16:39:30 2014
+Last updated: Fri Aug 14 09:29:41 2015
+Last change: Fri Aug 14 09:29:25 2015
Stack: corosync
-Current DC: pcmk-2 (2) - partition with quorum
-Version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+Current DC: pcmk-1 (1) - partition with quorum
+Version: 1.1.12-a14efad
2 Nodes configured
4 Resources configured
Online: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Full list of resources:
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-1
WebSite (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Started pcmk-1
Master/Slave Set: WebDataClone [WebData]
Masters: [ pcmk-1 ]
Slaves: [ pcmk-2 ]
PCSD Status:
pcmk-1: Online
pcmk-2: Online
Daemon Status:
corosync: active/disabled
pacemaker: active/disabled
pcsd: active/enabled
----
We can see that *WebDataClone* (our DRBD device) is running as master (DRBD's
primary role) on *pcmk-1* and slave (DRBD's secondary role) on *pcmk-2*.
[IMPORTANT]
====
The resource agent should load the DRBD module when needed if it's not already
loaded. If that does not happen, configure your operating system to load the
module at boot time. For &DISTRO; &DISTRO_VERSION;, you would run this on both
nodes:
----
# echo drbd >/etc/modules-load.d/drbd.conf
----
====
== Configure the Cluster for the Filesystem ==
Now that we have a working DRBD device, we need to mount its filesystem.
In addition to defining the filesystem, we also need to
tell the cluster where it can be located (only on the DRBD Primary)
and when it is allowed to start (after the Primary was promoted).
We are going to take a shortcut when creating the resource this time.
Instead of explicitly saying we want the *ocf:heartbeat:Filesystem* script, we
are only going to ask for *Filesystem*. We can do this because we know there is only
one resource script named *Filesystem* available to pacemaker, and that pcs is smart
enough to fill in the *ocf:heartbeat:* portion for us correctly in the configuration.
If there were multiple *Filesystem* scripts from different OCF providers, we would need
to specify the exact one we wanted.
Once again, we will queue our changes to a file and then push the
new configuration to the cluster as the final step.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster cib fs_cfg
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f fs_cfg resource create WebFS Filesystem \
device="/dev/drbd1" directory="/var/www/html" fstype="xfs"
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f fs_cfg constraint colocation add WebFS with WebDataClone INFINITY with-rsc-role=Master
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f fs_cfg constraint order promote WebDataClone then start WebFS
Adding WebDataClone WebFS (kind: Mandatory) (Options: first-action=promote then-action=start)
----
We also need to tell the cluster that Apache needs to run on the same
machine as the filesystem and that it must be active before Apache can
start.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f fs_cfg constraint colocation add WebSite with WebFS INFINITY
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f fs_cfg constraint order WebFS then WebSite
Adding WebFS WebSite (kind: Mandatory) (Options: first-action=start then-action=start)
----
Review the updated configuration.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f fs_cfg constraint
Location Constraints:
Ordering Constraints:
start ClusterIP then start WebSite (kind:Mandatory)
promote WebDataClone then start WebFS (kind:Mandatory)
start WebFS then start WebSite (kind:Mandatory)
Colocation Constraints:
WebSite with ClusterIP (score:INFINITY)
WebFS with WebDataClone (score:INFINITY) (with-rsc-role:Master)
WebSite with WebFS (score:INFINITY)
----
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f fs_cfg resource show
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started
WebSite (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Started
Master/Slave Set: WebDataClone [WebData]
Masters: [ pcmk-1 ]
Slaves: [ pcmk-2 ]
WebFS (ocf::heartbeat:Filesystem): Stopped
----
After reviewing the new configuration, upload it and watch the
cluster put it into effect.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster cib-push fs_cfg
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status
-Cluster name: mycluster
-Last updated: Wed Dec 17 17:02:45 2014
-Last change: Wed Dec 17 17:02:42 2014
+Last updated: Fri Aug 14 09:34:11 2015
+Last change: Fri Aug 14 09:34:09 2015
Stack: corosync
-Current DC: pcmk-2 (2) - partition with quorum
-Version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+Current DC: pcmk-1 (1) - partition with quorum
+Version: 1.1.12-a14efad
2 Nodes configured
5 Resources configured
Online: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Full list of resources:
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-1
WebSite (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Started pcmk-1
Master/Slave Set: WebDataClone [WebData]
Masters: [ pcmk-1 ]
Slaves: [ pcmk-2 ]
WebFS (ocf::heartbeat:Filesystem): Started pcmk-1
PCSD Status:
pcmk-1: Online
pcmk-2: Online
Daemon Status:
corosync: active/disabled
pacemaker: active/disabled
pcsd: active/enabled
----
== Test Cluster Failover ==
Previously, we used `pcs cluster stop pcmk-1` to stop all cluster
services on *pcmk-1*, failing over the cluster resources, but there is another
way to safely simulate node failure.
We can put the node into _standby mode_. Nodes in this state continue to
run corosync and pacemaker but are not allowed to run resources. Any resources
found active there will be moved elsewhere. This feature can be particularly
useful when performing system administration tasks such as updating packages
used by cluster resources.
Put the active node into standby mode, and observe the cluster move all
the resources to the other node. The node's status will
change to indicate that it can no longer host resources.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster standby pcmk-1
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status
Cluster name: mycluster
-Last updated: Wed Dec 17 17:14:05 2014
-Last change: Wed Dec 17 17:14:02 2014
+Last updated: Fri Aug 14 09:36:49 2015
+Last change: Fri Aug 14 09:36:43 2015
Stack: corosync
-Current DC: pcmk-2 (2) - partition with quorum
-Version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+Current DC: pcmk-1 (1) - partition with quorum
+Version: 1.1.12-a14efad
2 Nodes configured
5 Resources configured
Node pcmk-1 (1): standby
Online: [ pcmk-2 ]
Full list of resources:
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-2
WebSite (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Started pcmk-2
Master/Slave Set: WebDataClone [WebData]
Masters: [ pcmk-2 ]
Stopped: [ pcmk-1 ]
WebFS (ocf::heartbeat:Filesystem): Started pcmk-2
PCSD Status:
pcmk-1: Online
pcmk-2: Online
Daemon Status:
corosync: active/disabled
pacemaker: active/disabled
pcsd: active/enabled
----
Once we've done everything we needed to on pcmk-1 (in this case nothing,
we just wanted to see the resources move), we can allow the node to be a
full cluster member again.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster unstandby pcmk-1
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status
Cluster name: mycluster
-Last updated: Wed Dec 17 17:15:36 2014
-Last change: Wed Dec 17 17:15:33 2014
+Last updated: Fri Aug 14 09:38:02 2015
+Last change: Fri Aug 14 09:37:56 2015
Stack: corosync
-Current DC: pcmk-2 (2) - partition with quorum
-Version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+Current DC: pcmk-1 (1) - partition with quorum
+Version: 1.1.12-a14efad
2 Nodes configured
5 Resources configured
Online: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Full list of resources:
ClusterIP (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started pcmk-2
WebSite (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Started pcmk-2
Master/Slave Set: WebDataClone [WebData]
Masters: [ pcmk-2 ]
Slaves: [ pcmk-1 ]
WebFS (ocf::heartbeat:Filesystem): Started pcmk-2
PCSD Status:
pcmk-1: Online
pcmk-2: Online
Daemon Status:
corosync: active/disabled
pacemaker: active/disabled
pcsd: active/enabled
----
Notice that *pcmk-1* is back to the *Online* state, and that the cluster resources
stay where they are due to our resource stickiness settings configured earlier.
diff --git a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Stonith.txt b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Stonith.txt
index 43772c3633..744e734ef7 100644
--- a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Stonith.txt
+++ b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Stonith.txt
@@ -1,151 +1,151 @@
= Configure STONITH =
== What is STONITH? ==
STONITH (Shoot The Other Node In The Head aka. fencing) protects your data from
being corrupted by rogue nodes or unintended concurrent access.
Just because a node is unresponsive doesn't mean it has stopped
accessing your data. The only way to be 100% sure that your data is
safe, is to use STONITH to ensure that the node is truly
offline before allowing the data to be accessed from another node.
STONITH also has a role to play in the event that a clustered service
cannot be stopped. In this case, the cluster uses STONITH to force the
whole node offline, thereby making it safe to start the service
elsewhere.
== Choose a STONITH Device ==
It is crucial that your STONITH device can allow the cluster to
differentiate between a node failure and a network failure.
A common mistake people make when choosing a STONITH device is to use a remote
power switch (such as many on-board IPMI controllers) that shares power with
the node it controls. If the power fails in such a case, the cluster cannot be
sure whether the node is really offline, or active and suffering from a network
fault, so the cluster will stop all resources to avoid a possible split-brain
situation.
Likewise, any device that relies on the machine being active (such as
SSH-based "devices" sometimes used during testing) is inappropriate.
== Configure the Cluster for STONITH ==
. Install the STONITH agent(s). To see what packages are available, run `yum
search fence-`. Be sure to install the package(s) on all cluster nodes.
. Configure the STONITH device itself to be able to fence your nodes and accept
fencing requests. This includes any necessary configuration on the device and
on the nodes, and any firewall or SELinux changes needed. Test the
communication between the device and your nodes.
. Find the correct STONITH agent script: `pcs stonith list`
. Find the parameters associated with the device: +pcs stonith describe pass:[agent_name]+
. Create a local copy of the CIB: `pcs cluster cib stonith_cfg`
. Create the fencing resource: +pcs -f stonith_cfg stonith create pass:[stonith_id
stonith_device_type [stonith_device_options]]+
. Enable STONITH in the cluster: `pcs -f stonith_cfg property set stonith-enabled=true`
. If the device does not know how to fence nodes based on their uname,
you may also need to set the special *pcmk_host_map* parameter. See
`man stonithd` for details.
. If the device does not support the *list* command, you may also need
to set the special *pcmk_host_list* and/or *pcmk_host_check*
parameters. See `man stonithd` for details.
. If the device does not expect the victim to be specified with the
*port* parameter, you may also need to set the special
*pcmk_host_argument* parameter. See `man stonithd` for details.
. Commit the new configuration: `pcs cluster cib-push stonith_cfg`
. Once the STONITH resource is running, test it (you might want to stop
the cluster on that machine first): +stonith_admin --reboot pass:[nodename]+
== Example ==
For this example, assume we have a chassis containing four nodes
and an IPMI device active on 10.0.0.1. Following the steps above
would go something like this:
Step 1: Install the *fence-agents-ipmilan* package on both nodes.
Step 2: Configure the IP address, authentication credentials, etc. in the IPMI device itself.
Step 3: Choose the *fence_ipmilan* STONITH agent.
Step 4: Obtain the agent's possible parameters:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs stonith describe fence_ipmilan
Stonith options for: fence_ipmilan
ipport: TCP/UDP port to use for connection with device
inet6_only: Forces agent to use IPv6 addresses only
ipaddr (required): IP Address or Hostname
passwd_script: Script to retrieve password
method: Method to fence (onoff|cycle)
inet4_only: Forces agent to use IPv4 addresses only
passwd: Login password or passphrase
lanplus: Use Lanplus to improve security of connection
auth: IPMI Lan Auth type.
cipher: Ciphersuite to use (same as ipmitool -C parameter)
privlvl: Privilege level on IPMI device
action (required): Fencing Action
login: Login Name
verbose: Verbose mode
debug: Write debug information to given file
version: Display version information and exit
help: Display help and exit
power_wait: Wait X seconds after issuing ON/OFF
login_timeout: Wait X seconds for cmd prompt after login
power_timeout: Test X seconds for status change after ON/OFF
delay: Wait X seconds before fencing is started
ipmitool_path: Path to ipmitool binary
shell_timeout: Wait X seconds for cmd prompt after issuing command
retry_on: Count of attempts to retry power on
sudo: Use sudo (without password) when calling 3rd party sotfware.
stonith-timeout: How long to wait for the STONITH action (reboot, on, off) to complete per a stonith device.
priority: The priority of the stonith resource. Devices are tried in order of highest priority to lowest.
pcmk_host_map: A mapping of host names to ports numbers for devices that do not support host names.
pcmk_host_list: A list of machines controlled by this device (Optional unless pcmk_host_check=static-list).
pcmk_host_check: How to determine which machines are controlled by the device.
----
Step 5: `pcs cluster cib stonith_cfg`
Step 6: Here are example parameters for creating our STONITH resource:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f stonith_cfg stonith create ipmi-fencing fence_ipmilan \
pcmk_host_list="pcmk-1 pcmk-2" ipaddr=10.0.0.1 login=testuser \
passwd=acd123 op monitor interval=60s
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f stonith_cfg stonith
ipmi-fencing (stonith:fence_ipmilan): Stopped
----
Steps 7-10: Enable STONITH in the cluster:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f stonith_cfg property set stonith-enabled=true
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs -f stonith_cfg property
Cluster Properties:
cluster-infrastructure: corosync
cluster-name: mycluster
- dc-version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+ dc-version: 1.1.12-a14efad
have-watchdog: false
stonith-enabled: true
----
Step 11: `pcs cluster cib-push stonith_cfg`
Step 12: Test:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster stop pcmk-2
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# stonith_admin --reboot pcmk-2
----
After a successful test, login to any rebooted nodes, and start the cluster
(with `pcs cluster start`).
diff --git a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Tools.txt b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Tools.txt
index 1390384ee1..c7d73b8d18 100644
--- a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Tools.txt
+++ b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Tools.txt
@@ -1,119 +1,121 @@
= Pacemaker Tools =
== Simplify administration using a cluster shell ==
In the dark past, configuring Pacemaker required the administrator to
read and write XML. In true UNIX style, there were also a number of
different commands that specialized in different aspects of querying
and updating the cluster.
All of that has been greatly simplified with the creation of unified
command-line shells (and GUIs) that hide all the messy XML
scaffolding.
These shells take all the individual aspects required for managing and
configuring a cluster, and pack them into one simple-to-use command
line tool.
They even allow you to queue up several changes at once and commit
them atomically.
Two popular command-line shells are `pcs` and
`crmsh`. This edition of Clusters from Scratch is based on `pcs`.
[NOTE]
===========
The two shells share many concepts but the scope, layout and syntax
does differ, so make sure you read the version of this guide that
corresponds to the software installed on your system.
===========
[IMPORTANT]
===========
Since `pcs` has the ability to manage all aspects of the cluster (both
corosync and pacemaker), it requires a specific cluster stack to be in
use: corosync 2.0 or later with votequorum plus Pacemaker 1.1.8 or later.
===========
== Explore pcs ==
Start by taking some time to familiarize yourself with
what `pcs` can do.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs
Usage: pcs [-f file] [-h] [commands]...
Control and configure pacemaker and corosync.
Options:
-h, --help Display usage and exit
-f file Perform actions on file instead of active CIB
--debug Print all network traffic and external commands run
--version Print pcs version information
Commands:
cluster Configure cluster options and nodes
resource Manage cluster resources
stonith Configure fence devices
constraint Set resource constraints
property Set pacemaker properties
+ acl Set pacemaker access control lists
status View cluster status
- config Print full cluster configuration
+ config View and manage cluster configuration
----
As you can see, the different aspects of cluster management are separated
into categories: resource, cluster, stonith, property, constraint,
and status. To discover the functionality available in each of these
categories, one can issue the command +pcs pass:[category] help+. Below
is an example of all the options available under the status category.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status help
Usage: pcs status [commands]...
View current cluster and resource status
Commands:
- [status]
- View all information about the cluster and resources
+ [status] [--full]
+ View all information about the cluster and resources (--full provides
+ more details)
resources
View current status of cluster resources
groups
View currently configured groups and their resources
cluster
View current cluster status
corosync
View current membership information as seen by corosync
nodes [corosync|both|config]
View current status of nodes from pacemaker. If 'corosync' is
specified, print nodes currently configured in corosync, if 'both'
is specified, print nodes from both corosync & pacemaker. If 'config'
is specified, print nodes from corosync & pacemaker configuration.
pcsd ...
Show the current status of pcsd on the specified nodes
xml
View xml version of status (output from crm_mon -r -1 -X)
----
Additionally, if you are interested in the version and
supported cluster stack(s) available with your Pacemaker
installation, run:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pacemakerd --features
-Pacemaker 1.1.12 (Build: a9c8177)
+Pacemaker 1.1.12 (Build: a14efad)
Supporting v3.0.9: generated-manpages agent-manpages ascii-docs publican-docs ncurses libqb-logging libqb-ipc upstart systemd nagios corosync-native atomic-attrd acls
----
[NOTE]
======
If the SNMP and/or email options are not listed, then Pacemaker was not
built to support them. This may be by the choice of your distribution, or
the required libraries may not have been available. Please contact
whoever supplied you with the packages for more details.
======
diff --git a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Verification.txt b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Verification.txt
index 7a1505926b..217a5181e3 100644
--- a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Verification.txt
+++ b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Ch-Verification.txt
@@ -1,151 +1,153 @@
= Start and Verify Cluster =
== Start the Cluster ==
Now that corosync is configured, it is time to start the cluster.
The command below will start corosync and pacemaker on both nodes
in the cluster. If you are issuing the start command from a different
node than the one you ran the `pcs cluster auth` command on earlier, you
must authenticate on the current node you are logged into before you will
be allowed to start the cluster.
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs cluster start --all
pcmk-1: Starting Cluster...
pcmk-2: Starting Cluster...
----
[NOTE]
======
An alternative to using the `pcs cluster start --all` command
is to issue either of the below command sequences on each node in the
cluster separately:
----
# pcs cluster start
Starting Cluster...
----
or
----
# systemctl start corosync.service
# systemctl start pacemaker.service
----
======
[IMPORTANT]
====
In this example, we are not enabling the corosync and pacemaker services
to start at boot. If a cluster node fails or is rebooted, you will need to run
+pcs cluster start pass:[nodename]+ (or `--all`) to start the cluster on it.
While you could enable the services to start at boot, requiring a manual
start of cluster services gives you the opportunity to do a post-mortem investigation
of a node failure before returning it to the cluster.
====
== Verify Corosync Installation ==
First, use `corosync-cfgtool` to check whether cluster communication is happy:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# corosync-cfgtool -s
Printing ring status.
Local node ID 1
RING ID 0
id = 192.168.122.101
status = ring 0 active with no faults
----
We can see here that everything appears normal with our fixed IP
address (not a 127.0.0.x loopback address) listed as the *id*, and *no
faults* for the status.
If you see something different, you might want to start by checking
the node's network, firewall and selinux configurations.
Next, check the membership and quorum APIs:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# corosync-cmapctl | grep members
+runtime.totem.pg.mrp.srp.members.1.config_version (u64) = 0
runtime.totem.pg.mrp.srp.members.1.ip (str) = r(0) ip(192.168.122.101)
runtime.totem.pg.mrp.srp.members.1.join_count (u32) = 1
runtime.totem.pg.mrp.srp.members.1.status (str) = joined
+runtime.totem.pg.mrp.srp.members.2.config_version (u64) = 0
runtime.totem.pg.mrp.srp.members.2.ip (str) = r(0) ip(192.168.122.102)
-runtime.totem.pg.mrp.srp.members.2.join_count (u32) = 1
+runtime.totem.pg.mrp.srp.members.2.join_count (u32) = 2
runtime.totem.pg.mrp.srp.members.2.status (str) = joined
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status corosync
Membership information
--------------------------
Nodeid Votes Name
1 1 pcmk-1 (local)
2 1 pcmk-2
----
You should see both nodes have joined the cluster.
== Verify Pacemaker Installation ==
Now that we have confirmed that Corosync is functional, we can check
the rest of the stack. Pacemaker has already been started, so verify
the necessary processes are running:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# ps axf
PID TTY STAT TIME COMMAND
2 ? S 0:00 [kthreadd]
...lots of processes...
-28019 ? Ssl 0:03 /usr/sbin/corosync
-28047 ? Ss 0:00 /usr/sbin/pacemakerd -f
-28048 ? Ss 0:00 \_ /usr/libexec/pacemaker/cib
-28049 ? Ss 0:00 \_ /usr/libexec/pacemaker/stonithd
-28050 ? Ss 0:00 \_ /usr/lib64/heartbeat/lrmd
-28051 ? Ss 0:00 \_ /usr/libexec/pacemaker/attrd
-28052 ? Ss 0:00 \_ /usr/libexec/pacemaker/pengine
-28053 ? Ss 0:00 \_ /usr/libexec/pacemaker/crmd
+ 1362 ? Ssl 0:35 corosync
+ 1379 ? Ss 0:00 /usr/sbin/pacemakerd -f
+ 1380 ? Ss 0:00 \_ /usr/libexec/pacemaker/cib
+ 1381 ? Ss 0:00 \_ /usr/libexec/pacemaker/stonithd
+ 1382 ? Ss 0:00 \_ /usr/libexec/pacemaker/lrmd
+ 1383 ? Ss 0:00 \_ /usr/libexec/pacemaker/attrd
+ 1384 ? Ss 0:00 \_ /usr/libexec/pacemaker/pengine
+ 1385 ? Ss 0:00 \_ /usr/libexec/pacemaker/crmd
----
If that looks OK, check the `pcs status` output:
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# pcs status
Cluster name: mycluster
WARNING: no stonith devices and stonith-enabled is not false
Last updated: Tue Dec 16 16:15:29 2014
Last change: Tue Dec 16 15:49:47 2014
Stack: corosync
Current DC: pcmk-2 (2) - partition with quorum
-Version: 1.1.12-a9c8177
+Version: 1.1.12-a14efad
2 Nodes configured
0 Resources configured
Online: [ pcmk-1 pcmk-2 ]
Full list of resources:
PCSD Status:
pcmk-1: Online
pcmk-2: Online
Daemon Status:
corosync: active/disabled
pacemaker: active/disabled
pcsd: active/enabled
----
Finally, ensure there are no startup errors (aside from messages relating
to not having STONITH configured, which are OK at this point):
----
[root@pcmk-1 ~]# journalctl | grep -i error
----
[NOTE]
======
Other operating systems may report startup errors in other locations,
for example +/var/log/messages+.
======
Repeat these checks on the other node. The results should be the same.
diff --git a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Clusters_from_Scratch.ent b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Clusters_from_Scratch.ent
index 5a675ebd55..0d63dac195 100644
--- a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Clusters_from_Scratch.ent
+++ b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Clusters_from_Scratch.ent
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
-
-
+
+
diff --git a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Revision_History.xml b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Revision_History.xml
index 03d367ea73..cb65b05748 100644
--- a/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Revision_History.xml
+++ b/doc/Clusters_from_Scratch/en-US/Revision_History.xml
@@ -1,68 +1,74 @@
%BOOK_ENTITIES;
]>
Revision History
1-0
Mon May 17 2010
AndrewBeekhofandrew@beekhof.net
Import from Pages.app
2-0
Wed Sep 22 2010
RaoulScarazzinirasca@miamammausalinux.org
Italian translation
3-0
Wed Feb 9 2011
AndrewBeekhofandrew@beekhof.net
Updated for Fedora 13
4-0
Wed Oct 5 2011
AndrewBeekhofandrew@beekhof.net
Update the GFS2 section to use CMAN
5-0
Fri Feb 10 2012
AndrewBeekhofandrew@beekhof.net
Generate docbook content from asciidoc sources
6-0
Tues July 3 2012
AndrewBeekhofandrew@beekhof.net
Updated for Fedora 17
7-0
Fri Sept 14 2012
DavidVosseldvossel@redhat.com
Updated for pcs
8-0
Mon Jan 05 2015
KenGaillotkgaillot@redhat.com
Updated for Fedora 21
8-1
Thu Jan 08 2015
KenGaillotkgaillot@redhat.com
Minor corrections, plus use include file for intro
+
+ 9-0
+ Fri Aug 14 2015
+ KenGaillotkgaillot@redhat.com
+ Update for CentOS 7.1 and leaving firewalld/SELinux enabled
+