Red Hat ENTERPRISE LINUX 5 - CONFIGURATION NFS OVER GFS Guide d'installation

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Configuring and Managing a Red
Hat Cluster
Red Hat Cluster for Red Hat Enterprise
Linux 5
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Résumé du contenu

Page 1 - Hat Cluster

Configuring and Managing a RedHat ClusterRed Hat Cluster for Red Hat EnterpriseLinux 5

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Other options are available for storage according to the type of storage interface; for ex-ample, iSCSI or GNBD. A Fibre Channel switch can be configu

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grouped into a failover domain for a cluster service. The services comprise resources such asNFS exports, IP addresses, and shared GFS partitions.Figu

Page 4 - Table of Contents

In addition, information about using Conga and system-config-cluster is provided in sub-sequent chapters of this document. Information about the comma

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ine which users are allowed to access clusters and computers registered in the luci database. Itis possible to import users as a batch operation in a

Page 6 - Introduction

Figure 1.4. luci cluster Tab2. Conga6

Page 7 - 1. Document Conventions

Figure 1.5. luci storage Tab3. system-config-cluster Cluster Administration GUIThis section provides an overview of the cluster administration graphic

Page 8 - 2. Feedback

Figure 1.6. Cluster Configuration ToolThe Cluster Configuration Tool represents cluster configuration components in the configura-tion file (/etc/clus

Page 9 - Overview

elements under Fence Devices. Using configuration buttons at the bottom of the right frame(below Properties), you can add fence devices, delete fence

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Figure 1.7. Cluster Status ToolThe nodes and services displayed in the Cluster Status Tool are determined by the clusterconfiguration file (/etc/clust

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Command LineToolUsed With Purposeccs_tool —Cluster Configur-ation SystemToolCluster Infra-structureccs_tool is a program for making online updates to

Page 12 - 2. Conga

Configuring and Managing a Red Hat Cluster: Red Hat Clusterfor Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5Copyright © 2007 Red Hat, Inc.Configuring and Managing a Red

Page 13 - Figure 1.3. luci homebase Tab

Certain low-cost alternatives, such as host RAID controllers, software RAID without clustersupport, and multi-initiator parallel SCSI configurations a

Page 14 - Figure 1.4. luci cluster Tab

Chapter 2. Configuring Red HatCluster With CongaThis chapter describes how to configure Red Hat Cluster software using Conga, and consists ofthe follo

Page 15 - Figure 1.5. luci storage Tab

To administer Red Hat Clusters with Conga, install and run luci and ricci as follows:1. At each node to be administered by Conga, install the ricci ag

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(or the equivalent). The URL syntax for the luci server ishttps://luci_server_hostname:8084. The first time you access luci, two SSL certificate dia-l

Page 17 - 3.2. Cluster Status Tool

• The Cluster Name text box displays the cluster name; it does not accept a cluster namechange. You cannot change the cluster name. The only way to ch

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NoteFor more information about setting Quorum Partition parameters, refer to theqdisk(8) man page.5. Configuring Fence DevicesConfiguring fence device

Page 19 - Table 1.1. Command Line Tools

• Dell DRAC• HP iLO• IBM RSA II• IPMI LAN• RPS10 Serial SwitchThis section provides procedures for the following tasks:• Creating shared fence devices

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Figure 2.1. Fence Device Configuration3. At the Add a Sharable Fence Device page, click the drop-down box under Fencing Typeand select the type of fen

Page 21 - Cluster With Conga

1. At the detailed menu for the cluster (below the clusters menu), click Shared FenceDevices. Clicking Shared Fence Devices causes the display of the

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1. At the detailed menu for the cluster (below the clusters menu), click Nodes. ClickingNodes causes the display of an Add a Node element and a Config

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d. Joining the added node to cluster.A progress page shows the progress of those actions for each added node.5. When the process of adding a node is c

Page 25 - 5. Configuring Fence Devices

2. Disable or relocate each service that is running on the node to be deleted:NoteRepeat this step for each service that needs to be disabled or start

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NoteChanging a failover domain configuration has no effect on currently running ser-vices.NoteFailover domains are not required for operation.By defau

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3. At the Add a Failover Domain page, specify a failover domain name at the Failover Do-main Name text box.NoteThe name should be descriptive enough t

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4. Modifying failover name — To change the failover domain name, modify the text at the Fail-over Domain Name text box.NoteThe name should be descript

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select the type of resource to configure. The resource options are described as follows:GFSName — Create a name for the file system resource.Mount Poi

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Monitor Link checkbox — Check the box to enable or disable link status monitoring of theIP address resourceNFS MountName — Create a symbolic name for

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directly to service, not to a resource within a service.4. Click Submit. Clicking Submit causes a progress page to be displayed followed by the dis-pl

Page 32 - 7.1. Adding a Failover Domain

NoteIf you are adding a Samba-service resource, connect a Samba-service re-source directly to the service, not to a resource within a service.6. If yo

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forms throughout the storage user interface. This general choice allows you to avoid difficultdecimal representations of storage size (for example, if

Page 34 - 8. Adding Cluster Resources

Table of ContentsIntroduction ...vi1. Docu

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Chapter 3. Managing Red Hat ClusterWith CongaThis chapter describes various administrative tasks for managing a Red Hat Cluster and con-sists of the f

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node. You can select this action for any state the cluster is in. Deleting a cluster freeseach node in the cluster for use in another cluster.2. Selec

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Selecting Have node join cluster starts cluster software and makes the node join thecluster. Making a node join a cluster allows the node to automatic

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• Configure this service — Configure this service is available when the service is run-ning or not running. Selecting Configure this service causes th

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Chapter 4. Configuring Red HatCluster With system-config-clusterThis chapter describes how to configure Red Hat Cluster software using system-config-c

Page 40 - With Conga

9. Starting the cluster software. Refer to Section 10, “Starting the Cluster Software”.2. Starting the Cluster Configuration ToolYou can start the Clu

Page 41 - 2. Managing Cluster Nodes

3. Clicking Create New Configuration causes the New Configuration dialog box to be dis-played (refer to Figure 4.2, “Creating A New Configuration”). T

Page 42 - /etc/cluster/

Figure 4.2. Creating A New Configuration4. When you have completed entering the cluster name and other parameters in the NewConfiguration dialog box,

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Cluster Properties dialog box presents text boxes for Name, Config Version, and twoFence Daemon Properties parameters: Post-Join Delay and Post-Fail D

Page 44 - 1. Configuration Tasks

Fence Device button. Clicking Add a Fence Device causes the Fence Device Configura-tion dialog box to be displayed (refer to Figure 4.4, “Fence Device

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5.3. Deleting a Member from a Cluster ...456. Configuring a Failover Domain ...

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2. At the bottom of the right frame (labeled Properties), click the Add a Cluster Node button.Clicking that button causes a Node Properties dialog box

Page 47 - 3. Naming The Cluster

c. At the Fence Configuration dialog box, bottom of the right frame (below Properties),click Add a New Fence Level. Clicking Add a New Fence Level cau

Page 48 - 4. Configuring Fence Devices

Section 5.1, “Adding a Member to a Cluster”.2. Click Send to Cluster to propagate the updated configuration to other running nodes in thecluster.3. Us

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4. Start cluster services on the new node by running the following commands in this order:a. service cman startb. service clvmd startc. service gfs st

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Figure 4.6. Confirm Deleting a Memberd. At that dialog box, click Yes to confirm deletion.e. Propagate the updated configuration by clicking the Send

Page 51 - Two Nodes

• Ordered — Allows you to specify a preference order among the members of a failover do-main. The member at the top of the list is the most preferred,

Page 52 - Than Two Nodes

2. At the bottom of the right frame (labeled Properties), click the Create a Failover Domainbutton. Clicking the Create a Failover Domain button cause

Page 53

over domain.)6. To prioritize the order in which the members in the failover domain assume control of afailed cluster service, follow these steps:a. C

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• Running cluster — If this cluster is operational and running, and you want to propagatethe change immediately, click the Send to Cluster button. Cli

Page 55 - 6.1. Adding a Failover Domain

4. When finished, click Close.5. At the Cluster Configuration Tool, perform one of the following actions depending onwhether the configuration is for

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IntroductionThis document provides information about installing, configuring and managing Red Hat Clustercomponents. Red Hat Cluster components are pa

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Device — Specify the device file associated with the file system resource.Options — Mount options.File System ID — When creating a new file system res

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addresses (with wild-card support), and netgroups.Read-Write and Read Only options — Specify the type of access rights for this NFS clientresource:• R

Page 59 - 7. Adding Cluster Resources

2. At the bottom of the right frame (labeled Properties), click the Create a Service button.Clicking Create a Service causes the Add a Service dialog

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is checked, the service is started automatically when a cluster is started and running. IfAutostart This Service is not checked, the service must be s

Page 61

ton. The process is the same as creating a shared resource described in Section 7, “AddingCluster Resources”. The private resource will appear as a ch

Page 62

10. Starting the Cluster SoftwareAfter you have propagated the cluster configuration to the cluster nodes you can either rebooteach node or start the

Page 63

Chapter 5. Managing Red Hat ClusterWith system-config-clusterThis chapter describes various administrative tasks for managing a Red Hat Cluster and co

Page 64

Figure 5.1. Cluster Status ToolYou can use the Cluster Status Tool to enable, disable, restart, or relocate a high-availabilityservice. The Cluster St

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Members Status DescriptionMemberThe node is part of the cluster.Note: A node can be a member of a cluster; however, the node maybe inactive and incapa

Page 66 - With system-config-cluster

ImportantAlthough the Cluster Configuration Tool provides a Quorum Votes parameter inthe Properties dialog box of each cluster member, that parameter

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• Linux Virtual Server Administration — Provides information on configuring high-performancesystems and services with the Linux Virtual Server (LVS).•

Page 68 - Table 5.2. Services Status

Each time you save a configuration file, the Cluster Configuration Tool saves backup copiesof the three most recently used configuration files as /etc

Page 69 - Database

11. Click the Cluster Management tab and verify that the changes have been propagated tothe cluster members.5. Disabling the Cluster SoftwareIt may be

Page 70

Appendix A. Example of Setting UpApache HTTP ServerThis appendix provides an example of setting up a highly available Apache HTTP Server on aRed Hat C

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2. Configuring Shared StorageTo set up the shared file system resource, perform the following tasks as root on one clustersystem:1. On one cluster nod

Page 72 - Apache HTTP Server

DocumentRoot "/mnt/httpdservice/html"• Specify a unique IP address to which the service will listen for requests. For example:Listen 192.168

Page 73 - TP Server

• Enter a Name to be associated with the Apache HTTP Server service.• Specify the path to the Apache HTTP Server init script (for example, /etc/rc.d/i

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Appendix B. Fence DeviceParametersThis appendix provides tables with parameter descriptions of fence devices.NoteCertain fence devices have an optiona

Page 75 - /dev/sda3)

Field DescriptionIP Address The IP address assigned to the PAP console.Login The login name used to access the PAP console.Password The password used

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Table B.6. GNBD (Global Network Block Device)Field DescriptionName A name for the server with HP iLO support.Hostname The hostname assigned to the dev

Page 77 - Table B.4. Dell DRAC

Field DescriptionIP Address The IP address assigned to the IPMI port.Login The login name of a user capable of issuing power on/off commands to thegiv

Page 78 - Table B.8. IBM Blade Center

TipA tip is typically an alternative way of performing a task.ImportantImportant information is necessary, but possibly unexpected, such as a configur

Page 79 - Table B.12. McData SAN Switch

Field DescriptionName A name for the WTI RPS-10 power switch connected to the cluster.Device The device the switch is connected to on the controlling

Page 80 - Table B.15. SCSI Fencing

Field Description(optional)Table B.17. Vixel SAN SwitchField DescriptionName A name for the WTI power switch connected to the cluster.IP Address The I

Page 81 - Table B.18. WTI Power Switch

Appendix C. Upgrading A Red HatCluster from RHEL 4 to RHEL 5This appendix provides a procedure for upgrading a Red Hat cluster from RHEL 4 to RHEL 5.T

Page 82 - Cluster from RHEL 4 to RHEL 5

3. Disable cluster software from starting during reboot. At each node, run /sbin/chkconfig asfollows:# chkconfig --level 2345 rgmanager off# chkconfig

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6. Update the software in the cluster nodes to RHEL 5 and Red Hat Cluster Suite for RHEL 5.You can acquire and update software through Red Hat Network

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IndexAApache HTTP Serverhttpd.conf, 65setting up service, 64Cclusteradministration, 32, 58diagnosing and correcting problems, 35, 63disabling the clus

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cluster, 35, 63Uupgrading, RHEL 4 to RHEL 5, 7478

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Chapter 1. Red Hat ClusterConfiguration and ManagementOverviewRed Hat Cluster allows you to connect a group of computers (called nodes or members) to

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