diff --git a/cts/cli/regression.daemons.exp b/cts/cli/regression.daemons.exp index 5b1d67f22b..107bb906f0 100644 --- a/cts/cli/regression.daemons.exp +++ b/cts/cli/regression.daemons.exp @@ -1,438 +1,438 @@ =#=#=#= Begin test: Get CIB manager metadata =#=#=#= 1.1 Cluster options used by Pacemaker's Cluster Information Base manager Cluster Information Base manager options Enable Access Control Lists (ACLs) for the CIB Enable Access Control Lists (ACLs) for the CIB Raise this if log has "Evicting client" messages for cluster daemon PIDs (a good value is the number of resources in the cluster multiplied by the number of nodes). Maximum IPC message backlog before disconnecting a cluster daemon =#=#=#= End test: Get CIB manager metadata - OK (0) =#=#=#= * Passed: pacemaker-based - Get CIB manager metadata =#=#=#= Begin test: Get controller metadata =#=#=#= 1.1 Cluster options used by Pacemaker's controller Pacemaker controller options - Includes a hash which identifies the exact changeset the code was built from. Used for diagnostic purposes. + Includes a hash which identifies the exact revision the code was built from. Used for diagnostic purposes. Pacemaker version on cluster node elected Designated Controller (DC) Used for informational and diagnostic purposes. - The messaging stack on which Pacemaker is currently running + The messaging layer on which Pacemaker is currently running This optional value is mostly for users' convenience as desired in administration, but may also be used in Pacemaker configuration rules via the #cluster-name node attribute, and by higher-level tools and resource agents. An arbitrary name for the cluster The optimal value will depend on the speed and load of your network and the type of switches used. How long to wait for a response from other nodes during start-up - Pacemaker is primarily event-driven, and looks ahead to know when to recheck cluster state for failure timeouts and most time-based rules. However, it will also recheck the cluster after this amount of inactivity, to evaluate rules with date specifications and serve as a fail-safe for certain types of scheduler bugs. Allowed values: Zero disables polling, while positive values are an interval in seconds (unless other units are specified, for example "5min"). + Pacemaker is primarily event-driven, and looks ahead to know when to recheck cluster state for failure-timeout settings and most time-based rules. However, it will also recheck the cluster after this amount of inactivity, to evaluate rules with date specifications and serve as a fail-safe for certain types of scheduler bugs. Allowed values: Zero disables polling, while positive values are an interval in seconds (unless other units are specified, for example "5min"). Polling interval to recheck cluster state and evaluate rules with date specifications - A cluster node may receive notification of its own fencing if fencing is misconfigured, or if fabric fencing is in use that doesn't cut cluster communication. Use "stop" to attempt to immediately stop Pacemaker and stay stopped, or "panic" to attempt to immediately reboot the local node, falling back to stop on failure. Allowed values: stop, panic. + A cluster node may receive notification of a "succeeded" fencing that targeted it if fencing is misconfigured, or if fabric fencing is in use that doesn't cut cluster communication. Use "stop" to attempt to immediately stop Pacemaker and stay stopped, or "panic" to attempt to immediately reboot the local node, falling back to stop on failure. Allowed values: stop, panic. How a cluster node should react if notified of its own fencing Declare an election failed if it is not decided within this much time. If you need to adjust this value, it probably indicates the presence of a bug. *** Advanced Use Only *** Exit immediately if shutdown does not complete within this much time. If you need to adjust this value, it probably indicates the presence of a bug. *** Advanced Use Only *** If you need to adjust this value, it probably indicates the presence of a bug. *** Advanced Use Only *** If you need to adjust this value, it probably indicates the presence of a bug. *** Advanced Use Only *** Delay cluster recovery for this much time to allow for additional events to occur. Useful if your configuration is sensitive to the order in which ping updates arrive. *** Advanced Use Only *** Enabling this option will slow down cluster recovery under all conditions - If this is set to a positive value, lost nodes are assumed to self-fence using watchdog-based SBD within this much time. This does not require a fencing resource to be explicitly configured, though a fence_watchdog resource can be configured, to limit use to specific nodes. If this is set to 0 (the default), the cluster will never assume watchdog-based self-fencing. If this is set to a negative value, the cluster will use twice the local value of the `SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT` environment variable if that is positive, or otherwise treat this as 0. WARNING: When used, this timeout must be larger than `SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT` on all nodes that use watchdog-based SBD, and Pacemaker will refuse to start on any of those nodes where this is not true for the local value or SBD is not active. When this is set to a negative value, `SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT` must be set to the same value on all nodes that use SBD, otherwise data corruption or loss could occur. + If this is set to a positive value, lost nodes are assumed to achieve self-fencing using watchdog-based SBD within this much time. This does not require a fencing resource to be explicitly configured, though a fence_watchdog resource can be configured, to limit use to specific nodes. If this is set to 0 (the default), the cluster will never assume watchdog-based self-fencing. If this is set to a negative value, the cluster will use twice the local value of the `SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT` environment variable if that is positive, or otherwise treat this as 0. WARNING: When used, this timeout must be larger than `SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT` on all nodes that use watchdog-based SBD, and Pacemaker will refuse to start on any of those nodes where this is not true for the local value or SBD is not active. When this is set to a negative value, `SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT` must be set to the same value on all nodes that use SBD, otherwise data corruption or loss could occur. How long before nodes can be assumed to be safely down when watchdog-based self-fencing via SBD is in use How many times fencing can fail before it will no longer be immediately re-attempted on a target How many times fencing can fail before it will no longer be immediately re-attempted on a target The cluster will slow down its recovery process when the amount of system resources used (currently CPU) approaches this limit Maximum amount of system load that should be used by cluster nodes Maximum number of jobs that can be scheduled per node (defaults to 2x cores) Maximum number of jobs that can be scheduled per node (defaults to 2x cores) =#=#=#= End test: Get controller metadata - OK (0) =#=#=#= * Passed: pacemaker-controld - Get controller metadata =#=#=#= Begin test: Get fencer metadata =#=#=#= 1.1 Instance attributes available for all "stonith"-class resources and used by Pacemaker's fence daemon, formerly known as stonithd Instance attributes available for all "stonith"-class resources Some devices do not support the standard 'port' parameter or may provide additional ones. Use this to specify an alternate, device-specific, parameter that should indicate the machine to be fenced. A value of "none" can be used to tell the cluster not to supply any additional parameters. *** Advanced Use Only *** An alternate parameter to supply instead of 'port' For example, "node1:1;node2:2,3" would tell the cluster to use port 1 for node1 and ports 2 and 3 for node2. A mapping of node names to port numbers for devices that do not support node names. For example, "node1,node2,node3". A list of nodes that can be targeted by this device (optional unless pcmk_host_list="static-list") Use "dynamic-list" to query the device via the 'list' command; "static-list" to check the pcmk_host_list attribute; "status" to query the device via the 'status' command; or "none" to assume every device can fence every node. Allowed values: dynamic-list, static-list, status, none. How to determine which nodes can be targeted by the device Enable a delay of no more than the time specified before executing fencing actions. Pacemaker derives the overall delay by taking the value of pcmk_delay_base and adding a random delay value such that the sum is kept below this maximum. Enable a base delay for fencing actions and specify base delay value. This enables a static delay for fencing actions, which can help avoid "death matches" where two nodes try to fence each other at the same time. If pcmk_delay_max is also used, a random delay will be added such that the total delay is kept below that value. This can be set to a single time value to apply to any node targeted by this device (useful if a separate device is configured for each target), or to a node map (for example, "node1:1s;node2:5") to set a different value for each target. Enable a base delay for fencing actions and specify base delay value. Cluster property concurrent-fencing="true" needs to be configured first. Then use this to specify the maximum number of actions can be performed in parallel on this device. A value of -1 means an unlimited number of actions can be performed in parallel. The maximum number of actions can be performed in parallel on this device Some devices do not support the standard commands or may provide additional ones. Use this to specify an alternate, device-specific, command that implements the 'reboot' action. *** Advanced Use Only *** An alternate command to run instead of 'reboot' Some devices need much more/less time to complete than normal. Use this to specify an alternate, device-specific, timeout for 'reboot' actions. *** Advanced Use Only *** Specify an alternate timeout to use for 'reboot' actions instead of stonith-timeout Some devices do not support multiple connections. Operations may "fail" if the device is busy with another task. In that case, Pacemaker will automatically retry the operation if there is time remaining. Use this option to alter the number of times Pacemaker tries a 'reboot' action before giving up. *** Advanced Use Only *** The maximum number of times to try the 'reboot' command within the timeout period Some devices do not support the standard commands or may provide additional ones. Use this to specify an alternate, device-specific, command that implements the 'off' action. *** Advanced Use Only *** An alternate command to run instead of 'off' Some devices need much more/less time to complete than normal. Use this to specify an alternate, device-specific, timeout for 'off' actions. *** Advanced Use Only *** Specify an alternate timeout to use for 'off' actions instead of stonith-timeout Some devices do not support multiple connections. Operations may "fail" if the device is busy with another task. In that case, Pacemaker will automatically retry the operation if there is time remaining. Use this option to alter the number of times Pacemaker tries a 'off' action before giving up. *** Advanced Use Only *** The maximum number of times to try the 'off' command within the timeout period Some devices do not support the standard commands or may provide additional ones. Use this to specify an alternate, device-specific, command that implements the 'on' action. *** Advanced Use Only *** An alternate command to run instead of 'on' Some devices need much more/less time to complete than normal. Use this to specify an alternate, device-specific, timeout for 'on' actions. *** Advanced Use Only *** Specify an alternate timeout to use for 'on' actions instead of stonith-timeout Some devices do not support multiple connections. Operations may "fail" if the device is busy with another task. In that case, Pacemaker will automatically retry the operation if there is time remaining. Use this option to alter the number of times Pacemaker tries a 'on' action before giving up. *** Advanced Use Only *** The maximum number of times to try the 'on' command within the timeout period Some devices do not support the standard commands or may provide additional ones. Use this to specify an alternate, device-specific, command that implements the 'list' action. *** Advanced Use Only *** An alternate command to run instead of 'list' Some devices need much more/less time to complete than normal. Use this to specify an alternate, device-specific, timeout for 'list' actions. *** Advanced Use Only *** Specify an alternate timeout to use for 'list' actions instead of stonith-timeout Some devices do not support multiple connections. Operations may "fail" if the device is busy with another task. In that case, Pacemaker will automatically retry the operation if there is time remaining. Use this option to alter the number of times Pacemaker tries a 'list' action before giving up. *** Advanced Use Only *** The maximum number of times to try the 'list' command within the timeout period Some devices do not support the standard commands or may provide additional ones. Use this to specify an alternate, device-specific, command that implements the 'monitor' action. *** Advanced Use Only *** An alternate command to run instead of 'monitor' Some devices need much more/less time to complete than normal. Use this to specify an alternate, device-specific, timeout for 'monitor' actions. *** Advanced Use Only *** Specify an alternate timeout to use for 'monitor' actions instead of stonith-timeout Some devices do not support multiple connections. Operations may "fail" if the device is busy with another task. In that case, Pacemaker will automatically retry the operation if there is time remaining. Use this option to alter the number of times Pacemaker tries a 'monitor' action before giving up. *** Advanced Use Only *** The maximum number of times to try the 'monitor' command within the timeout period Some devices do not support the standard commands or may provide additional ones. Use this to specify an alternate, device-specific, command that implements the 'status' action. *** Advanced Use Only *** An alternate command to run instead of 'status' Some devices need much more/less time to complete than normal. Use this to specify an alternate, device-specific, timeout for 'status' actions. *** Advanced Use Only *** Specify an alternate timeout to use for 'status' actions instead of stonith-timeout Some devices do not support multiple connections. Operations may "fail" if the device is busy with another task. In that case, Pacemaker will automatically retry the operation if there is time remaining. Use this option to alter the number of times Pacemaker tries a 'status' action before giving up. *** Advanced Use Only *** The maximum number of times to try the 'status' command within the timeout period =#=#=#= End test: Get fencer metadata - OK (0) =#=#=#= * Passed: pacemaker-fenced - Get fencer metadata =#=#=#= Begin test: Get scheduler metadata =#=#=#= 1.1 Cluster options used by Pacemaker's scheduler Pacemaker scheduler options What to do when the cluster does not have quorum. Allowed values: stop, freeze, ignore, demote, suicide. What to do when the cluster does not have quorum When true, resources active on a node when it is cleanly shut down are kept "locked" to that node (not allowed to run elsewhere) until they start again on that node after it rejoins (or for at most shutdown-lock-limit, if set). Stonith resources and Pacemaker Remote connections are never locked. Clone and bundle instances and the promoted role of promotable clones are currently never locked, though support could be added in a future release. Whether to lock resources to a cleanly shut down node If shutdown-lock is true and this is set to a nonzero time duration, shutdown locks will expire after this much time has passed since the shutdown was initiated, even if the node has not rejoined. Do not lock resources to a cleanly shut down node longer than this Whether resources can run on any node by default Whether resources can run on any node by default Whether the cluster should refrain from monitoring, starting, and stopping resources Whether the cluster should refrain from monitoring, starting, and stopping resources When true, the cluster will immediately ban a resource from a node if it fails to start there. When false, the cluster will instead check the resource's fail count against its migration-threshold. Whether a start failure should prevent a resource from being recovered on the same node Whether the cluster should check for active resources during start-up Whether the cluster should check for active resources during start-up If false, unresponsive nodes are immediately assumed to be harmless, and resources that were active on them may be recovered elsewhere. This can result in a "split-brain" situation, potentially leading to data loss and/or service unavailability. *** Advanced Use Only *** Whether nodes may be fenced as part of recovery Action to send to fence device when a node needs to be fenced ("poweroff" is a deprecated alias for "off"). Allowed values: reboot, off, poweroff. Action to send to fence device when a node needs to be fenced ("poweroff" is a deprecated alias for "off") How long to wait for on, off, and reboot fence actions to complete by default How long to wait for on, off, and reboot fence actions to complete by default This is set automatically by the cluster according to whether SBD is detected to be in use. User-configured values are ignored. The value `true` is meaningful if diskless SBD is used and `stonith-watchdog-timeout` is nonzero. In that case, if fencing is required, watchdog-based self-fencing will be performed via SBD without requiring a fencing resource explicitly configured. Whether watchdog integration is enabled Allow performing fencing operations in parallel Allow performing fencing operations in parallel Setting this to false may lead to a "split-brain" situation, potentially leading to data loss and/or service unavailability. *** Advanced Use Only *** Whether to fence unseen nodes at start-up Apply specified delay for the fencings that are targeting the lost nodes with the highest total resource priority in case we don't have the majority of the nodes in our cluster partition, so that the more significant nodes potentially win any fencing match, which is especially meaningful under split-brain of 2-node cluster. A promoted resource instance takes the base priority + 1 on calculation if the base priority is not 0. Any static/random delays that are introduced by `pcmk_delay_base/max` configured for the corresponding fencing resources will be added to this delay. This delay should be significantly greater than, safely twice, the maximum `pcmk_delay_base/max`. By default, priority fencing delay is disabled. Apply fencing delay targeting the lost nodes with the highest total resource priority Fence nodes that do not join the controller process group within this much time after joining the cluster, to allow the cluster to continue managing resources. A value of 0 means never fence pending nodes. Setting the value to 2h means fence nodes after 2 hours. How long to wait for a node that has joined the cluster to join the controller process group The node elected Designated Controller (DC) will consider an action failed if it does not get a response from the node executing the action within this time (after considering the action's own timeout). The "correct" value will depend on the speed and load of your network and cluster nodes. Maximum time for node-to-node communication The "correct" value will depend on the speed and load of your network and cluster nodes. If set to 0, the cluster will impose a dynamically calculated limit when any node has a high load. Maximum number of jobs that the cluster may execute in parallel across all nodes The number of live migration actions that the cluster is allowed to execute in parallel on a node (-1 means no limit) The number of live migration actions that the cluster is allowed to execute in parallel on a node (-1 means no limit) Whether the cluster should stop all active resources Whether the cluster should stop all active resources Whether to stop resources that were removed from the configuration Whether to stop resources that were removed from the configuration Whether to cancel recurring actions removed from the configuration Whether to cancel recurring actions removed from the configuration Values other than default are poorly tested and potentially dangerous. This option will be removed in a future release. *** Deprecated *** Whether to remove stopped resources from the executor Zero to disable, -1 to store unlimited. The number of scheduler inputs resulting in errors to save Zero to disable, -1 to store unlimited. The number of scheduler inputs resulting in warnings to save Zero to disable, -1 to store unlimited. The number of scheduler inputs without errors or warnings to save Requires external entities to create node attributes (named with the prefix "#health") with values "red", "yellow", or "green". Allowed values: none, migrate-on-red, only-green, progressive, custom. How cluster should react to node health attributes Only used when "node-health-strategy" is set to "progressive". Base health score assigned to a node Only used when "node-health-strategy" is set to "custom" or "progressive". The score to use for a node health attribute whose value is "green" Only used when "node-health-strategy" is set to "custom" or "progressive". The score to use for a node health attribute whose value is "yellow" Only used when "node-health-strategy" is set to "custom" or "progressive". The score to use for a node health attribute whose value is "red" How the cluster should allocate resources to nodes. Allowed values: default, utilization, minimal, balanced. How the cluster should allocate resources to nodes =#=#=#= End test: Get scheduler metadata - OK (0) =#=#=#= * Passed: pacemaker-schedulerd - Get scheduler metadata diff --git a/doc/sphinx/Pacemaker_Explained/cluster-options.rst b/doc/sphinx/Pacemaker_Explained/cluster-options.rst index aa456b3686..042ed0bafe 100644 --- a/doc/sphinx/Pacemaker_Explained/cluster-options.rst +++ b/doc/sphinx/Pacemaker_Explained/cluster-options.rst @@ -1,832 +1,839 @@ Cluster-Wide Configuration -------------------------- .. index:: pair: XML element; cib pair: XML element; configuration Configuration Layout #################### The cluster is defined by the Cluster Information Base (CIB), which uses XML notation. The simplest CIB, an empty one, looks like this: .. topic:: An empty configuration .. code-block:: xml The empty configuration above contains the major sections that make up a CIB: * ``cib``: The entire CIB is enclosed with a ``cib`` element. Certain fundamental settings are defined as attributes of this element. * ``configuration``: This section -- the primary focus of this document -- contains traditional configuration information such as what resources the cluster serves and the relationships among them. * ``crm_config``: cluster-wide configuration options * ``nodes``: the machines that host the cluster * ``resources``: the services run by the cluster * ``constraints``: indications of how resources should be placed * ``status``: This section contains the history of each resource on each node. Based on this data, the cluster can construct the complete current state of the cluster. The authoritative source for this section is the local executor (pacemaker-execd process) on each cluster node, and the cluster will occasionally repopulate the entire section. For this reason, it is never written to disk, and administrators are advised against modifying it in any way. In this document, configuration settings will be described as properties or options based on how they are defined in the CIB: * Properties are XML attributes of an XML element. * Options are name-value pairs expressed as ``nvpair`` child elements of an XML element. Normally, you will use command-line tools that abstract the XML, so the distinction will be unimportant; both properties and options are cluster settings you can tweak. CIB Properties ############## Certain settings are defined by CIB properties (that is, attributes of the ``cib`` tag) rather than with the rest of the cluster configuration in the ``configuration`` section. The reason is simply a matter of parsing. These options are used by the configuration database which is, by design, mostly ignorant of the content it holds. So the decision was made to place them in an easy-to-find location. .. list-table:: **CIB Properties** :class: longtable :widths: 2 2 2 5 :header-rows: 1 * - Name - Type - Default - Description * - .. _admin_epoch: .. index:: pair: admin_epoch; cib admin_epoch - :ref:`nonnegative integer ` - 0 - When a node joins the cluster, the cluster asks the node with the highest (``admin_epoch``, ``epoch``, ``num_updates``) tuple to replace the configuration on all the nodes -- which makes setting them correctly very important. ``admin_epoch`` is never modified by the cluster; you can use this to make the configurations on any inactive nodes obsolete. * - .. _epoch: .. index:: pair: epoch; cib epoch - :ref:`nonnegative integer ` - 0 - The cluster increments this every time the CIB's configuration section is updated. * - .. _num_updates: .. index:: pair: num_updates; cib num_updates - :ref:`nonnegative integer ` - 0 - The cluster increments this every time the CIB's configuration or status sections are updated, and resets it to 0 when epoch changes. * - .. _validate_with: .. index:: pair: validate-with; cib validate-with - :ref:`enumeration ` - - Determines the type of XML validation that will be done on the configuration. Allowed values are ``none`` (in which case the cluster will not require that updates conform to expected syntax) and the base names of schema files installed on the local machine (for example, "pacemaker-3.9") * - .. _remote_tls_port: .. index:: pair: remote-tls-port; cib remote-tls-port - :ref:`port ` - - If set, the CIB manager will listen for anonymously encrypted remote connections on this port, to allow CIB administration from hosts not in the cluster. No key is used, so this should be used only on a protected network where man-in-the-middle attacks can be avoided. * - .. _remote_clear_port: .. index:: pair: remote-clear-port; cib remote-clear-port - :ref:`port ` - - If set to a TCP port number, the CIB manager will listen for remote connections on this port, to allow for CIB administration from hosts not in the cluster. No encryption is used, so this should be used only on a protected network. * - .. _cib_last_written: .. index:: pair: cib-last-written; cib cib-last-written - :ref:`date/time ` - - Indicates when the configuration was last written to disk. Maintained by the cluster; for informational purposes only. * - .. _have_quorum: .. index:: pair: have-quorum; cib have-quorum - :ref:`boolean ` - - Indicates whether the cluster has quorum. If false, the cluster's response is determined by ``no-quorum-policy`` (see below). Maintained by the cluster. * - .. _dc_uuid: .. index:: pair: dc-uuid; cib dc-uuid - :ref:`text ` - - Node ID of the cluster's current designated controller (DC). Used and maintained by the cluster. * - .. _execution_date: .. index:: pair: execution-date; cib execution-date - :ref:`epoch time ` - - Time to use when evaluating rules. .. _cluster_options: Cluster Options ############### Cluster options, as you might expect, control how the cluster behaves when confronted with various situations. They are grouped into sets within the ``crm_config`` section. In advanced configurations, there may be more than one set. (This will be described later in the chapter on :ref:`rules` where we will show how to have the cluster use different sets of options during working hours than during weekends.) For now, we will describe the simple case where each option is present at most once. You can obtain an up-to-date list of cluster options, including their default values, by running the ``man pacemaker-schedulerd`` and ``man pacemaker-controld`` commands. .. list-table:: **Cluster Options** :class: longtable :widths: 2 2 2 5 :header-rows: 1 * - Name - Type - Default - Description * - .. _cluster_name: .. index:: pair: cluster option; cluster-name cluster-name - :ref:`text ` - - An (optional) name for the cluster as a whole. This is mostly for users' convenience for use as desired in administration, but can be used in the Pacemaker configuration in :ref:`rules` (as the ``#cluster-name`` :ref:`node attribute `). It may also be used by higher-level tools when displaying cluster information, and by certain resource agents (for example, the ``ocf:heartbeat:GFS2`` agent stores the cluster name in filesystem meta-data). * - .. _dc_version: .. index:: pair: cluster option; dc-version dc-version - :ref:`version ` - *detected* - Version of Pacemaker on the cluster's designated controller (DC). Maintained by the cluster, and intended for diagnostic purposes. * - .. _cluster_infrastructure: .. index:: pair: cluster option; cluster-infrastructure cluster-infrastructure - :ref:`text ` - *detected* - The messaging layer with which Pacemaker is currently running. Maintained by the cluster, and intended for informational and diagnostic purposes. * - .. _no_quorum_policy: .. index:: pair: cluster option; no-quorum-policy no-quorum-policy - :ref:`enumeration ` - stop - What to do when the cluster does not have quorum. Allowed values: * ``ignore:`` continue all resource management * ``freeze:`` continue resource management, but don't recover resources from nodes not in the affected partition * ``stop:`` stop all resources in the affected cluster partition * ``demote:`` demote promotable resources and stop all other resources in the affected cluster partition *(since 2.0.5)* * ``suicide:`` fence all nodes in the affected cluster partition * - .. _batch_limit: .. index:: pair: cluster option; batch-limit batch-limit - :ref:`integer ` - 0 - The maximum number of actions that the cluster may execute in parallel across all nodes. The ideal value will depend on the speed and load of your network and cluster nodes. If zero, the cluster will impose a dynamically calculated limit only when any node has high load. If -1, the cluster will not impose any limit. * - .. _migration_limit: .. index:: pair: cluster option; migration-limit migration-limit - :ref:`integer ` - -1 - The number of :ref:`live migration ` actions that the cluster is allowed to execute in parallel on a node. A value of -1 means unlimited. * - .. _load_threshold: .. index:: pair: cluster option; load-threshold load-threshold - :ref:`percentage ` - 80% - Maximum amount of system load that should be used by cluster nodes. The cluster will slow down its recovery process when the amount of system resources used (currently CPU) approaches this limit. * - .. _node_action_limit: .. index:: pair: cluster option; node-action-limit node-action-limit - :ref:`integer ` - 0 - Maximum number of jobs that can be scheduled per node. If nonpositive or invalid, double the number of cores is used as the maximum number of jobs per node. :ref:`PCMK_node_action_limit ` overrides this option on a per-node basis. * - .. _symmetric_cluster: .. index:: pair: cluster option; symmetric-cluster symmetric-cluster - :ref:`boolean ` - true - If true, resources can run on any node by default. If false, a resource is allowed to run on a node only if a :ref:`location constraint ` enables it. * - .. _stop_all_resources: .. index:: pair: cluster option; stop-all-resources stop-all-resources - :ref:`boolean ` - false - Whether all resources should be disallowed from running (can be useful during maintenance or troubleshooting) * - .. _stop_orphan_resources: .. index:: pair: cluster option; stop-orphan-resources stop-orphan-resources - :ref:`boolean ` - true - Whether resources that have been deleted from the configuration should be stopped. This value takes precedence over :ref:`is-managed ` (that is, even unmanaged resources will be stopped when orphaned if this value is ``true``). * - .. _stop_orphan_actions: .. index:: pair: cluster option; stop-orphan-actions stop-orphan-actions - :ref:`boolean ` - true - Whether recurring :ref:`operations ` that have been deleted from the configuration should be cancelled * - .. _start_failure_is_fatal: .. index:: pair: cluster option; start-failure-is-fatal start-failure-is-fatal - :ref:`boolean ` - true - Whether a failure to start a resource on a particular node prevents further start attempts on that node. If ``false``, the cluster will decide whether the node is still eligible based on the resource's current failure count and ``migration-threshold``. * - .. _enable_startup_probes: .. index:: pair: cluster option; enable-startup-probes enable-startup-probes - :ref:`boolean ` - true - Whether the cluster should check the pre-existing state of resources when the cluster starts * - .. _maintenance_mode: .. index:: pair: cluster option; maintenance-mode maintenance-mode - :ref:`boolean ` - false - If true, the cluster will not start or stop any resource in the cluster, and any recurring operations (expect those specifying ``role`` as ``Stopped``) will be paused. If true, this overrides the :ref:`maintenance ` node attribute, :ref:`is-managed ` and :ref:`maintenance ` resource meta-attributes, and :ref:`enabled ` operation meta-attribute. * - .. _stonith_enabled: .. index:: pair: cluster option; stonith-enabled stonith-enabled - :ref:`boolean ` - true - Whether the cluster is allowed to fence nodes (for example, failed nodes and nodes with resources that can't be stopped). If true, at least one fence device must be configured before resources are allowed to run. If false, unresponsive nodes are immediately assumed to be running no resources, and resource recovery on online nodes starts without any further protection (which can mean *data loss* if the unresponsive node still accesses shared storage, for example). See also the :ref:`requires ` resource meta-attribute. * - .. _stonith_action: .. index:: pair: cluster option; stonith-action stonith-action - :ref:`enumeration ` - reboot - Action the cluster should send to the fence agent when a node must be fenced. Allowed values are ``reboot``, ``off``, and (for legacy agents only) ``poweroff``. * - .. _stonith_timeout: .. index:: pair: cluster option; stonith-timeout stonith-timeout - :ref:`duration ` - 60s - How long to wait for ``on``, ``off``, and ``reboot`` fence actions to complete by default. * - .. _stonith_max_attempts: .. index:: pair: cluster option; stonith-max-attempts stonith-max-attempts - :ref:`score ` - 10 - How many times fencing can fail for a target before the cluster will no longer immediately re-attempt it. Any value below 1 will be ignored, and the default will be used instead. * - .. _have_watchdog: .. index:: pair: cluster option; have-watchdog have-watchdog - :ref:`boolean ` - *detected* - Whether watchdog integration is enabled. This is set automatically by the cluster according to whether SBD is detected to be in use. User-configured values are ignored. The value `true` is meaningful if diskless SBD is used and :ref:`stonith-watchdog-timeout ` is nonzero. In that case, if fencing is required, watchdog-based self-fencing will be performed via SBD without requiring a fencing resource explicitly configured. * - .. _stonith_watchdog_timeout: .. index:: pair: cluster option; stonith-watchdog-timeout stonith-watchdog-timeout - :ref:`timeout ` - 0 - If nonzero, and the cluster detects ``have-watchdog`` as ``true``, then watchdog-based self-fencing will be performed via SBD when fencing is - required, without requiring a fencing resource explicitly configured. + required. - If this is set to a positive value, unseen nodes are assumed to - self-fence within this much time. - - **Warning:** It must be ensured that this value is larger than the - ``SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT`` environment variable on all nodes. Pacemaker - verifies the settings individually on all nodes and prevents startup or - shuts down if configured wrongly on the fly. It is strongly recommended - that ``SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT`` be set to the same value on all nodes. + If this is set to a positive value, lost nodes are assumed to achieve + self-fencing within this much time. + + This does not require a fencing resource to be explicitly configured, + though a fence_watchdog resource can be configured, to limit use to + specific nodes. + + If this is set to 0 (the default), the cluster will never assume + watchdog-based self-fencing. + + If this is set to a negative value, the cluster will use twice the local + value of the ``SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT`` environment variable if that is + positive, or otherwise treat this as 0. - If this is set to a negative value, and ``SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT`` is set, - twice that value will be used. + **Warning:** When used, this timeout must be larger than + ``SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT`` on all nodes that use watchdog-based SBD, and + Pacemaker will refuse to start on any of those nodes where this is not + true for the local value or SBD is not active. When this is set to a + negative value, ``SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT`` must be set to the same value + on all nodes that use SBD, otherwise data corruption or loss could occur. - **Warning:** In this case, it is essential (and currently not verified - by pacemaker) that ``SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT`` is set to the same value on - all nodes. * - .. _concurrent-fencing: .. index:: pair: cluster option; concurrent-fencing concurrent-fencing - :ref:`boolean ` - false - Whether the cluster is allowed to initiate multiple fence actions concurrently. Fence actions initiated externally, such as via the ``stonith_admin`` tool or an application such as DLM, or by the fencer itself such as recurring device monitors and ``status`` and ``list`` commands, are not limited by this option. * - .. _fence_reaction: .. index:: pair: cluster option; fence-reaction fence-reaction - :ref:`enumeration ` - stop - How should a cluster node react if notified of its own fencing? A - cluster node may receive notification of its own fencing if fencing is - misconfigured, or if fabric fencing is in use that doesn't cut cluster - communication. Allowed values are ``stop`` to attempt to immediately - stop Pacemaker and stay stopped, or ``panic`` to attempt to immediately - reboot the local node, falling back to stop on failure. The default is - likely to be changed to ``panic`` in a future release. *(since 2.0.3)* + cluster node may receive notification of a "succeeded" fencing that + targeted it if fencing is misconfigured, or if fabric fencing is in use + that doesn't cut cluster communication. Allowed values are ``stop`` to + attempt to immediately stop Pacemaker and stay stopped, or ``panic`` to + attempt to immediately reboot the local node, falling back to stop on + failure. The default is likely to be changed to ``panic`` in a future + release. *(since 2.0.3)* * - .. _priority_fencing_delay: .. index:: pair: cluster option; priority-fencing-delay priority-fencing-delay - :ref:`duration ` - 0 - Apply this delay to any fencing targeting the lost nodes with the highest total resource priority in case we don't have the majority of the nodes in our cluster partition, so that the more significant nodes potentially win any fencing match (especially meaningful in a split-brain of a 2-node cluster). A promoted resource instance takes the resource's priority plus 1 if the resource's priority is not 0. Any static or random delays introduced by ``pcmk_delay_base`` and ``pcmk_delay_max`` configured for the corresponding fencing resources will be added to this delay. This delay should be significantly greater than (safely twice) the maximum delay from those parameters. *(since 2.0.4)* * - .. _node_pending_timeout: .. index:: pair: cluster option; node-pending-timeout node-pending-timeout - :ref:`duration ` - 0 - Fence nodes that do not join the controller process group within this much time after joining the cluster, to allow the cluster to continue managing resources. A value of 0 means never fence pending nodes. Setting the value to 2h means fence nodes after 2 hours. *(since 2.1.7)* * - .. _cluster_delay: .. index:: pair: cluster option; cluster-delay cluster-delay - :ref:`duration ` - 60s - If the DC requires an action to be executed on another node, it will consider the action failed if it does not get a response from the other node within this time (beyond the action's own timeout). The ideal value will depend on the speed and load of your network and cluster nodes. * - .. _dc_deadtime: .. index:: pair: cluster option; dc-deadtime dc-deadtime - :ref:`duration ` - 20s - How long to wait for a response from other nodes when electing a DC. The ideal value will depend on the speed and load of your network and cluster nodes. * - .. _cluster_ipc_limit: .. index:: pair: cluster option; cluster-ipc-limit cluster-ipc-limit - :ref:`nonnegative integer ` - 500 - The maximum IPC message backlog before one cluster daemon will disconnect another. This is of use in large clusters, for which a good value is the number of resources in the cluster multiplied by the number of nodes. The default of 500 is also the minimum. Raise this if you see "Evicting client" log messages for cluster daemon process IDs. * - .. _pe_error_series_max: .. index:: pair: cluster option; pe-error-series-max pe-error-series-max - :ref:`integer ` - -1 - The number of scheduler inputs resulting in errors to save. These inputs can be helpful during troubleshooting and when reporting issues. A negative value means save all inputs, and 0 means save none. * - .. _pe_warn_series_max: .. index:: pair: cluster option; pe-warn-series-max pe-warn-series-max - :ref:`integer ` - 5000 - The number of scheduler inputs resulting in warnings to save. These inputs can be helpful during troubleshooting and when reporting issues. A negative value means save all inputs, and 0 means save none. * - .. _pe_input_series_max: .. index:: pair: cluster option; pe-input-series-max pe-input-series-max - :ref:`integer ` - 4000 - The number of "normal" scheduler inputs to save. These inputs can be helpful during troubleshooting and when reporting issues. A negative value means save all inputs, and 0 means save none. * - .. _enable_acl: .. index:: pair: cluster option; enable-acl enable-acl - :ref:`boolean ` - false - Whether :ref:`access control lists ` should be used to authorize CIB modifications * - .. _placement_strategy: .. index:: pair: cluster option; placement-strategy placement-strategy - :ref:`enumeration ` - default - How the cluster should assign resources to nodes (see :ref:`utilization`). Allowed values are ``default``, ``utilization``, ``balanced``, and ``minimal``. * - .. _node_health_strategy: .. index:: pair: cluster option; node-health-strategy node-health-strategy - :ref:`enumeration ` - none - How the cluster should react to :ref:`node health ` attributes. Allowed values are ``none``, ``migrate-on-red``, ``only-green``, ``progressive``, and ``custom``. * - .. _node_health_base: .. index:: pair: cluster option; node-health-base node-health-base - :ref:`score ` - 0 - The base health score assigned to a node. Only used when ``node-health-strategy`` is ``progressive``. * - .. _node_health_green: .. index:: pair: cluster option; node-health-green node-health-green - :ref:`score ` - 0 - The score to use for a node health attribute whose value is ``green``. Only used when ``node-health-strategy`` is ``progressive`` or ``custom``. * - .. _node_health_yellow: .. index:: pair: cluster option; node-health-yellow node-health-yellow - :ref:`score ` - 0 - The score to use for a node health attribute whose value is ``yellow``. Only used when ``node-health-strategy`` is ``progressive`` or ``custom``. * - .. _node_health_red: .. index:: pair: cluster option; node-health-red node-health-red - :ref:`score ` - -INFINITY - The score to use for a node health attribute whose value is ``red``. Only used when ``node-health-strategy`` is ``progressive`` or ``custom``. * - .. _cluster_recheck_interval: .. index:: pair: cluster option; cluster-recheck-interval cluster-recheck-interval - :ref:`duration ` - 15min - Pacemaker is primarily event-driven, and looks ahead to know when to - recheck the cluster for failure timeouts and most time-based rules - *(since 2.0.3)*. However, it will also recheck the cluster after this - amount of inactivity. This has two goals: rules with ``date_spec`` are - only guaranteed to be checked this often, and it also serves as a + recheck the cluster for failure-timeout settings and most time-based + rules *(since 2.0.3)*. However, it will also recheck the cluster after + this amount of inactivity. This has two goals: rules with ``date_spec`` + are only guaranteed to be checked this often, and it also serves as a fail-safe for some kinds of scheduler bugs. A value of 0 disables this polling. * - .. _shutdown_lock: .. index:: pair: cluster option; shutdown-lock shutdown-lock - :ref:`boolean ` - false - The default of false allows active resources to be recovered elsewhere when their node is cleanly shut down, which is what the vast majority of users will want. However, some users prefer to make resources highly available only for failures, with no recovery for clean shutdowns. If this option is true, resources active on a node when it is cleanly shut down are kept "locked" to that node (not allowed to run elsewhere) until they start again on that node after it rejoins (or for at most ``shutdown-lock-limit``, if set). Stonith resources and Pacemaker Remote connections are never locked. Clone and bundle instances and the promoted role of promotable clones are currently never locked, though support could be added in a future release. Locks may be manually cleared using the ``--refresh`` option of ``crm_resource`` (both the resource and node must be specified; this works with remote nodes if their connection resource's ``target-role`` is set to ``Stopped``, but not if Pacemaker Remote is stopped on the remote node without disabling the connection resource). *(since 2.0.4)* * - .. _shutdown_lock_limit: .. index:: pair: cluster option; shutdown-lock-limit shutdown-lock-limit - :ref:`duration ` - 0 - If ``shutdown-lock`` is true, and this is set to a nonzero time duration, locked resources will be allowed to start after this much time has passed since the node shutdown was initiated, even if the node has not rejoined. (This works with remote nodes only if their connection resource's ``target-role`` is set to ``Stopped``.) *(since 2.0.4)* * - .. _remove_after_stop: .. index:: pair: cluster option; remove-after-stop remove-after-stop - :ref:`boolean ` - false - *Deprecated* Whether the cluster should remove resources from Pacemaker's executor after they are stopped. Values other than the default are, at best, poorly tested and potentially dangerous. This option is deprecated and will be removed in a future release. * - .. _startup_fencing: .. index:: pair: cluster option; startup-fencing startup-fencing - :ref:`boolean ` - true - *Advanced Use Only:* Whether the cluster should fence unseen nodes at start-up. Setting this to false is unsafe, because the unseen nodes could be active and running resources but unreachable. ``dc-deadtime`` acts as a grace period before this fencing, since a DC must be elected to schedule fencing. * - .. _election_timeout: .. index:: pair: cluster option; election-timeout election-timeout - :ref:`duration ` - 2min - *Advanced Use Only:* If a winner is not declared within this much time of starting an election, the node that initiated the election will declare itself the winner. * - .. _shutdown_escalation: .. index:: pair: cluster option; shutdown-escalation shutdown-escalation - :ref:`duration ` - 20min - *Advanced Use Only:* The controller will exit immediately if a shutdown does not complete within this much time. * - .. _join_integration_timeout: .. index:: pair: cluster option; join-integration-timeout join-integration-timeout - :ref:`duration ` - 3min - *Advanced Use Only:* If you need to adjust this value, it probably indicates the presence of a bug. * - .. _join_finalization_timeout: .. index:: pair: cluster option; join-finalization-timeout join-finalization-timeout - :ref:`duration ` - 30min - *Advanced Use Only:* If you need to adjust this value, it probably indicates the presence of a bug. * - .. _transition_delay: .. index:: pair: cluster option; transition-delay transition-delay - :ref:`duration ` - 0s - *Advanced Use Only:* Delay cluster recovery for the configured interval to allow for additional or related events to occur. This can be useful if your configuration is sensitive to the order in which ping updates arrive. Enabling this option will slow down cluster recovery under all conditions. diff --git a/lib/common/options.c b/lib/common/options.c index 9dd66becf6..510ebe4ab5 100644 --- a/lib/common/options.c +++ b/lib/common/options.c @@ -1,1154 +1,1155 @@ /* * Copyright 2004-2024 the Pacemaker project contributors * * The version control history for this file may have further details. * * This source code is licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License * version 2.1 or later (LGPLv2.1+) WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY. */ #ifndef _GNU_SOURCE # define _GNU_SOURCE #endif #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include void pcmk__cli_help(char cmd) { if (cmd == 'v' || cmd == '$') { printf("Pacemaker %s\n", PACEMAKER_VERSION); printf("Written by Andrew Beekhof and " "the Pacemaker project contributors\n"); } else if (cmd == '!') { printf("Pacemaker %s (Build: %s): %s\n", PACEMAKER_VERSION, BUILD_VERSION, CRM_FEATURES); } crm_exit(CRM_EX_OK); while(1); // above does not return } /* * Option metadata */ static pcmk__cluster_option_t cluster_options[] = { /* name, old name, type, allowed values, * default value, validator, * context, * short description, * long description */ { PCMK_OPT_DC_VERSION, NULL, "string", NULL, PCMK__VALUE_NONE, NULL, pcmk__opt_context_controld, N_("Pacemaker version on cluster node elected Designated Controller " "(DC)"), - N_("Includes a hash which identifies the exact changeset the code was " + N_("Includes a hash which identifies the exact revision the code was " "built from. Used for diagnostic purposes."), }, { PCMK_OPT_CLUSTER_INFRASTRUCTURE, NULL, "string", NULL, "corosync", NULL, pcmk__opt_context_controld, - N_("The messaging stack on which Pacemaker is currently running"), + N_("The messaging layer on which Pacemaker is currently running"), N_("Used for informational and diagnostic purposes."), }, { PCMK_OPT_CLUSTER_NAME, NULL, "string", NULL, NULL, NULL, pcmk__opt_context_controld, N_("An arbitrary name for the cluster"), N_("This optional value is mostly for users' convenience as desired " "in administration, but may also be used in Pacemaker " "configuration rules via the #cluster-name node attribute, and " "by higher-level tools and resource agents."), }, { PCMK_OPT_DC_DEADTIME, NULL, "time", NULL, "20s", pcmk__valid_interval_spec, pcmk__opt_context_controld, N_("How long to wait for a response from other nodes during start-up"), N_("The optimal value will depend on the speed and load of your " "network and the type of switches used."), }, { PCMK_OPT_CLUSTER_RECHECK_INTERVAL, NULL, "time", N_("Zero disables polling, while positive values are an interval in " "seconds (unless other units are specified, for example \"5min\")"), "15min", pcmk__valid_interval_spec, pcmk__opt_context_controld, N_("Polling interval to recheck cluster state and evaluate rules " "with date specifications"), N_("Pacemaker is primarily event-driven, and looks ahead to know when " - "to recheck cluster state for failure timeouts and most time-based " - "rules. However, it will also recheck the cluster after this " - "amount of inactivity, to evaluate rules with date specifications " - "and serve as a fail-safe for certain types of scheduler bugs."), + "to recheck cluster state for failure-timeout settings and most " + "time-based rules. However, it will also recheck the cluster after " + "this amount of inactivity, to evaluate rules with date " + "specifications and serve as a fail-safe for certain types of " + "scheduler bugs."), }, { PCMK_OPT_FENCE_REACTION, NULL, "select", PCMK_VALUE_STOP ", panic", PCMK_VALUE_STOP, NULL, pcmk__opt_context_controld, N_("How a cluster node should react if notified of its own fencing"), - N_("A cluster node may receive notification of its own fencing if " - "fencing is misconfigured, or if fabric fencing is in use that " - "doesn't cut cluster communication. Use \"stop\" to attempt to " - "immediately stop Pacemaker and stay stopped, or \"panic\" to " - "attempt to immediately reboot the local node, falling back to " - "stop on failure."), + N_("A cluster node may receive notification of a \"succeeded\" " + "fencing that targeted it if fencing is misconfigured, or if " + "fabric fencing is in use that doesn't cut cluster communication. " + "Use \"stop\" to attempt to immediately stop Pacemaker and stay " + "stopped, or \"panic\" to attempt to immediately reboot the local " + "node, falling back to stop on failure."), }, { PCMK_OPT_ELECTION_TIMEOUT, NULL, "time", NULL, "2min", pcmk__valid_interval_spec, pcmk__opt_context_controld, N_("*** Advanced Use Only ***"), N_("Declare an election failed if it is not decided within this much " "time. If you need to adjust this value, it probably indicates " "the presence of a bug."), }, { PCMK_OPT_SHUTDOWN_ESCALATION, NULL, "time", NULL, "20min", pcmk__valid_interval_spec, pcmk__opt_context_controld, N_("*** Advanced Use Only ***"), N_("Exit immediately if shutdown does not complete within this much " "time. If you need to adjust this value, it probably indicates " "the presence of a bug."), }, { PCMK_OPT_JOIN_INTEGRATION_TIMEOUT, "crmd-integration-timeout", "time", NULL, "3min", pcmk__valid_interval_spec, pcmk__opt_context_controld, N_("*** Advanced Use Only ***"), N_("If you need to adjust this value, it probably indicates " "the presence of a bug."), }, { PCMK_OPT_JOIN_FINALIZATION_TIMEOUT, "crmd-finalization-timeout", "time", NULL, "30min", pcmk__valid_interval_spec, pcmk__opt_context_controld, N_("*** Advanced Use Only ***"), N_("If you need to adjust this value, it probably indicates " "the presence of a bug."), }, { PCMK_OPT_TRANSITION_DELAY, "crmd-transition-delay", "time", NULL, "0s", pcmk__valid_interval_spec, pcmk__opt_context_controld, N_("*** Advanced Use Only *** " "Enabling this option will slow down cluster recovery under all " "conditions"), N_("Delay cluster recovery for this much time to allow for additional " "events to occur. Useful if your configuration is sensitive to " "the order in which ping updates arrive."), }, { PCMK_OPT_NO_QUORUM_POLICY, NULL, "select", PCMK_VALUE_STOP ", " PCMK_VALUE_FREEZE ", " PCMK_VALUE_IGNORE ", " PCMK_VALUE_DEMOTE ", " PCMK_VALUE_FENCE_LEGACY, PCMK_VALUE_STOP, pcmk__valid_no_quorum_policy, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("What to do when the cluster does not have quorum"), NULL, }, { PCMK_OPT_SHUTDOWN_LOCK, NULL, "boolean", NULL, PCMK_VALUE_FALSE, pcmk__valid_boolean, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("Whether to lock resources to a cleanly shut down node"), N_("When true, resources active on a node when it is cleanly shut down " "are kept \"locked\" to that node (not allowed to run elsewhere) " "until they start again on that node after it rejoins (or for at " "most shutdown-lock-limit, if set). Stonith resources and " "Pacemaker Remote connections are never locked. Clone and bundle " "instances and the promoted role of promotable clones are " "currently never locked, though support could be added in a future " "release."), }, { PCMK_OPT_SHUTDOWN_LOCK_LIMIT, NULL, "time", NULL, "0", pcmk__valid_interval_spec, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("Do not lock resources to a cleanly shut down node longer than " "this"), N_("If shutdown-lock is true and this is set to a nonzero time " "duration, shutdown locks will expire after this much time has " "passed since the shutdown was initiated, even if the node has not " "rejoined."), }, { PCMK_OPT_ENABLE_ACL, NULL, "boolean", NULL, PCMK_VALUE_FALSE, pcmk__valid_boolean, pcmk__opt_context_based, N_("Enable Access Control Lists (ACLs) for the CIB"), NULL, }, { PCMK_OPT_SYMMETRIC_CLUSTER, NULL, "boolean", NULL, PCMK_VALUE_TRUE, pcmk__valid_boolean, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("Whether resources can run on any node by default"), NULL, }, { PCMK_OPT_MAINTENANCE_MODE, NULL, "boolean", NULL, PCMK_VALUE_FALSE, pcmk__valid_boolean, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("Whether the cluster should refrain from monitoring, starting, and " "stopping resources"), NULL, }, { PCMK_OPT_START_FAILURE_IS_FATAL, NULL, "boolean", NULL, PCMK_VALUE_TRUE, pcmk__valid_boolean, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("Whether a start failure should prevent a resource from being " "recovered on the same node"), N_("When true, the cluster will immediately ban a resource from a node " "if it fails to start there. When false, the cluster will instead " "check the resource's fail count against its migration-threshold.") }, { PCMK_OPT_ENABLE_STARTUP_PROBES, NULL, "boolean", NULL, PCMK_VALUE_TRUE, pcmk__valid_boolean, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("Whether the cluster should check for active resources during " "start-up"), NULL, }, // Fencing-related options { PCMK_OPT_STONITH_ENABLED, NULL, "boolean", NULL, PCMK_VALUE_TRUE, pcmk__valid_boolean, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("*** Advanced Use Only *** " "Whether nodes may be fenced as part of recovery"), N_("If false, unresponsive nodes are immediately assumed to be " "harmless, and resources that were active on them may be recovered " "elsewhere. This can result in a \"split-brain\" situation, " "potentially leading to data loss and/or service unavailability."), }, { PCMK_OPT_STONITH_ACTION, NULL, "select", "reboot, off, poweroff", PCMK_ACTION_REBOOT, pcmk__is_fencing_action, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("Action to send to fence device when a node needs to be fenced " "(\"poweroff\" is a deprecated alias for \"off\")"), NULL, }, { PCMK_OPT_STONITH_TIMEOUT, NULL, "time", NULL, "60s", pcmk__valid_interval_spec, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("How long to wait for on, off, and reboot fence actions to complete " "by default"), NULL, }, { PCMK_OPT_HAVE_WATCHDOG, NULL, "boolean", NULL, PCMK_VALUE_FALSE, pcmk__valid_boolean, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("Whether watchdog integration is enabled"), N_("This is set automatically by the cluster according to whether SBD " "is detected to be in use. User-configured values are ignored. " "The value `true` is meaningful if diskless SBD is used and " "`stonith-watchdog-timeout` is nonzero. In that case, if fencing " "is required, watchdog-based self-fencing will be performed via " "SBD without requiring a fencing resource explicitly configured."), }, { /* @COMPAT Currently, unparsable values default to -1 (auto-calculate), * while missing values default to 0 (disable). All values are accepted * (unless the controller finds that the value conflicts with the * SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT). * * At a compatibility break: properly validate as a timeout, let * either negative values or a particular string like "auto" mean auto- * calculate, and use 0 as the single default for when the option either * is unset or fails to validate. */ PCMK_OPT_STONITH_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT, NULL, "time", NULL, "0", NULL, pcmk__opt_context_controld, N_("How long before nodes can be assumed to be safely down when " "watchdog-based self-fencing via SBD is in use"), N_("If this is set to a positive value, lost nodes are assumed to " - "self-fence using watchdog-based SBD within this much time. This " - "does not require a fencing resource to be explicitly configured, " - "though a fence_watchdog resource can be configured, to limit use " - "to specific nodes. If this is set to 0 (the default), the cluster " - "will never assume watchdog-based self-fencing. If this is set to a " - "negative value, the cluster will use twice the local value of the " - "`SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT` environment variable if that is positive, " - "or otherwise treat this as 0. WARNING: When used, this timeout " - "must be larger than `SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT` on all nodes that use " - "watchdog-based SBD, and Pacemaker will refuse to start on any of " - "those nodes where this is not true for the local value or SBD is " - "not active. When this is set to a negative value, " + "achieve self-fencing using watchdog-based SBD within this much " + "time. This does not require a fencing resource to be explicitly " + "configured, though a fence_watchdog resource can be configured, to " + "limit use to specific nodes. If this is set to 0 (the default), " + "the cluster will never assume watchdog-based self-fencing. If this " + "is set to a negative value, the cluster will use twice the local " + "value of the `SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT` environment variable if that " + "is positive, or otherwise treat this as 0. WARNING: When used, " + "this timeout must be larger than `SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT` on all " + "nodes that use watchdog-based SBD, and Pacemaker will refuse to " + "start on any of those nodes where this is not true for the local " + "value or SBD is not active. When this is set to a negative value, " "`SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT` must be set to the same value on all nodes " "that use SBD, otherwise data corruption or loss could occur."), }, { PCMK_OPT_STONITH_MAX_ATTEMPTS, NULL, "integer", NULL, "10", pcmk__valid_positive_int, pcmk__opt_context_controld, N_("How many times fencing can fail before it will no longer be " "immediately re-attempted on a target"), NULL, }, { PCMK_OPT_CONCURRENT_FENCING, NULL, "boolean", NULL, PCMK__CONCURRENT_FENCING_DEFAULT, pcmk__valid_boolean, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("Allow performing fencing operations in parallel"), NULL, }, { PCMK_OPT_STARTUP_FENCING, NULL, "boolean", NULL, PCMK_VALUE_TRUE, pcmk__valid_boolean, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("*** Advanced Use Only *** " "Whether to fence unseen nodes at start-up"), N_("Setting this to false may lead to a \"split-brain\" situation, " "potentially leading to data loss and/or service unavailability."), }, { PCMK_OPT_PRIORITY_FENCING_DELAY, NULL, "time", NULL, "0", pcmk__valid_interval_spec, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("Apply fencing delay targeting the lost nodes with the highest " "total resource priority"), N_("Apply specified delay for the fencings that are targeting the lost " "nodes with the highest total resource priority in case we don't " "have the majority of the nodes in our cluster partition, so that " "the more significant nodes potentially win any fencing match, " "which is especially meaningful under split-brain of 2-node " "cluster. A promoted resource instance takes the base priority + 1 " "on calculation if the base priority is not 0. Any static/random " "delays that are introduced by `pcmk_delay_base/max` configured " "for the corresponding fencing resources will be added to this " "delay. This delay should be significantly greater than, safely " "twice, the maximum `pcmk_delay_base/max`. By default, priority " "fencing delay is disabled."), }, { PCMK_OPT_NODE_PENDING_TIMEOUT, NULL, "time", NULL, "0", pcmk__valid_interval_spec, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("How long to wait for a node that has joined the cluster to join " "the controller process group"), N_("Fence nodes that do not join the controller process group within " "this much time after joining the cluster, to allow the cluster " "to continue managing resources. A value of 0 means never fence " "pending nodes. Setting the value to 2h means fence nodes after " "2 hours."), }, { PCMK_OPT_CLUSTER_DELAY, NULL, "time", NULL, "60s", pcmk__valid_interval_spec, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("Maximum time for node-to-node communication"), N_("The node elected Designated Controller (DC) will consider an action " "failed if it does not get a response from the node executing the " "action within this time (after considering the action's own " "timeout). The \"correct\" value will depend on the speed and " "load of your network and cluster nodes.") }, // Limits { PCMK_OPT_LOAD_THRESHOLD, NULL, "percentage", NULL, "80%", pcmk__valid_percentage, pcmk__opt_context_controld, N_("Maximum amount of system load that should be used by cluster " "nodes"), N_("The cluster will slow down its recovery process when the amount of " "system resources used (currently CPU) approaches this limit"), }, { PCMK_OPT_NODE_ACTION_LIMIT, NULL, "integer", NULL, "0", pcmk__valid_int, pcmk__opt_context_controld, N_("Maximum number of jobs that can be scheduled per node (defaults to " "2x cores)"), NULL, }, { PCMK_OPT_BATCH_LIMIT, NULL, "integer", NULL, "0", pcmk__valid_int, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("Maximum number of jobs that the cluster may execute in parallel " "across all nodes"), N_("The \"correct\" value will depend on the speed and load of your " "network and cluster nodes. If set to 0, the cluster will " "impose a dynamically calculated limit when any node has a " "high load."), }, { PCMK_OPT_MIGRATION_LIMIT, NULL, "integer", NULL, "-1", pcmk__valid_int, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("The number of live migration actions that the cluster is allowed " "to execute in parallel on a node (-1 means no limit)"), NULL, }, { PCMK_OPT_CLUSTER_IPC_LIMIT, NULL, "integer", NULL, "500", pcmk__valid_positive_int, pcmk__opt_context_based, N_("Maximum IPC message backlog before disconnecting a cluster daemon"), N_("Raise this if log has \"Evicting client\" messages for cluster " "daemon PIDs (a good value is the number of resources in the " "cluster multiplied by the number of nodes)."), }, // Orphans and stopping { PCMK_OPT_STOP_ALL_RESOURCES, NULL, "boolean", NULL, PCMK_VALUE_FALSE, pcmk__valid_boolean, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("Whether the cluster should stop all active resources"), NULL, }, { PCMK_OPT_STOP_ORPHAN_RESOURCES, NULL, "boolean", NULL, PCMK_VALUE_TRUE, pcmk__valid_boolean, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("Whether to stop resources that were removed from the " "configuration"), NULL, }, { PCMK_OPT_STOP_ORPHAN_ACTIONS, NULL, "boolean", NULL, PCMK_VALUE_TRUE, pcmk__valid_boolean, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("Whether to cancel recurring actions removed from the " "configuration"), NULL, }, { PCMK__OPT_REMOVE_AFTER_STOP, NULL, "boolean", NULL, PCMK_VALUE_FALSE, pcmk__valid_boolean, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("*** Deprecated *** " "Whether to remove stopped resources from the executor"), N_("Values other than default are poorly tested and potentially " "dangerous. This option will be removed in a future release."), }, // Storing inputs { PCMK_OPT_PE_ERROR_SERIES_MAX, NULL, "integer", NULL, "-1", pcmk__valid_int, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("The number of scheduler inputs resulting in errors to save"), N_("Zero to disable, -1 to store unlimited."), }, { PCMK_OPT_PE_WARN_SERIES_MAX, NULL, "integer", NULL, "5000", pcmk__valid_int, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("The number of scheduler inputs resulting in warnings to save"), N_("Zero to disable, -1 to store unlimited."), }, { PCMK_OPT_PE_INPUT_SERIES_MAX, NULL, "integer", NULL, "4000", pcmk__valid_int, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("The number of scheduler inputs without errors or warnings to save"), N_("Zero to disable, -1 to store unlimited."), }, // Node health { PCMK_OPT_NODE_HEALTH_STRATEGY, NULL, "select", PCMK__VALUE_NONE ", " PCMK__VALUE_MIGRATE_ON_RED ", " PCMK__VALUE_ONLY_GREEN ", " PCMK__VALUE_PROGRESSIVE ", " PCMK__VALUE_CUSTOM, PCMK__VALUE_NONE, pcmk__validate_health_strategy, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("How cluster should react to node health attributes"), N_("Requires external entities to create node attributes (named with " "the prefix \"#health\") with values \"red\", \"yellow\", or " "\"green\".") }, { PCMK_OPT_NODE_HEALTH_BASE, NULL, "integer", NULL, "0", pcmk__valid_int, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("Base health score assigned to a node"), N_("Only used when \"node-health-strategy\" is set to " "\"progressive\"."), }, { PCMK_OPT_NODE_HEALTH_GREEN, NULL, "integer", NULL, "0", pcmk__valid_int, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("The score to use for a node health attribute whose value is " "\"green\""), N_("Only used when \"node-health-strategy\" is set to \"custom\" or " "\"progressive\"."), }, { PCMK_OPT_NODE_HEALTH_YELLOW, NULL, "integer", NULL, "0", pcmk__valid_int, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("The score to use for a node health attribute whose value is " "\"yellow\""), N_("Only used when \"node-health-strategy\" is set to \"custom\" or " "\"progressive\"."), }, { PCMK_OPT_NODE_HEALTH_RED, NULL, "integer", NULL, "-INFINITY", pcmk__valid_int, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("The score to use for a node health attribute whose value is " "\"red\""), N_("Only used when \"node-health-strategy\" is set to \"custom\" or " "\"progressive\".") }, // Placement strategy { PCMK_OPT_PLACEMENT_STRATEGY, NULL, "select", "default, utilization, minimal, balanced", "default", pcmk__valid_placement_strategy, pcmk__opt_context_schedulerd, N_("How the cluster should allocate resources to nodes"), NULL, }, }; /* * Environment variable option handling */ /*! * \internal * \brief Get the value of a Pacemaker environment variable option * * If an environment variable option is set, with either a PCMK_ or (for * backward compatibility) HA_ prefix, log and return the value. * * \param[in] option Environment variable name (without prefix) * * \return Value of environment variable option, or NULL in case of * option name too long or value not found */ const char * pcmk__env_option(const char *option) { const char *const prefixes[] = {"PCMK_", "HA_"}; char env_name[NAME_MAX]; const char *value = NULL; CRM_CHECK(!pcmk__str_empty(option), return NULL); for (int i = 0; i < PCMK__NELEM(prefixes); i++) { int rv = snprintf(env_name, NAME_MAX, "%s%s", prefixes[i], option); if (rv < 0) { crm_err("Failed to write %s%s to buffer: %s", prefixes[i], option, strerror(errno)); return NULL; } if (rv >= sizeof(env_name)) { crm_trace("\"%s%s\" is too long", prefixes[i], option); continue; } value = getenv(env_name); if (value != NULL) { crm_trace("Found %s = %s", env_name, value); return value; } } crm_trace("Nothing found for %s", option); return NULL; } /*! * \brief Set or unset a Pacemaker environment variable option * * Set an environment variable option with a \c "PCMK_" prefix and optionally * an \c "HA_" prefix for backward compatibility. * * \param[in] option Environment variable name (without prefix) * \param[in] value New value (or NULL to unset) * \param[in] compat If false and \p value is not \c NULL, set only * \c "PCMK_