Statistics
| Branch: | Tag: | Revision:

root / doc / admin.rst @ 9626f028

History | View | Annotate | Download (52.8 kB)

1 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
Ganeti administrator's guide
2 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
============================
3 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
4 fd07c6b3 Iustin Pop
Documents Ganeti version |version|
5 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
6 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
.. contents::
7 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
8 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. highlight:: text
9 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
10 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
Introduction
11 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
------------
12 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
13 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Ganeti is a virtualization cluster management software. You are expected
14 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
to be a system administrator familiar with your Linux distribution and
15 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
the Xen or KVM virtualization environments before using it.
16 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
17 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
The various components of Ganeti all have man pages and interactive
18 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
help. This manual though will help you getting familiar with the system
19 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
by explaining the most common operations, grouped by related use.
20 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
21 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
After a terminology glossary and a section on the prerequisites needed
22 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
to use this manual, the rest of this document is divided in sections
23 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
for the different targets that a command affects: instance, nodes, etc.
24 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
25 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. _terminology-label:
26 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
27 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
Ganeti terminology
28 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
++++++++++++++++++
29 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
30 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
This section provides a small introduction to Ganeti terminology, which
31 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
might be useful when reading the rest of the document.
32 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
33 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
Cluster
34 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~
35 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
36 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
A set of machines (nodes) that cooperate to offer a coherent, highly
37 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
available virtualization service under a single administration domain.
38 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
39 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Node
40 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~
41 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
42 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
A physical machine which is member of a cluster.  Nodes are the basic
43 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
cluster infrastructure, and they don't need to be fault tolerant in
44 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
order to achieve high availability for instances.
45 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
46 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Node can be added and removed (if they host no instances) at will from
47 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
the cluster. In a HA cluster and only with HA instances, the loss of any
48 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
single node will not cause disk data loss for any instance; of course,
49 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
a node crash will cause the crash of the its primary instances.
50 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
51 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
A node belonging to a cluster can be in one of the following roles at a
52 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
given time:
53 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
54 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- *master* node, which is the node from which the cluster is controlled
55 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- *master candidate* node, only nodes in this role have the full cluster
56 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  configuration and knowledge, and only master candidates can become the
57 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  master node
58 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- *regular* node, which is the state in which most nodes will be on
59 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  bigger clusters (>20 nodes)
60 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- *drained* node, nodes in this state are functioning normally but the
61 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  cannot receive new instances; the intention is that nodes in this role
62 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  have some issue and they are being evacuated for hardware repairs
63 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- *offline* node, in which there is a record in the cluster
64 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  configuration about the node, but the daemons on the master node will
65 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  not talk to this node; any instances declared as having an offline
66 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node as either primary or secondary will be flagged as an error in the
67 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  cluster verify operation
68 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
69 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Depending on the role, each node will run a set of daemons:
70 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
71 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- the :command:`ganeti-noded` daemon, which control the manipulation of
72 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  this node's hardware resources; it runs on all nodes which are in a
73 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  cluster
74 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- the :command:`ganeti-confd` daemon (Ganeti 2.1+) which runs on all
75 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  nodes, but is only functional on master candidate nodes
76 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- the :command:`ganeti-rapi` daemon which runs on the master node and
77 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  offers an HTTP-based API for the cluster
78 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- the :command:`ganeti-masterd` daemon which runs on the master node and
79 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  allows control of the cluster
80 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
81 feec31d1 Iustin Pop
Beside the node role, there are other node flags that influence its
82 feec31d1 Iustin Pop
behaviour:
83 feec31d1 Iustin Pop
84 feec31d1 Iustin Pop
- the *master_capable* flag denotes whether the node can ever become a
85 feec31d1 Iustin Pop
  master candidate; setting this to 'no' means that auto-promotion will
86 feec31d1 Iustin Pop
  never make this node a master candidate; this flag can be useful for a
87 feec31d1 Iustin Pop
  remote node that only runs local instances, and having it become a
88 feec31d1 Iustin Pop
  master is impractical due to networking or other constraints
89 feec31d1 Iustin Pop
- the *vm_capable* flag denotes whether the node can host instances or
90 feec31d1 Iustin Pop
  not; for example, one might use a non-vm_capable node just as a master
91 feec31d1 Iustin Pop
  candidate, for configuration backups; setting this flag to no
92 feec31d1 Iustin Pop
  disallows placement of instances of this node, deactivates hypervisor
93 feec31d1 Iustin Pop
  and related checks on it (e.g. bridge checks, LVM check, etc.), and
94 feec31d1 Iustin Pop
  removes it from cluster capacity computations
95 feec31d1 Iustin Pop
96 feec31d1 Iustin Pop
97 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
Instance
98 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~
99 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
100 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
A virtual machine which runs on a cluster. It can be a fault tolerant,
101 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
highly available entity.
102 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
103 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
An instance has various parameters, which are classified in three
104 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
categories: hypervisor related-parameters (called ``hvparams``), general
105 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
parameters (called ``beparams``) and per network-card parameters (called
106 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
``nicparams``). All these parameters can be modified either at instance
107 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
level or via defaults at cluster level.
108 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
109 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Disk template
110 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
111 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
112 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The are multiple options for the storage provided to an instance; while
113 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
the instance sees the same virtual drive in all cases, the node-level
114 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
configuration varies between them.
115 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
116 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
There are four disk templates you can choose from:
117 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
118 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
diskless
119 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  The instance has no disks. Only used for special purpose operating
120 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  systems or for testing.
121 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
122 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
file
123 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  The instance will use plain files as backend for its disks. No
124 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  redundancy is provided, and this is somewhat more difficult to
125 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  configure for high performance.
126 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
127 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
plain
128 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  The instance will use LVM devices as backend for its disks. No
129 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  redundancy is provided.
130 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
131 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
drbd
132 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  .. note:: This is only valid for multi-node clusters using DRBD 8.0+
133 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
134 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  A mirror is set between the local node and a remote one, which must be
135 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  specified with the second value of the --node option. Use this option
136 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  to obtain a highly available instance that can be failed over to a
137 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  remote node should the primary one fail.
138 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
139 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
IAllocator
140 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~
141 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
142 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
A framework for using external (user-provided) scripts to compute the
143 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
placement of instances on the cluster nodes. This eliminates the need to
144 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
manually specify nodes in instance add, instance moves, node evacuate,
145 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
etc.
146 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
147 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
In order for Ganeti to be able to use these scripts, they must be place
148 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
in the iallocator directory (usually ``lib/ganeti/iallocators`` under
149 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
the installation prefix, e.g. ``/usr/local``).
150 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
151 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
“Primary” and “secondary” concepts
152 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
153 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
154 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
An instance has a primary and depending on the disk configuration, might
155 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
also have a secondary node. The instance always runs on the primary node
156 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
and only uses its secondary node for disk replication.
157 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
158 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Similarly, the term of primary and secondary instances when talking
159 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
about a node refers to the set of instances having the given node as
160 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
primary, respectively secondary.
161 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
162 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Tags
163 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~
164 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
165 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Tags are short strings that can be attached to either to cluster itself,
166 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
or to nodes or instances. They are useful as a very simplistic
167 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
information store for helping with cluster administration, for example
168 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
by attaching owner information to each instance after it's created::
169 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
170 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance add … instance1
171 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance add-tags instance1 owner:user2
172 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
173 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
And then by listing each instance and its tags, this information could
174 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
be used for contacting the users of each instance.
175 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
176 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Jobs and OpCodes
177 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
178 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
179 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
While not directly visible by an end-user, it's useful to know that a
180 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
basic cluster operation (e.g. starting an instance) is represented
181 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
internall by Ganeti as an *OpCode* (abbreviation from operation
182 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
code). These OpCodes are executed as part of a *Job*. The OpCodes in a
183 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
single Job are processed serially by Ganeti, but different Jobs will be
184 f313e7be Michael Hanselmann
processed (depending on resource availability) in parallel. They will
185 f313e7be Michael Hanselmann
not be executed in the submission order, but depending on resource
186 f313e7be Michael Hanselmann
availability, locks and (starting with Ganeti 2.3) priority. An earlier
187 f313e7be Michael Hanselmann
job may have to wait for a lock while a newer job doesn't need any locks
188 f313e7be Michael Hanselmann
and can be executed right away. Operations requiring a certain order
189 f313e7be Michael Hanselmann
need to be submitted as a single job, or the client must submit one job
190 f313e7be Michael Hanselmann
at a time and wait for it to finish before continuing.
191 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
192 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
For example, shutting down the entire cluster can be done by running the
193 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
command ``gnt-instance shutdown --all``, which will submit for each
194 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
instance a separate job containing the “shutdown instance” OpCode.
195 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
196 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
197 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Prerequisites
198 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
+++++++++++++
199 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
200 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
You need to have your Ganeti cluster installed and configured before you
201 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
try any of the commands in this document. Please follow the
202 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
:doc:`install` for instructions on how to do that.
203 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
204 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Instance management
205 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
-------------------
206 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
207 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Adding an instance
208 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
++++++++++++++++++
209 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
210 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The add operation might seem complex due to the many parameters it
211 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
accepts, but once you have understood the (few) required parameters and
212 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
the customisation capabilities you will see it is an easy operation.
213 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
214 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The add operation requires at minimum five parameters:
215 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
216 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- the OS for the instance
217 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- the disk template
218 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- the disk count and size
219 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- the node specification or alternatively the iallocator to use
220 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- and finally the instance name
221 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
222 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The OS for the instance must be visible in the output of the command
223 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
``gnt-os list`` and specifies which guest OS to install on the instance.
224 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
225 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The disk template specifies what kind of storage to use as backend for
226 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
the (virtual) disks presented to the instance; note that for instances
227 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
with multiple virtual disks, they all must be of the same type.
228 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
229 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The node(s) on which the instance will run can be given either manually,
230 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
via the ``-n`` option, or computed automatically by Ganeti, if you have
231 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
installed any iallocator script.
232 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
233 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
With the above parameters in mind, the command is::
234 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
235 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance add \
236 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
    -n TARGET_NODE:SECONDARY_NODE \
237 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
    -o OS_TYPE \
238 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
    -t DISK_TEMPLATE -s DISK_SIZE \
239 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
    INSTANCE_NAME
240 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
241 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
The instance name must be resolvable (e.g. exist in DNS) and usually
242 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
points to an address in the same subnet as the cluster itself.
243 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
244 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The above command has the minimum required options; other options you
245 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
can give include, among others:
246 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
247 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
- The memory size (``-B memory``)
248 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
249 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
- The number of virtual CPUs (``-B vcpus``)
250 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
251 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
- Arguments for the NICs of the instance; by default, a single-NIC
252 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
  instance is created. The IP and/or bridge of the NIC can be changed
253 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
  via ``--nic 0:ip=IP,bridge=BRIDGE``
254 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
255 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
See the manpage for gnt-instance for the detailed option list.
256 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
257 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
For example if you want to create an highly available instance, with a
258 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
single disk of 50GB and the default memory size, having primary node
259 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
``node1`` and secondary node ``node3``, use the following command::
260 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
261 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance add -n node1:node3 -o debootstrap -t drbd \
262 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
    instance1
263 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
264 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
There is a also a command for batch instance creation from a
265 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
specification file, see the ``batch-create`` operation in the
266 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
gnt-instance manual page.
267 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
268 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Regular instance operations
269 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++
270 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
271 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Removal
272 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~
273 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
274 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Removing an instance is even easier than creating one. This operation is
275 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
irreversible and destroys all the contents of your instance. Use with
276 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
care::
277 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
278 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance remove INSTANCE_NAME
279 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
280 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Startup/shutdown
281 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
282 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
283 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
Instances are automatically started at instance creation time. To
284 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
manually start one which is currently stopped you can run::
285 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
286 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance startup INSTANCE_NAME
287 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
288 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
While the command to stop one is::
289 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
290 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance shutdown INSTANCE_NAME
291 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
292 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. warning:: Do not use the Xen or KVM commands directly to stop
293 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
   instances. If you run for example ``xm shutdown`` or ``xm destroy``
294 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
   on an instance Ganeti will automatically restart it (via the
295 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
   :command:`ganeti-watcher` command which is launched via cron).
296 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
297 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Querying instances
298 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
299 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
300 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
There are two ways to get information about instances: listing
301 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
instances, which does a tabular output containing a given set of fields
302 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
about each instance, and querying detailed information about a set of
303 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
instances.
304 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
305 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
The command to see all the instances configured and their status is::
306 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
307 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance list
308 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
309 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The command can return a custom set of information when using the ``-o``
310 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
option (as always, check the manpage for a detailed specification). Each
311 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
instance will be represented on a line, thus making it easy to parse
312 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
this output via the usual shell utilities (grep, sed, etc.).
313 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
314 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
To get more detailed information about an instance, you can run::
315 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
316 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance info INSTANCE
317 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
318 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
which will give a multi-line block of information about the instance,
319 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
it's hardware resources (especially its disks and their redundancy
320 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
status), etc. This is harder to parse and is more expensive than the
321 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
list operation, but returns much more detailed information.
322 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
323 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
324 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Export/Import
325 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
+++++++++++++
326 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
327 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
You can create a snapshot of an instance disk and its Ganeti
328 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
configuration, which then you can backup, or import into another
329 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
cluster. The way to export an instance is::
330 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
331 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
  gnt-backup export -n TARGET_NODE INSTANCE_NAME
332 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
333 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
334 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
The target node can be any node in the cluster with enough space under
335 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
``/srv/ganeti`` to hold the instance image. Use the ``--noshutdown``
336 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
option to snapshot an instance without rebooting it. Note that Ganeti
337 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
only keeps one snapshot for an instance - any previous snapshot of the
338 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
same instance existing cluster-wide under ``/srv/ganeti`` will be
339 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
removed by this operation: if you want to keep them, you need to move
340 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
them out of the Ganeti exports directory.
341 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
342 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Importing an instance is similar to creating a new one, but additionally
343 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
one must specify the location of the snapshot. The command is::
344 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
345 33ea43b6 Iustin Pop
  gnt-backup import -n TARGET_NODE \
346 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
    --src-node=NODE --src-dir=DIR INSTANCE_NAME
347 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
348 33ea43b6 Iustin Pop
By default, parameters will be read from the export information, but you
349 33ea43b6 Iustin Pop
can of course pass them in via the command line - most of the options
350 33ea43b6 Iustin Pop
available for the command :command:`gnt-instance add` are supported here
351 33ea43b6 Iustin Pop
too.
352 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
353 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
Import of foreign instances
354 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++
355 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
356 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
There is a possibility to import a foreign instance whose disk data is
357 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
already stored as LVM volumes without going through copying it: the disk
358 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
adoption mode.
359 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
360 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
For this, ensure that the original, non-managed instance is stopped,
361 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
then create a Ganeti instance in the usual way, except that instead of
362 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
passing the disk information you specify the current volumes::
363 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
364 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance add -t plain -n HOME_NODE ... \
365 7af3534e Dmitry Chernyak
    --disk 0:adopt=lv_name[,vg=vg_name] INSTANCE_NAME
366 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
367 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
This will take over the given logical volumes, rename them to the Ganeti
368 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
standard (UUID-based), and without installing the OS on them start
369 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
directly the instance. If you configure the hypervisor similar to the
370 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
non-managed configuration that the instance had, the transition should
371 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
be seamless for the instance. For more than one disk, just pass another
372 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
disk parameter (e.g. ``--disk 1:adopt=...``).
373 17227cd1 Iustin Pop
374 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Instance HA features
375 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
--------------------
376 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
377 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
.. note:: This section only applies to multi-node clusters
378 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
379 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. _instance-change-primary-label:
380 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
381 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Changing the primary node
382 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
+++++++++++++++++++++++++
383 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
384 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
There are three ways to exchange an instance's primary and secondary
385 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
nodes; the right one to choose depends on how the instance has been
386 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
created and the status of its current primary node. See
387 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
:ref:`rest-redundancy-label` for information on changing the secondary
388 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
node. Note that it's only possible to change the primary node to the
389 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
secondary and vice-versa; a direct change of the primary node with a
390 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
third node, while keeping the current secondary is not possible in a
391 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
single step, only via multiple operations as detailed in
392 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
:ref:`instance-relocation-label`.
393 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
394 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
Failing over an instance
395 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
396 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
397 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
If an instance is built in highly available mode you can at any time
398 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
fail it over to its secondary node, even if the primary has somehow
399 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
failed and it's not up anymore. Doing it is really easy, on the master
400 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
node you can just run::
401 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
402 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance failover INSTANCE_NAME
403 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
404 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
That's it. After the command completes the secondary node is now the
405 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
primary, and vice-versa.
406 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
407 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
Live migrating an instance
408 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
409 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
410 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
If an instance is built in highly available mode, it currently runs and
411 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
both its nodes are running fine, you can at migrate it over to its
412 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
secondary node, without downtime. On the master node you need to run::
413 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
414 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance migrate INSTANCE_NAME
415 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
416 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The current load on the instance and its memory size will influence how
417 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
long the migration will take. In any case, for both KVM and Xen
418 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
hypervisors, the migration will be transparent to the instance.
419 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
420 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Moving an instance (offline)
421 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
422 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
423 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
If an instance has not been create as mirrored, then the only way to
424 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
change its primary node is to execute the move command::
425 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
426 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance move -n NEW_NODE INSTANCE
427 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
428 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
This has a few prerequisites:
429 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
430 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- the instance must be stopped
431 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- its current primary node must be on-line and healthy
432 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- the disks of the instance must not have any errors
433 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
434 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Since this operation actually copies the data from the old node to the
435 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
new node, expect it to take proportional to the size of the instance's
436 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
disks and the speed of both the nodes' I/O system and their networking.
437 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
438 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Disk operations
439 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
+++++++++++++++
440 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
441 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Disk failures are a common cause of errors in any server
442 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
deployment. Ganeti offers protection from single-node failure if your
443 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
instances were created in HA mode, and it also offers ways to restore
444 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
redundancy after a failure.
445 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
446 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Preparing for disk operations
447 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
448 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
449 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
It is important to note that for Ganeti to be able to do any disk
450 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
operation, the Linux machines on top of which Ganeti must be consistent;
451 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
for LVM, this means that the LVM commands must not return failures; it
452 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
is common that after a complete disk failure, any LVM command aborts
453 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
with an error similar to::
454 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
455 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  # vgs
456 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  /dev/sdb1: read failed after 0 of 4096 at 0: Input/output error
457 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  /dev/sdb1: read failed after 0 of 4096 at 750153695232: Input/output
458 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  error
459 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  /dev/sdb1: read failed after 0 of 4096 at 0: Input/output error
460 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Couldn't find device with uuid
461 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  't30jmN-4Rcf-Fr5e-CURS-pawt-z0jU-m1TgeJ'.
462 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Couldn't find all physical volumes for volume group xenvg.
463 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
464 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Before restoring an instance's disks to healthy status, it's needed to
465 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
fix the volume group used by Ganeti so that we can actually create and
466 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
manage the logical volumes. This is usually done in a multi-step
467 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
process:
468 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
469 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
#. first, if the disk is completely gone and LVM commands exit with
470 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
   “Couldn't find device with uuid…” then you need to run the command::
471 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
472 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
    vgreduce --removemissing VOLUME_GROUP
473 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
474 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
#. after the above command, the LVM commands should be executing
475 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
   normally (warnings are normal, but the commands will not fail
476 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
   completely).
477 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
478 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
#. if the failed disk is still visible in the output of the ``pvs``
479 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
   command, you need to deactivate it from allocations by running::
480 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
481 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
    pvs -x n /dev/DISK
482 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
483 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
At this point, the volume group should be consistent and any bad
484 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
physical volumes should not longer be available for allocation.
485 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
486 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Note that since version 2.1 Ganeti provides some commands to automate
487 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
these two operations, see :ref:`storage-units-label`.
488 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
489 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. _rest-redundancy-label:
490 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
491 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Restoring redundancy for DRBD-based instances
492 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
493 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
494 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
A DRBD instance has two nodes, and the storage on one of them has
495 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
failed. Depending on which node (primary or secondary) has failed, you
496 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
have three options at hand:
497 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
498 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- if the storage on the primary node has failed, you need to re-create
499 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  the disks on it
500 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- if the storage on the secondary node has failed, you can either
501 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  re-create the disks on it or change the secondary and recreate
502 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  redundancy on the new secondary node
503 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
504 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Of course, at any point it's possible to force re-creation of disks even
505 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
though everything is already fine.
506 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
507 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
For all three cases, the ``replace-disks`` operation can be used::
508 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
509 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  # re-create disks on the primary node
510 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance replace-disks -p INSTANCE_NAME
511 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  # re-create disks on the current secondary
512 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance replace-disks -s INSTANCE_NAME
513 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  # change the secondary node, via manual specification
514 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance replace-disks -n NODE INSTANCE_NAME
515 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  # change the secondary node, via an iallocator script
516 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance replace-disks -I SCRIPT INSTANCE_NAME
517 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  # since Ganeti 2.1: automatically fix the primary or secondary node
518 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance replace-disks -a INSTANCE_NAME
519 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
520 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Since the process involves copying all data from the working node to the
521 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
target node, it will take a while, depending on the instance's disk
522 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
size, node I/O system and network speed. But it is (baring any network
523 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
interruption) completely transparent for the instance.
524 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
525 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Re-creating disks for non-redundant instances
526 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
527 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
528 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. versionadded:: 2.1
529 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
530 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
For non-redundant instances, there isn't a copy (except backups) to
531 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
re-create the disks. But it's possible to at-least re-create empty
532 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
disks, after which a reinstall can be run, via the ``recreate-disks``
533 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
command::
534 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
535 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance recreate-disks INSTANCE
536 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
537 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Note that this will fail if the disks already exists.
538 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
539 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
Conversion of an instance's disk type
540 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
541 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
542 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
It is possible to convert between a non-redundant instance of type
543 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
``plain`` (LVM storage) and redundant ``drbd`` via the ``gnt-instance
544 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
modify`` command::
545 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
546 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
  # start with a non-redundant instance
547 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance add -t plain ... INSTANCE
548 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
549 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
  # later convert it to redundant
550 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance stop INSTANCE
551 3e039592 Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance modify -t drbd -n NEW_SECONDARY INSTANCE
552 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance start INSTANCE
553 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
554 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
  # and convert it back
555 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance stop INSTANCE
556 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance modify -t plain INSTANCE
557 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance start INSTANCE
558 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
559 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
The conversion must be done while the instance is stopped, and
560 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
converting from plain to drbd template presents a small risk, especially
561 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
if the instance has multiple disks and/or if one node fails during the
562 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
conversion procedure). As such, it's recommended (as always) to make
563 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
sure that downtime for manual recovery is acceptable and that the
564 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
instance has up-to-date backups.
565 bbf74a76 Iustin Pop
566 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Debugging instances
567 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
+++++++++++++++++++
568 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
569 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
Accessing an instance's disks
570 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
571 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
572 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
From an instance's primary node you can have access to its disks. Never
573 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
ever mount the underlying logical volume manually on a fault tolerant
574 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
instance, or will break replication and your data will be
575 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
inconsistent. The correct way to access an instance's disks is to run
576 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
(on the master node, as usual) the command::
577 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
578 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance activate-disks INSTANCE
579 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
580 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
And then, *on the primary node of the instance*, access the device that
581 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
gets created. For example, you could mount the given disks, then edit
582 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
files on the filesystem, etc.
583 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
584 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Note that with partitioned disks (as opposed to whole-disk filesystems),
585 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
you will need to use a tool like :manpage:`kpartx(8)`::
586 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
587 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-instance activate-disks instance1
588 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
589 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# ssh node3
590 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node3# kpartx -l /dev/…
591 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node3# kpartx -a /dev/…
592 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node3# mount /dev/mapper/… /mnt/
593 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  # edit files under mnt as desired
594 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node3# umount /mnt/
595 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node3# kpartx -d /dev/…
596 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node3# exit
597 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1#
598 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
599 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
After you've finished you can deactivate them with the deactivate-disks
600 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
command, which works in the same way::
601 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
602 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance deactivate-disks INSTANCE
603 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
604 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Note that if any process started by you is still using the disks, the
605 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
above command will error out, and you **must** cleanup and ensure that
606 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
the above command runs successfully before you start the instance,
607 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
otherwise the instance will suffer corruption.
608 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
609 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
Accessing an instance's console
610 fd07c6b3 Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
611 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
612 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
The command to access a running instance's console is::
613 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
614 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance console INSTANCE_NAME
615 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
616 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Use the console normally and then type ``^]`` when done, to exit.
617 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
618 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Other instance operations
619 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
+++++++++++++++++++++++++
620 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
621 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Reboot
622 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~
623 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
624 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
There is a wrapper command for rebooting instances::
625 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
626 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance reboot instance2
627 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
628 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
By default, this does the equivalent of shutting down and then starting
629 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
the instance, but it accepts parameters to perform a soft-reboot (via
630 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
the hypervisor), a hard reboot (hypervisor shutdown and then startup) or
631 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
a full one (the default, which also de-configures and then configures
632 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
again the disks of the instance).
633 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
634 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Instance OS definitions debugging
635 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
636 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
637 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Should you have any problems with instance operating systems the command
638 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
to see a complete status for all your nodes is::
639 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
640 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
   gnt-os diagnose
641 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
642 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. _instance-relocation-label:
643 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
644 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Instance relocation
645 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
646 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
647 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
While it is not possible to move an instance from nodes ``(A, B)`` to
648 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
nodes ``(C, D)`` in a single move, it is possible to do so in a few
649 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
steps::
650 ffa6869f Iustin Pop
651 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  # instance is located on A, B
652 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-instance replace -n nodeC instance1
653 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  # instance has moved from (A, B) to (A, C)
654 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  # we now flip the primary/secondary nodes
655 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-instance migrate instance1
656 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  # instance lives on (C, A)
657 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  # we can then change A to D via:
658 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-instance replace -n nodeD instance1
659 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
660 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Which brings it into the final configuration of ``(C, D)``. Note that we
661 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
needed to do two replace-disks operation (two copies of the instance
662 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
disks), because we needed to get rid of both the original nodes (A and
663 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
B).
664 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
665 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Node operations
666 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
---------------
667 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
668 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
There are much fewer node operations available than for instances, but
669 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
they are equivalently important for maintaining a healthy cluster.
670 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
671 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Add/readd
672 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
+++++++++
673 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
674 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
It is at any time possible to extend the cluster with one more node, by
675 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
using the node add operation::
676 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
677 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-node add NEW_NODE
678 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
679 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
If the cluster has a replication network defined, then you need to pass
680 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
the ``-s REPLICATION_IP`` parameter to this option.
681 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
682 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
A variation of this command can be used to re-configure a node if its
683 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Ganeti configuration is broken, for example if it has been reinstalled
684 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
by mistake::
685 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
686 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-node add --readd EXISTING_NODE
687 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
688 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
This will reinitialise the node as if it's been newly added, but while
689 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
keeping its existing configuration in the cluster (primary/secondary IP,
690 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
etc.), in other words you won't need to use ``-s`` here.
691 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
692 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Changing the node role
693 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
++++++++++++++++++++++
694 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
695 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
A node can be in different roles, as explained in the
696 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
:ref:`terminology-label` section. Promoting a node to the master role is
697 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
special, while the other roles are handled all via a single command.
698 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
699 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Failing over the master node
700 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
701 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
702 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
If you want to promote a different node to the master role (for whatever
703 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
reason), run on any other master-candidate node the command::
704 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
705 c28502b1 Iustin Pop
  gnt-cluster master-failover
706 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
707 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
and the node you ran it on is now the new master. In case you try to run
708 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
this on a non master-candidate node, you will get an error telling you
709 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
which nodes are valid.
710 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
711 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Changing between the other roles
712 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
713 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
714 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The ``gnt-node modify`` command can be used to select a new role::
715 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
716 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  # change to master candidate
717 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-node modify -C yes NODE
718 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  # change to drained status
719 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-node modify -D yes NODE
720 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  # change to offline status
721 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-node modify -O yes NODE
722 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  # change to regular mode (reset all flags)
723 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-node modify -O no -D no -C no NODE
724 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
725 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Note that the cluster requires that at any point in time, a certain
726 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
number of nodes are master candidates, so changing from master candidate
727 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
to other roles might fail. It is recommended to either force the
728 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
operation (via the ``--force`` option) or first change the number of
729 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
master candidates in the cluster - see :ref:`cluster-config-label`.
730 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
731 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Evacuating nodes
732 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
++++++++++++++++
733 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
734 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
There are two steps of moving instances off a node:
735 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
736 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- moving the primary instances (actually converting them into secondary
737 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  instances)
738 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- moving the secondary instances (including any instances converted in
739 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  the step above)
740 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
741 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Primary instance conversion
742 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
743 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
744 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
For this step, you can use either individual instance move
745 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
commands (as seen in :ref:`instance-change-primary-label`) or the bulk
746 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
per-node versions; these are::
747 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
748 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-node migrate NODE
749 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-node evacuate NODE
750 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
751 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Note that the instance “move” command doesn't currently have a node
752 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
equivalent.
753 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
754 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Both these commands, or the equivalent per-instance command, will make
755 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
this node the secondary node for the respective instances, whereas their
756 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
current secondary node will become primary. Note that it is not possible
757 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
to change in one step the primary node to another node as primary, while
758 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
keeping the same secondary node.
759 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
760 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Secondary instance evacuation
761 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
762 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
763 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
For the evacuation of secondary instances, a command called
764 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
:command:`gnt-node evacuate` is provided and its syntax is::
765 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
766 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-node evacuate -I IALLOCATOR_SCRIPT NODE
767 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-node evacuate -n DESTINATION_NODE NODE
768 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
769 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The first version will compute the new secondary for each instance in
770 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
turn using the given iallocator script, whereas the second one will
771 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
simply move all instances to DESTINATION_NODE.
772 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
773 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Removal
774 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
+++++++
775 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
776 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Once a node no longer has any instances (neither primary nor secondary),
777 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
it's easy to remove it from the cluster::
778 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
779 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-node remove NODE_NAME
780 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
781 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
This will deconfigure the node, stop the ganeti daemons on it and leave
782 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
it hopefully like before it joined to the cluster.
783 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
784 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Storage handling
785 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
++++++++++++++++
786 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
787 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
When using LVM (either standalone or with DRBD), it can become tedious
788 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
to debug and fix it in case of errors. Furthermore, even file-based
789 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
storage can become complicated to handle manually on many hosts. Ganeti
790 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
provides a couple of commands to help with automation.
791 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
792 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Logical volumes
793 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
794 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
795 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
This is a command specific to LVM handling. It allows listing the
796 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
logical volumes on a given node or on all nodes and their association to
797 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
instances via the ``volumes`` command::
798 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
799 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-node volumes
800 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Node  PhysDev   VG    Name             Size Instance
801 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1 /dev/sdb1 xenvg e61fbc97-….disk0 512M instance17
802 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1 /dev/sdb1 xenvg ebd1a7d1-….disk0 512M instance19
803 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node2 /dev/sdb1 xenvg 0af08a3d-….disk0 512M instance20
804 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node2 /dev/sdb1 xenvg cc012285-….disk0 512M instance16
805 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node2 /dev/sdb1 xenvg f0fac192-….disk0 512M instance18
806 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
807 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The above command maps each logical volume to a volume group and
808 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
underlying physical volume and (possibly) to an instance.
809 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
810 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. _storage-units-label:
811 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
812 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Generalized storage handling
813 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
814 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
815 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. versionadded:: 2.1
816 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
817 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Starting with Ganeti 2.1, a new storage framework has been implemented
818 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
that tries to abstract the handling of the storage type the cluster
819 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
uses.
820 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
821 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
First is listing the backend storage and their space situation::
822 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
823 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-node list-storage
824 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Node  Name        Size Used   Free
825 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1 /dev/sda7 673.8G   0M 673.8G
826 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1 /dev/sdb1 698.6G 1.5G 697.1G
827 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node2 /dev/sda7 673.8G   0M 673.8G
828 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node2 /dev/sdb1 698.6G 1.0G 697.6G
829 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
830 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The default is to list LVM physical volumes. It's also possible to list
831 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
the LVM volume groups::
832 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
833 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-node list-storage -t lvm-vg
834 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Node  Name  Size
835 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1 xenvg 1.3T
836 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node2 xenvg 1.3T
837 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
838 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Next is repairing storage units, which is currently only implemented for
839 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
volume groups and does the equivalent of ``vgreduce --removemissing``::
840 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
841 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-node repair-storage node2 lvm-vg xenvg
842 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Sun Oct 25 22:21:45 2009 Repairing storage unit 'xenvg' on node2 ...
843 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
844 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Last is the modification of volume properties, which is (again) only
845 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
implemented for LVM physical volumes and allows toggling the
846 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
``allocatable`` value::
847 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
848 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-node modify-storage --allocatable=no node2 lvm-pv /dev/sdb1
849 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
850 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Use of the storage commands
851 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
852 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
853 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
All these commands are needed when recovering a node from a disk
854 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
failure:
855 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
856 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- first, we need to recover from complete LVM failure (due to missing
857 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  disk), by running the ``repair-storage`` command
858 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- second, we need to change allocation on any partially-broken disk
859 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  (i.e. LVM still sees it, but it has bad blocks) by running
860 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  ``modify-storage``
861 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- then we can evacuate the instances as needed
862 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
863 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
864 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Cluster operations
865 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
------------------
866 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
867 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Beside the cluster initialisation command (which is detailed in the
868 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
:doc:`install` document) and the master failover command which is
869 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
explained under node handling, there are a couple of other cluster
870 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
operations available.
871 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
872 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. _cluster-config-label:
873 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
874 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Standard operations
875 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
+++++++++++++++++++
876 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
877 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
One of the few commands that can be run on any node (not only the
878 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
master) is the ``getmaster`` command::
879 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
880 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node2# gnt-cluster getmaster
881 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1.example.com
882 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node2#
883 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
884 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
It is possible to query and change global cluster parameters via the
885 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
``info`` and ``modify`` commands::
886 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
887 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-cluster info
888 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Cluster name: cluster.example.com
889 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Cluster UUID: 07805e6f-f0af-4310-95f1-572862ee939c
890 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Creation time: 2009-09-25 05:04:15
891 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Modification time: 2009-10-18 22:11:47
892 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Master node: node1.example.com
893 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Architecture (this node): 64bit (x86_64)
894 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
895 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Tags: foo
896 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Default hypervisor: xen-pvm
897 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Enabled hypervisors: xen-pvm
898 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Hypervisor parameters:
899 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
    - xen-pvm:
900 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
        root_path: /dev/sda1
901 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
902 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Cluster parameters:
903 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
    - candidate pool size: 10
904 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
905 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Default instance parameters:
906 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
    - default:
907 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
        memory: 128
908 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
909 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Default nic parameters:
910 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
    - default:
911 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
        link: xen-br0
912 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
913 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
914 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
There various parameters above can be changed via the ``modify``
915 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
commands as follows:
916 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
917 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- the hypervisor parameters can be changed via ``modify -H
918 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  xen-pvm:root_path=…``, and so on for other hypervisors/key/values
919 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- the "default instance parameters" are changeable via ``modify -B
920 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  parameter=value…`` syntax
921 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- the cluster parameters are changeable via separate options to the
922 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  modify command (e.g. ``--candidate-pool-size``, etc.)
923 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
924 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
For detailed option list see the :manpage:`gnt-cluster(8)` man page.
925 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
926 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The cluster version can be obtained via the ``version`` command::
927 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-cluster version
928 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Software version: 2.1.0
929 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Internode protocol: 20
930 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Configuration format: 2010000
931 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  OS api version: 15
932 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Export interface: 0
933 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
934 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
This is not very useful except when debugging Ganeti.
935 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
936 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Global node commands
937 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
++++++++++++++++++++
938 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
939 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
There are two commands provided for replicating files to all nodes of a
940 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
cluster and for running commands on all the nodes::
941 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
942 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-cluster copyfile /path/to/file
943 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-cluster command ls -l /path/to/file
944 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
945 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
These are simple wrappers over scp/ssh and more advanced usage can be
946 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
obtained using :manpage:`dsh(1)` and similar commands. But they are
947 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
useful to update an OS script from the master node, for example.
948 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
949 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Cluster verification
950 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
++++++++++++++++++++
951 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
952 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
There are three commands that relate to global cluster checks. The first
953 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
one is ``verify`` which gives an overview on the cluster state,
954 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
highlighting any issues. In normal operation, this command should return
955 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
no ``ERROR`` messages::
956 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
957 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-cluster verify
958 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Sun Oct 25 23:08:58 2009 * Verifying global settings
959 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Sun Oct 25 23:08:58 2009 * Gathering data (2 nodes)
960 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Sun Oct 25 23:09:00 2009 * Verifying node status
961 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Sun Oct 25 23:09:00 2009 * Verifying instance status
962 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Sun Oct 25 23:09:00 2009 * Verifying orphan volumes
963 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Sun Oct 25 23:09:00 2009 * Verifying remaining instances
964 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Sun Oct 25 23:09:00 2009 * Verifying N+1 Memory redundancy
965 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Sun Oct 25 23:09:00 2009 * Other Notes
966 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Sun Oct 25 23:09:00 2009   - NOTICE: 5 non-redundant instance(s) found.
967 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Sun Oct 25 23:09:00 2009 * Hooks Results
968 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
969 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The second command is ``verify-disks``, which checks that the instance's
970 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
disks have the correct status based on the desired instance state
971 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
(up/down)::
972 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
973 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-cluster verify-disks
974 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
975 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Note that this command will show no output when disks are healthy.
976 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
977 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The last command is used to repair any discrepancies in Ganeti's
978 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
recorded disk size and the actual disk size (disk size information is
979 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
needed for proper activation and growth of DRBD-based disks)::
980 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
981 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-cluster repair-disk-sizes
982 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Sun Oct 25 23:13:16 2009  - INFO: Disk 0 of instance instance1 has mismatched size, correcting: recorded 512, actual 2048
983 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Sun Oct 25 23:13:17 2009  - WARNING: Invalid result from node node4, ignoring node results
984 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
985 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The above shows one instance having wrong disk size, and a node which
986 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
returned invalid data, and thus we ignored all primary instances of that
987 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
node.
988 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
989 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Configuration redistribution
990 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
991 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
992 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
If the verify command complains about file mismatches between the master
993 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
and other nodes, due to some node problems or if you manually modified
994 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
configuration files, you can force an push of the master configuration
995 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
to all other nodes via the ``redist-conf`` command::
996 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
997 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-cluster redist-conf
998 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1#
999 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1000 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
This command will be silent unless there are problems sending updates to
1001 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
the other nodes.
1002 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1003 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1004 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Cluster renaming
1005 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
++++++++++++++++
1006 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1007 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
It is possible to rename a cluster, or to change its IP address, via the
1008 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
``rename`` command. If only the IP has changed, you need to pass the
1009 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
current name and Ganeti will realise its IP has changed::
1010 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1011 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-cluster rename cluster.example.com
1012 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  This will rename the cluster to 'cluster.example.com'. If
1013 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  you are connected over the network to the cluster name, the operation
1014 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  is very dangerous as the IP address will be removed from the node and
1015 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  the change may not go through. Continue?
1016 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  y/[n]/?: y
1017 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Failure: prerequisites not met for this operation:
1018 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Neither the name nor the IP address of the cluster has changed
1019 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1020 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
In the above output, neither value has changed since the cluster
1021 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
initialisation so the operation is not completed.
1022 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1023 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Queue operations
1024 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
++++++++++++++++
1025 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1026 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The job queue execution in Ganeti 2.0 and higher can be inspected,
1027 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
suspended and resumed via the ``queue`` command::
1028 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1029 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1~# gnt-cluster queue info
1030 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  The drain flag is unset
1031 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1~# gnt-cluster queue drain
1032 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1~# gnt-instance stop instance1
1033 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Failed to submit job for instance1: Job queue is drained, refusing job
1034 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1~# gnt-cluster queue info
1035 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  The drain flag is set
1036 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1~# gnt-cluster queue undrain
1037 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1038 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
This is most useful if you have an active cluster and you need to
1039 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
upgrade the Ganeti software, or simply restart the software on any node:
1040 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1041 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
#. suspend the queue via ``queue drain``
1042 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
#. wait until there are no more running jobs via ``gnt-job list``
1043 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
#. restart the master or another node, or upgrade the software
1044 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
#. resume the queue via ``queue undrain``
1045 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1046 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. note:: this command only stores a local flag file, and if you
1047 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
   failover the master, it will not have effect on the new master.
1048 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1049 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1050 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Watcher control
1051 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
+++++++++++++++
1052 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1053 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The :manpage:`ganeti-watcher` is a program, usually scheduled via
1054 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
``cron``, that takes care of cluster maintenance operations (restarting
1055 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
downed instances, activating down DRBD disks, etc.). However, during
1056 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
maintenance and troubleshooting, this can get in your way; disabling it
1057 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
via commenting out the cron job is not so good as this can be
1058 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
forgotten. Thus there are some commands for automated control of the
1059 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
watcher: ``pause``, ``info`` and ``continue``::
1060 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1061 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1~# gnt-cluster watcher info
1062 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  The watcher is not paused.
1063 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1~# gnt-cluster watcher pause 1h
1064 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  The watcher is paused until Mon Oct 26 00:30:37 2009.
1065 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1~# gnt-cluster watcher info
1066 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  The watcher is paused until Mon Oct 26 00:30:37 2009.
1067 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1~# ganeti-watcher -d
1068 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  2009-10-25 23:30:47,984:  pid=28867 ganeti-watcher:486 DEBUG Pause has been set, exiting
1069 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1~# gnt-cluster watcher continue
1070 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  The watcher is no longer paused.
1071 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1~# ganeti-watcher -d
1072 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  2009-10-25 23:31:04,789:  pid=28976 ganeti-watcher:345 DEBUG Archived 0 jobs, left 0
1073 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  2009-10-25 23:31:05,884:  pid=28976 ganeti-watcher:280 DEBUG Got data from cluster, writing instance status file
1074 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  2009-10-25 23:31:06,061:  pid=28976 ganeti-watcher:150 DEBUG Data didn't change, just touching status file
1075 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1~# gnt-cluster watcher info
1076 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  The watcher is not paused.
1077 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1~#
1078 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1079 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The exact details of the argument to the ``pause`` command are available
1080 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
in the manpage.
1081 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1082 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. note:: this command only stores a local flag file, and if you
1083 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
   failover the master, it will not have effect on the new master.
1084 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1085 6328fea3 Iustin Pop
Node auto-maintenance
1086 6328fea3 Iustin Pop
+++++++++++++++++++++
1087 6328fea3 Iustin Pop
1088 6328fea3 Iustin Pop
If the cluster parameter ``maintain_node_health`` is enabled (see the
1089 6328fea3 Iustin Pop
manpage for :command:`gnt-cluster`, the init and modify subcommands),
1090 6328fea3 Iustin Pop
then the following will happen automatically:
1091 6328fea3 Iustin Pop
1092 6328fea3 Iustin Pop
- the watcher will shutdown any instances running on offline nodes
1093 6328fea3 Iustin Pop
- the watcher will deactivate any DRBD devices on offline nodes
1094 6328fea3 Iustin Pop
1095 6328fea3 Iustin Pop
In the future, more actions are planned, so only enable this parameter
1096 6328fea3 Iustin Pop
if the nodes are completely dedicated to Ganeti; otherwise it might be
1097 6328fea3 Iustin Pop
possible to lose data due to auto-maintenance actions.
1098 6328fea3 Iustin Pop
1099 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Removing a cluster entirely
1100 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1101 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1102 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The usual method to cleanup a cluster is to run ``gnt-cluster destroy``
1103 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
however if the Ganeti installation is broken in any way then this will
1104 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
not run.
1105 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1106 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
It is possible in such a case to cleanup manually most if not all traces
1107 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
of a cluster installation by following these steps on all of the nodes:
1108 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1109 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1. Shutdown all instances. This depends on the virtualisation method
1110 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
   used (Xen, KVM, etc.):
1111 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
1112 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
  - Xen: run ``xm list`` and ``xm destroy`` on all the non-Domain-0
1113 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
    instances
1114 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
  - KVM: kill all the KVM processes
1115 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
  - chroot: kill all processes under the chroot mountpoints
1116 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
1117 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
2. If using DRBD, shutdown all DRBD minors (which should by at this time
1118 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
   no-longer in use by instances); on each node, run ``drbdsetup
1119 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
   /dev/drbdN down`` for each active DRBD minor.
1120 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
1121 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
3. If using LVM, cleanup the Ganeti volume group; if only Ganeti created
1122 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
   logical volumes (and you are not sharing the volume group with the
1123 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
   OS, for example), then simply running ``lvremove -f xenvg`` (replace
1124 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
   'xenvg' with your volume group name) should do the required cleanup.
1125 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
1126 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
4. If using file-based storage, remove recursively all files and
1127 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
   directories under your file-storage directory: ``rm -rf
1128 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
   /srv/ganeti/file-storage/*`` replacing the path with the correct path
1129 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
   for your cluster.
1130 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
1131 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
5. Stop the ganeti daemons (``/etc/init.d/ganeti stop``) and kill any
1132 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
   that remain alive (``pgrep ganeti`` and ``pkill ganeti``).
1133 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
1134 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
6. Remove the ganeti state directory (``rm -rf /var/lib/ganeti/*``),
1135 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
   replacing the path with the correct path for your installation.
1136 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
1137 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
On the master node, remove the cluster from the master-netdev (usually
1138 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
``xen-br0`` for bridged mode, otherwise ``eth0`` or similar), by running
1139 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
``ip a del $clusterip/32 dev xen-br0`` (use the correct cluster ip and
1140 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
network device name).
1141 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
1142 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
At this point, the machines are ready for a cluster creation; in case
1143 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
you want to remove Ganeti completely, you need to also undo some of the
1144 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
SSH changes and log directories:
1145 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
1146 7faf5110 Michael Hanselmann
- ``rm -rf /var/log/ganeti /srv/ganeti`` (replace with the correct
1147 7faf5110 Michael Hanselmann
  paths)
1148 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- remove from ``/root/.ssh`` the keys that Ganeti added (check the
1149 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  ``authorized_keys`` and ``id_dsa`` files)
1150 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
- regenerate the host's SSH keys (check the OpenSSH startup scripts)
1151 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
- uninstall Ganeti
1152 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
1153 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
Otherwise, if you plan to re-create the cluster, you can just go ahead
1154 56c9a709 Iustin Pop
and rerun ``gnt-cluster init``.
1155 558fd122 Michael Hanselmann
1156 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Tags handling
1157 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
-------------
1158 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1159 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The tags handling (addition, removal, listing) is similar for all the
1160 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
objects that support it (instances, nodes, and the cluster).
1161 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1162 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Limitations
1163 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
+++++++++++
1164 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1165 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Note that the set of characters present in a tag and the maximum tag
1166 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
length are restricted. Currently the maximum length is 128 characters,
1167 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
there can be at most 4096 tags per object, and the set of characters is
1168 bde65914 Iustin Pop
comprised by alphanumeric characters and additionally ``.+*/:@-``.
1169 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1170 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Operations
1171 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
++++++++++
1172 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1173 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Tags can be added via ``add-tags``::
1174 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1175 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance add-tags INSTANCE a b c
1176 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-node add-tags INSTANCE a b c
1177 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-cluster add-tags a b c
1178 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1179 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1180 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The above commands add three tags to an instance, to a node and to the
1181 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
cluster. Note that the cluster command only takes tags as arguments,
1182 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
whereas the node and instance commands first required the node and
1183 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
instance name.
1184 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1185 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Tags can also be added from a file, via the ``--from=FILENAME``
1186 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
argument. The file is expected to contain one tag per line.
1187 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1188 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Tags can also be remove via a syntax very similar to the add one::
1189 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1190 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance remove-tags INSTANCE a b c
1191 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1192 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
And listed via::
1193 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1194 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-instance list-tags
1195 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-node list-tags
1196 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-cluster list-tags
1197 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1198 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Global tag search
1199 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
+++++++++++++++++
1200 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1201 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
It is also possible to execute a global search on the all tags defined
1202 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
in the cluster configuration, via a cluster command::
1203 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1204 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  gnt-cluster search-tags REGEXP
1205 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1206 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The parameter expected is a regular expression (see
1207 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
:manpage:`regex(7)`). This will return all tags that match the search,
1208 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
together with the object they are defined in (the names being show in a
1209 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
hierarchical kind of way)::
1210 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1211 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-cluster search-tags o
1212 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  /cluster foo
1213 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  /instances/instance1 owner:bar
1214 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1215 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1216 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Job operations
1217 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
--------------
1218 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1219 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The various jobs submitted by the instance/node/cluster commands can be
1220 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
examined, canceled and archived by various invocations of the
1221 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
``gnt-job`` command.
1222 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1223 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
First is the job list command::
1224 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1225 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-job list
1226 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  17771 success INSTANCE_QUERY_DATA
1227 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  17773 success CLUSTER_VERIFY_DISKS
1228 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  17775 success CLUSTER_REPAIR_DISK_SIZES
1229 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  17776 error   CLUSTER_RENAME(cluster.example.com)
1230 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  17780 success CLUSTER_REDIST_CONF
1231 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  17792 success INSTANCE_REBOOT(instance1.example.com)
1232 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1233 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
More detailed information about a job can be found via the ``info``
1234 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
command::
1235 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1236 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-job info 17776
1237 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Job ID: 17776
1238 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
    Status: error
1239 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
    Received:         2009-10-25 23:18:02.180569
1240 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
    Processing start: 2009-10-25 23:18:02.200335 (delta 0.019766s)
1241 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
    Processing end:   2009-10-25 23:18:02.279743 (delta 0.079408s)
1242 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
    Total processing time: 0.099174 seconds
1243 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
    Opcodes:
1244 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
      OP_CLUSTER_RENAME
1245 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
        Status: error
1246 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
        Processing start: 2009-10-25 23:18:02.200335
1247 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
        Processing end:   2009-10-25 23:18:02.252282
1248 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
        Input fields:
1249 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
          name: cluster.example.com
1250 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
        Result:
1251 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
          OpPrereqError
1252 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
          [Neither the name nor the IP address of the cluster has changed]
1253 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
        Execution log:
1254 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1255 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
During the execution of a job, it's possible to follow the output of a
1256 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
job, similar to the log that one get from the ``gnt-`` commands, via the
1257 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
watch command::
1258 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1259 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-instance add --submit … instance1
1260 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  JobID: 17818
1261 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-job watch 17818
1262 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Output from job 17818 follows
1263 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  -----------------------------
1264 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Mon Oct 26 00:22:48 2009  - INFO: Selected nodes for instance instance1 via iallocator dumb: node1, node2
1265 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Mon Oct 26 00:22:49 2009 * creating instance disks...
1266 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Mon Oct 26 00:22:52 2009 adding instance instance1 to cluster config
1267 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Mon Oct 26 00:22:52 2009  - INFO: Waiting for instance instance1 to sync disks.
1268 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1269 e0897adf Michael Hanselmann
  Mon Oct 26 00:23:03 2009 creating os for instance instance1 on node node1
1270 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Mon Oct 26 00:23:03 2009 * running the instance OS create scripts...
1271 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Mon Oct 26 00:23:13 2009 * starting instance...
1272 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1#
1273 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1274 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
This is useful if you need to follow a job's progress from multiple
1275 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
terminals.
1276 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1277 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
A job that has not yet started to run can be canceled::
1278 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1279 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-job cancel 17810
1280 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1281 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
But not one that has already started execution::
1282 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1283 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-job cancel 17805
1284 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  Job 17805 is no longer waiting in the queue
1285 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1286 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
There are two queues for jobs: the *current* and the *archive*
1287 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
queue. Jobs are initially submitted to the current queue, and they stay
1288 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
in that queue until they have finished execution (either successfully or
1289 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
not). At that point, they can be moved into the archive queue, and the
1290 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
ganeti-watcher script will do this automatically after 6 hours. The
1291 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
ganeti-cleaner script will remove the jobs from the archive directory
1292 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
after three weeks.
1293 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1294 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Note that only jobs in the current queue can be viewed via the list and
1295 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
info commands; Ganeti itself doesn't examine the archive directory. If
1296 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
you need to see an older job, either move the file manually in the
1297 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
top-level queue directory, or look at its contents (it's a
1298 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
JSON-formatted file).
1299 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1300 bde65914 Iustin Pop
Special Ganeti deployments
1301 bde65914 Iustin Pop
--------------------------
1302 bde65914 Iustin Pop
1303 bde65914 Iustin Pop
Since Ganeti 2.4, it is possible to extend the Ganeti deployment with
1304 bde65914 Iustin Pop
two custom scenarios: Ganeti inside Ganeti and multi-site model.
1305 bde65914 Iustin Pop
1306 bde65914 Iustin Pop
Running Ganeti under Ganeti
1307 bde65914 Iustin Pop
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++
1308 bde65914 Iustin Pop
1309 bde65914 Iustin Pop
It is sometimes useful to be able to use a Ganeti instance as a Ganeti
1310 bde65914 Iustin Pop
node (part of another cluster, usually). One example scenario is two
1311 bde65914 Iustin Pop
small clusters, where we want to have an additional master candidate
1312 bde65914 Iustin Pop
that holds the cluster configuration and can be used for helping with
1313 bde65914 Iustin Pop
the master voting process.
1314 bde65914 Iustin Pop
1315 bde65914 Iustin Pop
However, these Ganeti instance should not host instances themselves, and
1316 bde65914 Iustin Pop
should not be considered in the normal capacity planning, evacuation
1317 bde65914 Iustin Pop
strategies, etc. In order to accomplish this, mark these nodes as
1318 bde65914 Iustin Pop
non-``vm_capable``::
1319 bde65914 Iustin Pop
1320 bde65914 Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-node modify --vm-capable=no node3
1321 bde65914 Iustin Pop
1322 bde65914 Iustin Pop
The vm_capable status can be listed as usual via ``gnt-node list``::
1323 bde65914 Iustin Pop
1324 bde65914 Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-node list -oname,vm_capable
1325 bde65914 Iustin Pop
  Node  VMCapable
1326 bde65914 Iustin Pop
  node1 Y
1327 bde65914 Iustin Pop
  node2 Y
1328 bde65914 Iustin Pop
  node3 N
1329 bde65914 Iustin Pop
1330 bde65914 Iustin Pop
When this flag is set, the cluster will not do any operations that
1331 bde65914 Iustin Pop
relate to instances on such nodes, e.g. hypervisor operations,
1332 bde65914 Iustin Pop
disk-related operations, etc. Basically they will just keep the ssconf
1333 bde65914 Iustin Pop
files, and if master candidates the full configuration.
1334 bde65914 Iustin Pop
1335 bde65914 Iustin Pop
Multi-site model
1336 bde65914 Iustin Pop
++++++++++++++++
1337 bde65914 Iustin Pop
1338 bde65914 Iustin Pop
If Ganeti is deployed in multi-site model, with each site being a node
1339 bde65914 Iustin Pop
group (so that instances are not relocated across the WAN by mistake),
1340 bde65914 Iustin Pop
it is conceivable that either the WAN latency is high or that some sites
1341 bde65914 Iustin Pop
have a lower reliability than others. In this case, it doesn't make
1342 bde65914 Iustin Pop
sense to replicate the job information across all sites (or even outside
1343 bde65914 Iustin Pop
of a “central” node group), so it should be possible to restrict which
1344 bde65914 Iustin Pop
nodes can become master candidates via the auto-promotion algorithm.
1345 bde65914 Iustin Pop
1346 bde65914 Iustin Pop
Ganeti 2.4 introduces for this purpose a new ``master_capable`` flag,
1347 bde65914 Iustin Pop
which (when unset) prevents nodes from being marked as master
1348 bde65914 Iustin Pop
candidates, either manually or automatically.
1349 bde65914 Iustin Pop
1350 bde65914 Iustin Pop
As usual, the node modify operation can change this flag::
1351 bde65914 Iustin Pop
1352 bde65914 Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-node modify --auto-promote --master-capable=no node3
1353 bde65914 Iustin Pop
  Fri Jan  7 06:23:07 2011  - INFO: Demoting from master candidate
1354 bde65914 Iustin Pop
  Fri Jan  7 06:23:08 2011  - INFO: Promoted nodes to master candidate role: node4
1355 bde65914 Iustin Pop
  Modified node node3
1356 bde65914 Iustin Pop
   - master_capable -> False
1357 bde65914 Iustin Pop
   - master_candidate -> False
1358 bde65914 Iustin Pop
1359 bde65914 Iustin Pop
And the node list operation will list this flag::
1360 bde65914 Iustin Pop
1361 bde65914 Iustin Pop
  node1# gnt-node list -oname,master_capable node1 node2 node3
1362 bde65914 Iustin Pop
  Node  MasterCapable
1363 bde65914 Iustin Pop
  node1 Y
1364 bde65914 Iustin Pop
  node2 Y
1365 bde65914 Iustin Pop
  node3 N
1366 bde65914 Iustin Pop
1367 bde65914 Iustin Pop
Note that marking a node both not ``vm_capable`` and not
1368 bde65914 Iustin Pop
``master_capable`` makes the node practically unusable from Ganeti's
1369 bde65914 Iustin Pop
point of view. Hence these two flags should be used probably in
1370 bde65914 Iustin Pop
contrast: some nodes will be only master candidates (master_capable but
1371 bde65914 Iustin Pop
not vm_capable), and other nodes will only hold instances (vm_capable
1372 bde65914 Iustin Pop
but not master_capable).
1373 bde65914 Iustin Pop
1374 bde65914 Iustin Pop
1375 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Ganeti tools
1376 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
------------
1377 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1378 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Beside the usual ``gnt-`` and ``ganeti-`` commands which are provided
1379 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
and installed in ``$prefix/sbin`` at install time, there are a couple of
1380 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
other tools installed which are used seldom but can be helpful in some
1381 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
cases.
1382 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1383 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
lvmstrap
1384 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
++++++++
1385 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1386 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The ``lvmstrap`` tool, introduced in :ref:`configure-lvm-label` section,
1387 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
has two modes of operation:
1388 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1389 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- ``diskinfo`` shows the discovered disks on the system and their status
1390 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- ``create`` takes all not-in-use disks and creates a volume group out
1391 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
  of them
1392 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1393 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. warning:: The ``create`` argument to this command causes data-loss!
1394 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1395 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
cfgupgrade
1396 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
++++++++++
1397 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1398 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The ``cfgupgrade`` tools is used to upgrade between major (and minor)
1399 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Ganeti versions. Point-releases are usually transparent for the admin.
1400 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1401 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
More information about the upgrade procedure is listed on the wiki at
1402 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
http://code.google.com/p/ganeti/wiki/UpgradeNotes.
1403 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1404 b5672ea0 Iustin Pop
There is also a script designed to upgrade from Ganeti 1.2 to 2.0,
1405 b5672ea0 Iustin Pop
called ``cfgupgrade12``.
1406 b5672ea0 Iustin Pop
1407 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
cfgshell
1408 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
++++++++
1409 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1410 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. note:: This command is not actively maintained; make sure you backup
1411 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
   your configuration before using it
1412 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1413 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
This can be used as an alternative to direct editing of the
1414 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
main configuration file if Ganeti has a bug and prevents you, for
1415 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
example, from removing an instance or a node from the configuration
1416 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
file.
1417 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1418 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. _burnin-label:
1419 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1420 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
burnin
1421 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
++++++
1422 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1423 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. warning:: This command will erase existing instances if given as
1424 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
   arguments!
1425 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1426 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
This tool is used to exercise either the hardware of machines or
1427 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
alternatively the Ganeti software. It is safe to run on an existing
1428 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
cluster **as long as you don't pass it existing instance names**.
1429 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1430 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The command will, by default, execute a comprehensive set of operations
1431 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
against a list of instances, these being:
1432 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1433 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- creation
1434 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- disk replacement (for redundant instances)
1435 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- failover and migration (for redundant instances)
1436 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- move (for non-redundant instances)
1437 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- disk growth
1438 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- add disks, remove disk
1439 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- add NICs, remove NICs
1440 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- export and then import
1441 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- rename
1442 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- reboot
1443 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- shutdown/startup
1444 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
- and finally removal of the test instances
1445 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1446 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Executing all these operations will test that the hardware performs
1447 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
well: the creation, disk replace, disk add and disk growth will exercise
1448 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
the storage and network; the migrate command will test the memory of the
1449 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
systems. Depending on the passed options, it can also test that the
1450 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
instance OS definitions are executing properly the rename, import and
1451 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
export operations.
1452 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1453 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
sanitize-config
1454 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
+++++++++++++++
1455 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
1456 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
This tool takes the Ganeti configuration and outputs a "sanitized"
1457 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
version, by randomizing or clearing:
1458 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
1459 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
- DRBD secrets and cluster public key (always)
1460 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
- host names (optional)
1461 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
- IPs (optional)
1462 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
- OS names (optional)
1463 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
- LV names (optional, only useful for very old clusters which still have
1464 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
  instances whose LVs are based on the instance name)
1465 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
1466 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
By default, all optional items are activated except the LV name
1467 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
randomization. When passing ``--no-randomization``, which disables the
1468 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
optional items (i.e. just the DRBD secrets and cluster public keys are
1469 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
randomized), the resulting file can be used as a safety copy of the
1470 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
cluster config - while not trivial, the layout of the cluster can be
1471 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
recreated from it and if the instance disks have not been lost it
1472 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
permits recovery from the loss of all master candidates.
1473 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
1474 e0897adf Michael Hanselmann
move-instance
1475 e0897adf Michael Hanselmann
+++++++++++++
1476 e0897adf Michael Hanselmann
1477 e0897adf Michael Hanselmann
See :doc:`separate documentation for move-instance <move-instance>`.
1478 e0897adf Michael Hanselmann
1479 e0897adf Michael Hanselmann
.. TODO: document cluster-merge tool
1480 e0897adf Michael Hanselmann
1481 ea5fd476 Iustin Pop
1482 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
Other Ganeti projects
1483 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
---------------------
1484 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1485 1ebe6dbd Iustin Pop
Below is a list (which might not be up-to-date) of additional projects
1486 1ebe6dbd Iustin Pop
that can be useful in a Ganeti deployment. They can be downloaded from
1487 1ebe6dbd Iustin Pop
the project site (http://code.google.com/p/ganeti/) and the repositories
1488 1ebe6dbd Iustin Pop
are also on the project git site (http://git.ganeti.org).
1489 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1490 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
NBMA tools
1491 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
++++++++++
1492 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1493 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
The ``ganeti-nbma`` software is designed to allow instances to live on a
1494 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
separate, virtual network from the nodes, and in an environment where
1495 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
nodes are not guaranteed to be able to reach each other via multicasting
1496 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
or broadcasting. For more information see the README in the source
1497 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
archive.
1498 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1499 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
ganeti-htools
1500 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
+++++++++++++
1501 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1502 1ebe6dbd Iustin Pop
Before Ganeti version 2.5, this was a standalone project; since that
1503 1ebe6dbd Iustin Pop
version it is integrated into the Ganeti codebase (see
1504 1ebe6dbd Iustin Pop
:doc:`install-quick` for instructions on how to enable it). If you run
1505 1ebe6dbd Iustin Pop
an older Ganeti version, you will have to download and build it
1506 1ebe6dbd Iustin Pop
separately.
1507 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1508 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
For more information and installation instructions, see the README file
1509 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
in the source archive.
1510 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
1511 558fd122 Michael Hanselmann
.. vim: set textwidth=72 :
1512 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. Local Variables:
1513 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. mode: rst
1514 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. fill-column: 72
1515 c71a1a3d Iustin Pop
.. End: