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Configuring and Managing a Red
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Red Hat Cluster for Red Hat Enterprise
Linux 5
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Strany 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

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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

Strany 6 - Introduction

Figure 1.4. luci cluster Tab2. Conga6

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

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

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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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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,

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

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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

Strany 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

Strany 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

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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

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

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

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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

Strany 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).•

Strany 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

Strany 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

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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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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

Strany 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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