Statistics
| Branch: | Tag: | Revision:

root / man / gnt-node.rst @ 2237687b

History | View | Annotate | Download (17.4 kB)

1
gnt-node(8) Ganeti | Version @GANETI_VERSION@
2
=============================================
3

    
4
Name
5
----
6

    
7
gnt-node - Node administration
8

    
9
Synopsis
10
--------
11

    
12
**gnt-node** {command} [arguments...]
13

    
14
DESCRIPTION
15
-----------
16

    
17
The **gnt-node** is used for managing the (physical) nodes in the
18
Ganeti system.
19

    
20
COMMANDS
21
--------
22

    
23
ADD
24
~~~
25

    
26
| **add** [--readd] [-s *secondary\_ip*] [-g *nodegroup*]
27
| [--master-capable=``yes|no``] [--vm-capable=``yes|no``]
28
| [--node-parameters *ndparams*]
29
| {*nodename*}
30

    
31
Adds the given node to the cluster.
32

    
33
This command is used to join a new node to the cluster. You will
34
have to provide the password for root of the node to be able to add
35
the node in the cluster. The command needs to be run on the Ganeti
36
master.
37

    
38
Note that the command is potentially destructive, as it will
39
forcibly join the specified host the cluster, not paying attention
40
to its current status (it could be already in a cluster, etc.)
41

    
42
The ``-s`` is used in dual-home clusters and specifies the new node's
43
IP in the secondary network. See the discussion in **gnt-cluster**(8)
44
for more information.
45

    
46
In case you're readding a node after hardware failure, you can use
47
the ``--readd`` parameter. In this case, you don't need to pass the
48
secondary IP again, it will reused from the cluster. Also, the
49
drained and offline flags of the node will be cleared before
50
re-adding it.
51

    
52
The ``-g`` is used to add the new node into a specific node group,
53
specified by UUID or name. If only one node group exists you can
54
skip this option, otherwise it's mandatory.
55

    
56
The ``vm_capable``, ``master_capable`` and ``ndparams`` options are
57
described in **ganeti**(7), and are used to set the properties of the
58
new node.
59

    
60
Example::
61

    
62
    # gnt-node add node5.example.com
63
    # gnt-node add -s 192.0.2.5 node5.example.com
64
    # gnt-node add -g group2 -s 192.0.2.9 node9.group2.example.com
65

    
66

    
67
ADD-TAGS
68
~~~~~~~~
69

    
70
**add-tags** [--from *file*] {*nodename*} {*tag*...}
71

    
72
Add tags to the given node. If any of the tags contains invalid
73
characters, the entire operation will abort.
74

    
75
If the ``--from`` option is given, the list of tags will be
76
extended with the contents of that file (each line becomes a tag).
77
In this case, there is not need to pass tags on the command line
78
(if you do, both sources will be used). A file name of - will be
79
interpreted as stdin.
80

    
81
EVACUATE
82
~~~~~~~~
83

    
84
**evacuate** [-f] [--early-release] [--iallocator *NAME* \|
85
--new-secondary *destination\_node*] {*node*...}
86

    
87
This command will move all secondary instances away from the given
88
node(s). It works only for instances having a drbd disk template.
89

    
90
The new location for the instances can be specified in two ways:
91

    
92
- as a single node for all instances, via the ``--new-secondary``
93
  option
94

    
95
- or via the ``--iallocator`` option, giving a script name as
96
  parameter, so each instance will be in turn placed on the (per the
97
  script) optimal node
98

    
99

    
100
The ``--early-release`` changes the code so that the old storage on
101
node being evacuated is removed early (before the resync is
102
completed) and the internal Ganeti locks are also released for both
103
the current secondary and the new secondary, thus allowing more
104
parallelism in the cluster operation. This should be used only when
105
recovering from a disk failure on the current secondary (thus the
106
old storage is already broken) or when the storage on the primary
107
node is known to be fine (thus we won't need the old storage for
108
potential recovery).
109

    
110
Example::
111

    
112
    # gnt-node evacuate -I dumb node3.example.com
113

    
114

    
115
FAILOVER
116
~~~~~~~~
117

    
118
**failover** [-f] [--ignore-consistency] {*node*}
119

    
120
This command will fail over all instances having the given node as
121
primary to their secondary nodes. This works only for instances having
122
a drbd disk template.
123

    
124
Normally the failover will check the consistency of the disks before
125
failing over the instance. If you are trying to migrate instances off
126
a dead node, this will fail. Use the ``--ignore-consistency`` option
127
for this purpose.
128

    
129
Example::
130

    
131
    # gnt-node failover node1.example.com
132

    
133

    
134
INFO
135
~~~~
136

    
137
**info** [*node*...]
138

    
139
Show detailed information about the nodes in the cluster. If you
140
don't give any arguments, all nodes will be shows, otherwise the
141
output will be restricted to the given names.
142

    
143
LIST
144
~~~~
145

    
146
| **list**
147
| [--no-headers] [--separator=*SEPARATOR*]
148
| [--units=*UNITS*] [-o *[+]FIELD,...*]
149
| [node...]
150

    
151
Lists the nodes in the cluster.
152

    
153
The ``--no-headers`` option will skip the initial header line. The
154
``--separator`` option takes an argument which denotes what will be
155
used between the output fields. Both these options are to help
156
scripting.
157

    
158
The units used to display the numeric values in the output varies,
159
depending on the options given. By default, the values will be
160
formatted in the most appropriate unit. If the ``--separator``
161
option is given, then the values are shown in mebibytes to allow
162
parsing by scripts. In both cases, the ``--units`` option can be
163
used to enforce a given output unit.
164

    
165
Queries of nodes will be done in parallel with any running jobs. This might
166
give inconsistent results for the free disk/memory.
167

    
168
The ``-o`` option takes a comma-separated list of output fields.
169
The available fields and their meaning are:
170

    
171

    
172

    
173
name
174
    the node name
175

    
176
pinst_cnt
177
    the number of instances having this node as primary
178

    
179
pinst_list
180
    the list of instances having this node as primary, comma separated
181

    
182
sinst_cnt
183
    the number of instances having this node as a secondary node
184

    
185
sinst_list
186
    the list of instances having this node as a secondary node, comma
187
    separated
188

    
189
pip
190
    the primary ip of this node (used for cluster communication)
191

    
192
sip
193
    the secondary ip of this node (used for data replication in dual-ip
194
    clusters, see gnt-cluster(8)
195

    
196
dtotal
197
    total disk space in the volume group used for instance disk
198
    allocations
199

    
200
dfree
201
    available disk space in the volume group
202

    
203
mtotal
204
    total memory on the physical node
205

    
206
mnode
207
    the memory used by the node itself
208

    
209
mfree
210
    memory available for instance allocations
211

    
212
bootid
213
    the node bootid value; this is a linux specific feature that
214
    assigns a new UUID to the node at each boot and can be use to
215
    detect node reboots (by tracking changes in this value)
216

    
217
tags
218
    comma-separated list of the node's tags
219

    
220
serial_no
221
    the so called 'serial number' of the node; this is a numeric field
222
    that is incremented each time the node is modified, and it can be
223
    used to detect modifications
224

    
225
ctime
226
    the creation time of the node; note that this field contains spaces
227
    and as such it's harder to parse
228

    
229
    if this attribute is not present (e.g. when upgrading from older
230
    versions), then "N/A" will be shown instead
231

    
232
mtime
233
    the last modification time of the node; note that this field
234
    contains spaces and as such it's harder to parse
235

    
236
    if this attribute is not present (e.g. when upgrading from older
237
    versions), then "N/A" will be shown instead
238

    
239
uuid
240
    Show the UUID of the node (generated automatically by Ganeti)
241

    
242
ctotal
243
    the toal number of logical processors
244

    
245
cnodes
246
    the number of NUMA domains on the node, if the hypervisor can
247
    export this information
248

    
249
csockets
250
    the number of physical CPU sockets, if the hypervisor can export
251
    this information
252

    
253
master_candidate
254
    whether the node is a master candidate or not
255

    
256
drained
257
    whether the node is drained or not; the cluster still communicates
258
    with drained nodes but excludes them from allocation operations
259

    
260
offline
261
    whether the node is offline or not; if offline, the cluster does
262
    not communicate with offline nodes; useful for nodes that are not
263
    reachable in order to avoid delays
264

    
265
role
266
    A condensed version of the node flags; this field will output a
267
    one-character field, with the following possible values:
268

    
269
    - *M* for the master node
270

    
271
    - *C* for a master candidate
272

    
273
    - *R* for a regular node
274

    
275
    - *D* for a drained node
276

    
277
    - *O* for an offline node
278

    
279
master_capable
280
    whether the node can become a master candidate
281

    
282
vm_capable
283
    whether the node can host instances
284

    
285
group
286
    the name of the node's group, if known (the query is done without
287
    locking, so data consistency is not guaranteed)
288

    
289
group.uuid
290
    the UUID of the node's group
291

    
292

    
293
If the value of the option starts with the character ``+``, the new
294
fields will be added to the default list. This allows to quickly
295
see the default list plus a few other fields, instead of retyping
296
the entire list of fields.
297

    
298
Note that some of this fields are known from the configuration of
299
the cluster (e.g. name, pinst, sinst, pip, sip and thus the master
300
does not need to contact the node for this data (making the listing
301
fast if only fields from this set are selected), whereas the other
302
fields are "live" fields and we need to make a query to the cluster
303
nodes.
304

    
305
Depending on the virtualization type and implementation details,
306
the mtotal, mnode and mfree may have slighly varying meanings. For
307
example, some solutions share the node memory with the pool of
308
memory used for instances (KVM), whereas others have separate
309
memory for the node and for the instances (Xen).
310

    
311
If no node names are given, then all nodes are queried. Otherwise,
312
only the given nodes will be listed.
313

    
314

    
315
LIST-FIELDS
316
~~~~~~~~~~~
317

    
318
**list-fields** [field...]
319

    
320
Lists available fields for nodes.
321

    
322

    
323
LIST-TAGS
324
~~~~~~~~~
325

    
326
**list-tags** {*nodename*}
327

    
328
List the tags of the given node.
329

    
330
MIGRATE
331
~~~~~~~
332

    
333
**migrate** [-f] [--non-live] [--migration-mode=live\|non-live]
334
{*node*}
335

    
336
This command will migrate all instances having the given node as
337
primary to their secondary nodes. This works only for instances
338
having a drbd disk template.
339

    
340
As for the **gnt-instance migrate** command, the options
341
``--no-live`` and ``--migration-mode`` can be given to influence
342
the migration type.
343

    
344
Example::
345

    
346
    # gnt-node migrate node1.example.com
347

    
348

    
349
MODIFY
350
~~~~~~
351

    
352
| **modify** [-f] [--submit]
353
| [--master-candidate=``yes|no``] [--drained=``yes|no``] [--offline=``yes|no``]
354
| [--master-capable=``yes|no``] [--vm-capable=``yes|no``] [--auto-promote]
355
| [-s *secondary_ip*]
356
| [--node-parameters *ndparams*]
357
| [--node-powered=``yes|no``]
358
| {*node*}
359

    
360
This command changes the role of the node. Each options takes
361
either a literal yes or no, and only one option should be given as
362
yes. The meaning of the roles and flags are described in the
363
manpage **ganeti**(7).
364

    
365
``--node-powered`` can be used to modify state-of-record if it doesn't reflect
366
the reality anymore.
367

    
368
In case a node is demoted from the master candidate role, the
369
operation will be refused unless you pass the ``--auto-promote``
370
option. This option will cause the operation to lock all cluster nodes
371
(thus it will not be able to run in parallel with most other jobs),
372
but it allows automated maintenance of the cluster candidate pool. If
373
locking all cluster node is too expensive, another option is to
374
promote manually another node to master candidate before demoting the
375
current one.
376

    
377
Example (setting a node offline, which will demote it from master
378
candidate role if is in that role)::
379

    
380
    # gnt-node modify --offline=yes node1.example.com
381

    
382
The ``-s`` can be used to change the node's secondary ip. No drbd
383
instances can be running on the node, while this operation is
384
taking place.
385

    
386
Example (setting the node back to online and master candidate)::
387

    
388
    # gnt-node modify --offline=no --master-candidate=yes node1.example.com
389

    
390

    
391
REMOVE
392
~~~~~~
393

    
394
**remove** {*nodename*}
395

    
396
Removes a node from the cluster. Instances must be removed or
397
migrated to another cluster before.
398

    
399
Example::
400

    
401
    # gnt-node remove node5.example.com
402

    
403

    
404
REMOVE-TAGS
405
~~~~~~~~~~~
406

    
407
**remove-tags** [--from *file*] {*nodename*} {*tag*...}
408

    
409
Remove tags from the given node. If any of the tags are not
410
existing on the node, the entire operation will abort.
411

    
412
If the ``--from`` option is given, the list of tags to be removed will
413
be extended with the contents of that file (each line becomes a tag).
414
In this case, there is not need to pass tags on the command line (if
415
you do, tags from both sources will be removed). A file name of - will
416
be interpreted as stdin.
417

    
418
VOLUMES
419
~~~~~~~
420

    
421
| **volumes** [--no-headers] [--human-readable]
422
| [--separator=*SEPARATOR*] [--output=*FIELDS*]
423
| [*node*...]
424

    
425
Lists all logical volumes and their physical disks from the node(s)
426
provided.
427

    
428
The ``--no-headers`` option will skip the initial header line. The
429
``--separator`` option takes an argument which denotes what will be
430
used between the output fields. Both these options are to help
431
scripting.
432

    
433
The units used to display the numeric values in the output varies,
434
depending on the options given. By default, the values will be
435
formatted in the most appropriate unit. If the ``--separator``
436
option is given, then the values are shown in mebibytes to allow
437
parsing by scripts. In both cases, the ``--units`` option can be
438
used to enforce a given output unit.
439

    
440
The ``-o`` option takes a comma-separated list of output fields.
441
The available fields and their meaning are:
442

    
443
node
444
    the node name on which the volume exists
445

    
446
phys
447
    the physical drive (on which the LVM physical volume lives)
448

    
449
vg
450
    the volume group name
451

    
452
name
453
    the logical volume name
454

    
455
size
456
    the logical volume size
457

    
458
instance
459
    The name of the instance to which this volume belongs, or (in case
460
    it's an orphan volume) the character "-"
461

    
462

    
463
Example::
464

    
465
    # gnt-node volumes node5.example.com
466
    Node              PhysDev   VG    Name                                 Size Instance
467
    node1.example.com /dev/hdc1 xenvg instance1.example.com-sda_11000.meta 128  instance1.example.com
468
    node1.example.com /dev/hdc1 xenvg instance1.example.com-sda_11001.data 256  instance1.example.com
469

    
470

    
471
LIST-STORAGE
472
~~~~~~~~~~~~
473

    
474
| **list-storage** [--no-headers] [--human-readable]
475
| [--separator=*SEPARATOR*] [--storage-type=*STORAGE\_TYPE*]
476
| [--output=*FIELDS*]
477
| [*node*...]
478

    
479
Lists the available storage units and their details for the given
480
node(s).
481

    
482
The ``--no-headers`` option will skip the initial header line. The
483
``--separator`` option takes an argument which denotes what will be
484
used between the output fields. Both these options are to help
485
scripting.
486

    
487
The units used to display the numeric values in the output varies,
488
depending on the options given. By default, the values will be
489
formatted in the most appropriate unit. If the ``--separator``
490
option is given, then the values are shown in mebibytes to allow
491
parsing by scripts. In both cases, the ``--units`` option can be
492
used to enforce a given output unit.
493

    
494
The ``--storage-type`` option can be used to choose a storage unit
495
type. Possible choices are lvm-pv, lvm-vg or file.
496

    
497
The ``-o`` option takes a comma-separated list of output fields.
498
The available fields and their meaning are:
499

    
500
node
501
    the node name on which the volume exists
502

    
503
type
504
    the type of the storage unit (currently just what is passed in via
505
    ``--storage-type``)
506

    
507
name
508
    the path/identifier of the storage unit
509

    
510
size
511
    total size of the unit; for the file type see a note below
512

    
513
used
514
    used space in the unit; for the file type see a note below
515

    
516
free
517
    available disk space
518

    
519
allocatable
520
    whether we the unit is available for allocation (only lvm-pv can
521
    change this setting, the other types always report true)
522

    
523

    
524
Note that for the "file" type, the total disk space might not equal
525
to the sum of used and free, due to the method Ganeti uses to
526
compute each of them. The total and free values are computed as the
527
total and free space values for the filesystem to which the
528
directory belongs, but the used space is computed from the used
529
space under that directory *only*, which might not be necessarily
530
the root of the filesystem, and as such there could be files
531
outside the file storage directory using disk space and causing a
532
mismatch in the values.
533

    
534
Example::
535

    
536
    node1# gnt-node list-storage node2
537
    Node  Type   Name        Size Used   Free Allocatable
538
    node2 lvm-pv /dev/sda7 673.8G 1.5G 672.3G Y
539
    node2 lvm-pv /dev/sdb1 698.6G   0M 698.6G Y
540

    
541

    
542
MODIFY-STORAGE
543
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
544

    
545
**modify-storage** [``--allocatable=yes|no``]
546
{*node*} {*storage-type*} {*volume-name*}
547

    
548
Modifies storage volumes on a node. Only LVM physical volumes can
549
be modified at the moment. They have a storage type of "lvm-pv".
550

    
551
Example::
552

    
553
    # gnt-node modify-storage --allocatable no node5.example.com lvm-pv /dev/sdb1
554

    
555

    
556
REPAIR-STORAGE
557
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
558

    
559
**repair-storage** [--ignore-consistency] {*node*} {*storage-type*}
560
{*volume-name*}
561

    
562
Repairs a storage volume on a node. Only LVM volume groups can be
563
repaired at this time. They have the storage type "lvm-vg".
564

    
565
On LVM volume groups, **repair-storage** runs "vgreduce
566
--removemissing".
567

    
568

    
569

    
570
**Caution:** Running this command can lead to data loss. Use it with
571
care.
572

    
573
The ``--ignore-consistency`` option will ignore any inconsistent
574
disks (on the nodes paired with this one). Use of this option is
575
most likely to lead to data-loss.
576

    
577
Example::
578

    
579
    # gnt-node repair-storage node5.example.com lvm-vg xenvg
580

    
581

    
582
POWERCYCLE
583
~~~~~~~~~~
584

    
585
**powercycle** [``--yes``] [``--force``] {*node*}
586

    
587
This commands (tries to) forcefully reboot a node. It is a command
588
that can be used if the node environemnt is broken, such that the
589
admin can no longer login over ssh, but the Ganeti node daemon is
590
still working.
591

    
592
Note that this command is not guaranteed to work; it depends on the
593
hypervisor how effective is the reboot attempt. For Linux, this
594
command require that the kernel option CONFIG\_MAGIC\_SYSRQ is
595
enabled.
596

    
597
The ``--yes`` option can be used to skip confirmation, while the
598
``--force`` option is needed if the target node is the master
599
node.
600

    
601
POWER
602
~~~~~
603

    
604
**power** on|off|cycle|status {*node*}
605

    
606
This commands calls out to out-of-band management to change the power
607
state of given node. With ``status`` you get the power status as reported
608
by the out-of-band managment script.