December 12, 2007"> 8"> gnt-cluster"> Debian"> GNU"> GPL"> ]> 2006 2007 Google Inc. &dhdate; &dhucpackage; &dhsection; ganeti 1.2 &dhpackage; ganeti administration, cluster-wide &dhpackage; command arguments... DESCRIPTION The &dhpackage; is used for cluster-wide administration in the ganeti system. COMMANDS ADD-TAGS add-tags --from file tag Add tags to the cluster. If any of the tags contains invalid characters, the entire operation will abort. If the option is given, the list of tags will be extended with the contents of that file (each line becomes a tag). In this case, there is not need to pass tags on the command line (if you do, both sources will be used). A file name of - will be interpreted as stdin. COMMAND command -n node command Executes a command on all nodes. If the option is not given, the command will be executed on all nodes, otherwise it will be executed only on the node(s) specified. Use the option multiple times for running it on multiple nodes, like: # gnt-cluster command -n node1.example.com -n node2.example.com date The command is executed serially on the selected nodes. If the master node is present in the list, the command will be executed last on the master. Regarding the other nodes, the execution order is somewhat alphabetic (it's smarter so that node2.example.com will be earlier than node10.example.com but after node1.example.com). So given the node names node1, node2, node3, node10, node11, with node3 being the master, the order will be: node1, node2, node10, node11, node3. The command is constructed by concatenating all other command line arguments. For example, to list the contents of the /etc directory on all nodes, run: # gnt-cluster command ls -l /etc and the command which will be executed will be "ls -l /etc" COPYFILE copyfile -n node file Copies a file to all or to some nodes. The argument specifies the source file (on the current system), the argument specifies the target node, or nodes if the option is given multiple times. If is not given at all, the file will be copied to all nodes. Example: # gnt-cluster -n node1.example.com -n node2.example.com copyfile /tmp/test This will copy the file /tmp/test from the current node to the two named nodes. DESTROY destroy --yes-do-it Remove all configuration files related to the cluster, so that a gnt-cluster init can be done again afterwards. Since this is a dangerous command, you are required to pass the argument --yes-do-it. GETMASTER getmaster Displays the current master node. INFO info Shows runtime cluster information: cluster name, architecture (32 or 64 bit), master node, node list and instance list. INIT init -s secondary_ip -b bridge -t hypervisor-type -g vg-name --master-netdev vg-name -m mac-prefix --no-lvm-storage clustername This commands is only run once initially on the first node of the cluster. It will initialize the cluster configuration and setup ssh-keys and more. Note that the clustername is not any random name. It has to be resolvable to an IP address using DNS, and it is best if you give the fully-qualified domain name. Also it is advisable to reserve a per-cluster unique name, and not try to reuse one of the nodes' names. The cluster can run in two modes: single-home or dual-homed. In the first case, all traffic (both public traffic, inter-node traffic and data replication traffic) goes over the same interface. In the dual-homed case, the data replication traffic goes over the second network. The option here marks the cluster as dual-homed and its parameter represents this node's address on the second network. If you initialise the cluster with , all nodes added must have a secondary IP as well. Note that for Ganeti it doesn't matter if the secondary network is actually a separate physical network, or is done using tunneling, etc. For performance reasons, it's recommended to use a separate network, of course. The option specifies the default bridge for instances. The allows to set the hypervisor type of the cluster. Available hypervisor types are: xen-3.0, fake and xen-hvm3.1. The default is the xen-3.0 hypervisor. Note that if you init the cluster with hypervisor-type xen-hvm3.1 you also need to provide the cluster VNC password file /etc/ganeti/vnc-cluster-password and the HVM boot ISO image /srv/ganeti/iso/hvm-install.iso because instances created by the experimental HVM support require them. The option will let you specify a volume group different than 'xenvg' for ganeti to use when creating instance disks. This volume group must have the same name on all nodes. Once the cluster is initialized this can be altered by using the modify command. If you don't want to use lvm storage at all use the option. Once the cluster is initialized you can change this setup with the modify command. The option is useful for specifying a different interface on which the master will activate its IP address. It's important that all nodes have this interface because you'll need it for a master failover. The option will let you specify a three byte prefix under which the virtual MAC addresses of your instances will be generated. The prefix must be specified in the format XX:XX:XX and the default is aa:00:00. The allows you to initialize the cluster without lvm support. This means that only instances using files as storage backend will be possible to create. Once the cluster is initialized you can change this setup with the modify command. LIST-TAGS list-tags List the tags of the cluster. MASTERFAILOVER masterfailover Failover the master role to the current node. MODIFY modify -g vg-name --no-lvm-storage Modify the options for the cluster. The and are described in the init command. REMOVE-TAGS remove-tags --from file tag Remove tags from the cluster. If any of the tags are not existing on the cluster, the entire operation will abort. If the option is given, the list of tags will be extended with the contents of that file (each line becomes a tag). In this case, there is not need to pass tags on the command line (if you do, both sources will be used). A file name of - will be interpreted as stdin. RENAME rename -f name Renames the cluster and in the process updates the master IP address to the one the new name resolves to. At least one of either the name or the IP address must be different, otherwise the operation will be aborted. Note that since this command can be dangerous (especially when run over SSH), the command will require confirmation unless run with the option. SEARCH-TAGS search-tags pattern Searches the tags on all objects in the cluster (the cluster itself, the nodes and the instances) for a given pattern. The pattern is interpreted as a regular expression and a search will be done on it (i.e. the given pattern is not anchored to the beggining of the string; if you want that, prefix the pattern with ^). If no tags are matching the pattern, the exit code of the command will be one. If there is at least one match, the exit code will be zero. Each match is listed on one line, the object and the tag separated by a space. The cluster will be listed as /cluster, a node will be listed as /nodes/name, and an instance as /instances/name. Example: # gnt-cluster search time /cluster ctime:2007-09-01 /nodes/node1.example.com mtime:2007-10-04 VERIFY verify --no-nplus1-mem Verify correctness of cluster configuration. This is safe with respect to running instances, and incurs no downtime of the instances. If the option is given, ganeti won't check whether if it loses a node it can restart all the instances on their secondaries (and report an error otherwise). VERIFY-DISKS verify-disks The command checks which instances have degraded DRBD disks and activates the disks of those instances. This command is run from the ganeti-watcher tool, which also has a different, complementary algorithm for doing this check. Together, these two should ensure that DRBD disks are kept consistent. VERSION version Show the cluster version. &footer;