diff --git a/src/sbd.sysconfig b/src/sbd.sysconfig index cbc1501..75ff980 100644 --- a/src/sbd.sysconfig +++ b/src/sbd.sysconfig @@ -1,67 +1,70 @@ ## Type: string ## Default: "" # # SBD_DEVICE specifies the devices to use for exchanging sbd messages # and to monitor. If specifying more than one path, use ";" as # separator. # #SBD_DEVICE="" ## Type: yesno ## Default: yes # # Whether to enable the pacemaker integration. # SBD_PACEMAKER=yes ## Type: list(always,clean) ## Default: always # # Specify the start mode for sbd. Setting this to "clean" will only # allow sbd to start if it was not previously fenced. See the -S option # in the man page. # SBD_STARTMODE=always ## Type: yesno ## Default: no # # Whether to delay after starting sbd on boot for "msgwait" seconds. # This may be necessary if your cluster nodes reboot so fast that the # other nodes are still waiting in the fence acknowledgement phase. # This is an occasional issue with virtual machines. # +# Consider that you might have to adapt the startup-timeout accordingly +# if the default isn't sufficient. (TimeoutStartSec for systemd) +# # This option may be ignored at a later point, once pacemaker handles # this case better. # SBD_DELAY_START=no ## Type: string ## Default: /dev/watchdog # # Watchdog device to use. If set to /dev/null, no watchdog device will # be used. # SBD_WATCHDOG_DEV=/dev/watchdog ## Type: integer ## Default: 5 # # How long, in seconds, the watchdog will wait before panicing the # node if no-one tickles it. # # This depends mostly on your storage latency; the majority of devices # must be successfully read within this time, or else the node will # self-fence. # # If your sbd device(s) reside on a multipath setup or iSCSI, this # should be the time required to detect a path failure. # SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT=5 ## Type: string ## Default: "" # # Additional options for starting sbd # SBD_OPTS=