Geo Clustering Quick Start #
Geo clustering protects workloads across globally distributed data centers. This document guides you through the basic setup of a Geo cluster, using the Geo bootstrap scripts provided by the crm shell.
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1 Conceptual overview #
Geo clusters based on SUSE® Linux Enterprise High Availability can be considered
“overlay” clusters where each cluster site corresponds to a
cluster node in a traditional cluster. The overlay cluster is managed by the
booth cluster ticket manager (in the following called booth). Each of the
parties involved in a Geo cluster runs a service, the boothd
. It
connects to the booth daemons running on the other sites and exchanges
connectivity details. For making cluster resources highly available across
sites, booth relies on cluster objects called tickets. A ticket grants the
right to run certain resources on a specific cluster site. Booth guarantees
that every ticket is granted to no more than one site at a time.
If the communication between two booth instances breaks down, it might be
because of a network breakdown between the cluster sites or
because of an outage of one cluster site. In this case, you need an additional
instance (a third cluster site or an arbitrator
) to reach
consensus about decisions (such as failover of resources across sites).
Arbitrators are single machines (outside of the clusters) that run a booth
instance in a special mode. Each Geo cluster can have one or multiple
arbitrators.
It is also possible to run a two-site Geo cluster without an arbitrator. In this case, a Geo cluster administrator needs to manually manage the tickets. If a ticket should be granted to more than one site at the same time, booth displays a warning.
For more details on the concept, components and ticket management used for Geo clusters, see Book “Administration Guide”.
2 Usage scenario #
The procedures in this document lead to a basic Geo cluster with two cluster sites and one arbitrator:
We assume the cluster sites are named
amsterdam
andberlin
.We assume that each site consists of two nodes. The nodes
alice
andbob
belong to the clusteramsterdam
. The nodescharlie
anddoro
belong to the clusterberlin
.Site
amsterdam
gets the following virtual IP address:192.168.201.100
.Site
berlin
gets the following virtual IP address:192.168.202.100
.We assume that the arbitrator has the following IP address:
192.168.203.100
.
Before you proceed, make sure the following requirements are fulfilled:
- Two existing clusters
You have at least two existing clusters that you want to combine into a Geo cluster (if you need to set up two clusters first, follow the instructions in the Article “Installation and Setup Quick Start”).
- Meaningful cluster names
Each cluster has a meaningful name that reflects its location, for example:
amsterdam
andberlin
. Cluster names are defined in/etc/corosync/corosync.conf
.- Arbitrator
You have installed a third machine that is not part of any existing clusters and is to be used as arbitrator.
For detailed requirements on each item, see also Section 3, “Requirements”.
3 Requirements #
All machines (cluster nodes and arbitrators) need at least the following modules and extensions:
Basesystem Module 15 SP6
Server Applications Module 15 SP6
SUSE Linux Enterprise High Availability 15 SP6
When installing the machines, select HA GEO Node
as
system role
. This leads to the installation of a
minimal system where the packages from the pattern Geo Clustering
for High Availability (ha_geo)
are installed by default.
The virtual IPs to be used for each cluster site must be accessible across the Geo cluster.
The sites must be reachable on one UDP and TCP port per booth instance. That means any firewalls or IPsec tunnels in between must be configured accordingly.
Other setup decisions may require opening more ports (for example, for DRBD or database replication).
All cluster nodes on all sites should synchronize to an NTP server outside the cluster. For more information, see the Administration Guide for SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6.
If nodes are not synchronized, log files and cluster reports are very hard to analyze.
Use an uneven number of sites in your Geo cluster. If the network connection breaks down, this makes sure that there still is a majority of sites (to avoid a split-brain scenario). If you have an even number of cluster sites, use an arbitrator for handling automatic failover of tickets. If you do not use an arbitrator, you need to handle ticket failover manually.
The cluster on each site has a meaningful name, for example:
amsterdam
andberlin
.The cluster names for each site are defined in the respective
/etc/corosync/corosync.conf
files:totem { [...] cluster_name: amsterdam }
Change the name with following crmsh command:
#
crm cluster rename NEW_NAME
Stop and start the cluster services for the changes to take effect:
#
crm cluster restart
Mixed architectures within one cluster are not supported. However, for Geo clusters, each member of the Geo cluster can have a different architecture—be it a cluster site or an arbitrator. For example, you can run a Geo cluster with three members (two cluster sites and an arbitrator), where one cluster site runs on IBM Z, the other cluster site runs on x86, and the arbitrator runs on POWER.
4 Overview of the Geo bootstrap scripts #
With
crm cluster geo_init
, turn a cluster into the first site of a Geo cluster. The script takes parameters like the names of the clusters, the arbitrator, and one or multiple tickets and creates/etc/booth/booth.conf
from them. It copies the booth configuration to all nodes on the current cluster site. It also configures the cluster resources needed for booth on the current cluster site.For details, see Section 6, “Setting up the first site of a Geo cluster”.
With
crm cluster geo_join
, add the current cluster to an existing Geo cluster. The script copies the booth configuration from an existing cluster site and writes it to/etc/booth/booth.conf
on all nodes on the current cluster site. It also configures the cluster resources needed for booth on the current cluster site.For details, see Section 7, “Adding another site to a Geo cluster”.
With
crm cluster geo_init_arbitrator
, turn the current machine into an arbitrator for the Geo cluster. The script copies the booth configuration from an existing cluster site and writes it to/etc/booth/booth.conf
.For details, see Section 8, “Adding the arbitrator”.
All bootstrap scripts log to
/var/log/crmsh/crmsh.log
. Check the log file
for any details of the bootstrap process. Any options set during the
bootstrap process can be modified later (by modifying booth settings,
modifying resources etc.). For details, see Book “Administration Guide”.
5 Installing the High Availability and Geo clustering packages #
The packages for configuring and managing a Geo cluster are included in the
High Availability
and Geo Clustering for High Availability
installation
patterns. These patterns are only available after the SUSE Linux Enterprise High Availability is installed.
You can register with the SUSE Customer Center and install SUSE Linux Enterprise High Availability while installing SUSE Linux Enterprise Server, or after installation. For more information, see Deployment Guide for SUSE Linux Enterprise Server.
Install the High Availability and Geo clustering patterns from the command line:
#
zypper install -t pattern ha_sles ha_geo
Install the High Availability and Geo clustering patterns on all machines that will be part of your cluster.
Note: Installing software packages on all nodesFor an automated installation of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP6 and SUSE Linux Enterprise High Availability 15 SP6, use AutoYaST to clone existing nodes. For more information, see Book “Administration Guide”, Chapter 3 “Installing SUSE Linux Enterprise High Availability”, Section 3.2 “Mass installation and deployment with AutoYaST”.
6 Setting up the first site of a Geo cluster #
Use the crm cluster geo_init
command to turn an existing
cluster into the first site of a Geo cluster.
amsterdam
) with crm cluster geo_init
#Define a virtual IP per cluster site that can be used to access the site. We assume using
192.168.201.100
and192.168.202.100
for this purpose. You do not need to configure the virtual IPs as cluster resources yet. This is done by the bootstrap scripts.Define the name of at least one ticket that grants the right to run certain resources on a cluster site. Use a meaningful name that reflects the resources that depend on the ticket (for example,
ticket-nfs
). The bootstrap scripts only need the ticket name—you can define the remaining details (ticket dependencies of the resources) later on, as described in Section 10, “Next steps”.Log in to a node of an existing cluster (for example, on node
alice
of the clusteramsterdam
).Run
crm cluster geo_init
. For example, use the following options:#
crm cluster geo_init \ --clusters "amsterdam=192.168.201.100 berlin=192.168.202.100" \
1--tickets ticket-nfs \
2--arbitrator 192.168.203.100
3The names of the cluster sites (as defined in
/etc/corosync/corosync.conf
) and the virtual IP addresses you want to use for each cluster site. In this case, we have two cluster sites (amsterdam
andberlin
) with a virtual IP address each.The name of one or multiple tickets.
The host name or IP address of a machine outside of the clusters.
The bootstrap script creates the booth configuration file and synchronizes it across the cluster sites. It also creates the basic cluster resources needed for booth. Step 4 of Procedure 2 would result in the following booth configuration and cluster resources:
crm cluster geo_init
## The booth configuration file is "/etc/booth/booth.conf". You need to # prepare the same booth configuration file on each arbitrator and # each node in the cluster sites where the booth daemon can be launched. # "transport" means which transport layer booth daemon will use. # Currently only "UDP" is supported. transport="UDP" port="9929" arbitrator="192.168.203.100" site="192.168.201.100" site="192.168.202.100" authfile="/etc/booth/authkey" ticket="ticket-nfs" expire="600"
crm cluster geo_init
#primitive1 booth-ip IPaddr2 \ params rule #cluster-name eq amsterdam ip=192.168.201.100 \ params rule #cluster-name eq berlin ip=192.168.202.100 \ primitive2 booth-site ocf:pacemaker:booth-site \ meta resource-stickiness=INFINITY \ params config=booth \ op monitor interval=10s group3 g-booth booth-ip booth-site \ meta target-role=Stopped4
A virtual IP address for each cluster site. It is required by the booth daemons who need a persistent IP address on each cluster site. | |
A primitive resource for the booth daemon. It communicates with the booth
daemons on the other cluster sites. The daemon can be started on any
node of the site. To make the resource stay on the same node, if possible,
resource-stickiness is set to | |
A cluster resource group for both primitives. With this configuration, each booth daemon is available at its individual IP address, independent of the node the daemon is running on. | |
The cluster resource group is not started by default. After verifying the configuration of your cluster resources (and adding the resources you need to complete your setup), you need to start the resource group. See Required steps to complete the Geo cluster setup for details. |
7 Adding another site to a Geo cluster #
After you have initialized the first site of your Geo cluster, add the
second cluster with crm cluster geo_join
, as described in
Procedure 3.
The script needs SSH access to an already configured cluster site and
adds the current cluster to the Geo cluster.
berlin
) with crm cluster geo_join
#Log in to a node of the cluster site you want to add (for example, on node
charlie
of the clusterberlin
).Run the
crm cluster geo_join
command. For example:#
crm cluster geo_join \ --cluster-node 192.168.201.100\
1--clusters "amsterdam=192.168.201.100 berlin=192.168.202.100"
2Specifies where to copy the booth configuration from. Use the IP address or host name of a node in an already configured Geo cluster site. You can also use the virtual IP address of an existing cluster site (like in this example). Alternatively, use the IP address or host name of an already configured arbitrator for your Geo cluster.
The names of the cluster sites (as defined in
/etc/corosync/corosync.conf
) and the virtual IP addresses you want to use for each cluster site. In this case, we have two cluster sites (amsterdam
andberlin
) with a virtual IP address each.
The crm cluster geo_join
command copies the booth
configuration from
1, see
Example 1. In
addition, it creates the cluster resources needed for booth (see
Example 2).
8 Adding the arbitrator #
After you have set up all sites of your Geo cluster with
crm cluster geo_init
and
crm cluster geo_join
, set up the arbitrator with
crm cluster geo_init_arbitrator
.
crm cluster geo_init_arbitrator
#Log in to the machine you want to use as arbitrator.
Run the following command. For example:
#
crm cluster geo_init_arbitrator --cluster-node 192.168.201.100
1Specifies where to copy the booth configuration from. Use the IP address or host name of a node in an already configured Geo cluster site. Alternatively, use the virtual IP address of an already existing cluster site (like in this example).
The crm cluster geo_init_arbitrator
script copies the
booth configuration from
1, see
Example 1. It also
enables and starts the booth service on the arbitrator. Thus, the arbitrator
is ready to communicate with the booth instances on the cluster sites when
the booth services are running there, too.
9 Monitoring the cluster sites #
To view both cluster sites with the resources and the ticket that you have created during the bootstrapping process, use Hawk2. The Hawk2 Web interface allows you to monitor and manage multiple (unrelated) clusters and Geo clusters.
All clusters to be monitored from Hawk2's
must be running SUSE Linux Enterprise High Availability 15 SP6.If you did not replace the self-signed certificate for Hawk2 on every cluster node with your own certificate (or a certificate signed by an official Certificate Authority) yet, do the following: log in to Hawk2 on every node in every cluster at least once. Verify the certificate (or add an exception in the browser to bypass the warning). Otherwise Hawk2 cannot connect to the cluster.
Start a Web browser and enter the virtual IP of your first cluster site,
amsterdam
:https://192.168.201.100:7630/
Alternatively, use the IP address or host name of
alice
orbob
. If you have set up both nodes with the bootstrap scripts, thehawk
service should run on both nodes.Log in to the Hawk2 Web interface.
From the left navigation bar, select
.Hawk2 shows an overview of the resources and nodes on the current cluster site. It also shows any
that have been configured for the Geo cluster. If you need information about the icons used in this view, click .Figure 2: Hawk2 dashboard with one cluster site (amsterdam
) #To add a dashboard for the second cluster site, click
.Enter the
with which to identify the cluster in the . In this case,berlin
.Enter the fully qualified host name of one of the cluster nodes (in this case,
charlie
ordoro
).Click
. Hawk2 displays a second tab for the newly added cluster site with an overview of its nodes and resources.Figure 3: Hawk2 dashboard with both cluster sites #
To view more details for a cluster site or to manage it, switch to the site's tab and click the chain icon.
Hawk2 opens the
view for this site in a new browser window or tab. From there, you can administer this part of the Geo cluster.
10 Next steps #
The Geo clustering bootstrap scripts provide a quick way to set up a basic Geo cluster that can be used for testing purposes. However, to move the resulting Geo cluster into a functioning Geo cluster that can be used in production environments, more steps are required.
- Starting the booth services on cluster sites
After the bootstrap process, the arbitrator booth service cannot communicate with the booth services on the cluster sites yet, because they are not started by default.
The booth service for each cluster site is managed by the booth resource group
g-booth
(see Example 2, “Cluster resources created bycrm cluster geo_init
”). To start one instance of the booth service per site, start the respective booth resource group on each cluster site. This enables all booth instances to communicate with each other.- Configuring ticket dependencies and order constraints
To make resources depend on the ticket that you have created during the Geo cluster bootstrap process, configure constraints. For each constraint, set a
loss-policy
that defines what should happen to the respective resources if the ticket is revoked from a cluster site.For details, see Book “Geo Clustering Guide”, Chapter 6 “Configuring cluster resources and constraints”.
- Initially granting a ticket to a site
Before booth can manage a certain ticket within the Geo cluster, you initially need to grant it to a site manually. You can use either the booth client command-line tool or Hawk2 to grant a ticket.
For details, see Book “Geo Clustering Guide”, Chapter 8 “Managing Geo clusters”.
The bootstrap scripts create the same booth resources on both cluster sites, and the same booth configuration files on all sites, including the arbitrator. If you extend the Geo cluster setup (to move to a production environment), you will probably fine-tune the booth configuration and change the configuration of the booth-related cluster resources. Afterward, you need to synchronize the changes to the other sites of your Geo cluster to take effect.
To synchronize changes in the booth configuration to all cluster sites (including the arbitrator), use Csync2. Find more information at Book “Geo Clustering Guide”, Chapter 5 “Synchronizing configuration files across all sites and arbitrators”.
The CIB (Cluster Information Database) is not automatically synchronized across cluster sites of a Geo cluster. That means any changes in resource configuration that are required on all cluster sites need to be transferred to the other sites manually. Do so by tagging the respective resources, exporting them from the current CIB, and importing them to the CIB on the other cluster sites. For details, see Book “Geo Clustering Guide”, Chapter 6 “Configuring cluster resources and constraints”, Section 6.4 “Transferring the resource configuration to other cluster sites”.
11 For more information #
More documentation for this product is available at https://documentation.suse.com/sle-ha/. For further configuration and administration tasks, see the comprehensive Geo Clustering Guide.
Find information about data replication across Geo clusters via DRBD in the following SUSE Best Practices document.
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If the Cover Text requirement of section 3 is applicable to these copies of the Document, then if the Document is less than one half of the entire aggregate, the Document's Cover Texts may be placed on covers that bracket the Document within the aggregate, or the electronic equivalent of covers if the Document is in electronic form. Otherwise they must appear on printed covers that bracket the whole aggregate.
8. TRANSLATION #
Translation is considered a kind of modification, so you may distribute translations of the Document under the terms of section 4. Replacing Invariant Sections with translations requires special permission from their copyright holders, but you may include translations of some or all Invariant Sections in addition to the original versions of these Invariant Sections. You may include a translation of this License, and all the license notices in the Document, and any Warranty Disclaimers, provided that you also include the original English version of this License and the original versions of those notices and disclaimers. In case of a disagreement between the translation and the original version of this License or a notice or disclaimer, the original version will prevail.
If a section in the Document is Entitled "Acknowledgements", "Dedications", or "History", the requirement (section 4) to Preserve its Title (section 1) will typically require changing the actual title.
9. TERMINATION #
You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Document except as expressly provided for under this License. Any other attempt to copy, modify, sublicense or distribute the Document is void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this License. However, parties who have received copies, or rights, from you under this License will not have their licenses terminated so long as such parties remain in full compliance.
10. FUTURE REVISIONS OF THIS LICENSE #
The Free Software Foundation may publish new, revised versions of the GNU Free Documentation License from time to time. Such new versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to address new problems or concerns. See https://www.gnu.org/copyleft/.
Each version of the License is given a distinguishing version number. If the Document specifies that a particular numbered version of this License "or any later version" applies to it, you have the option of following the terms and conditions either of that specified version or of any later version that has been published (not as a draft) by the Free Software Foundation. If the Document does not specify a version number of this License, you may choose any version ever published (not as a draft) by the Free Software Foundation.
ADDENDUM: How to use this License for your documents #
Copyright (c) YEAR YOUR NAME. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled “GNU Free Documentation License”.
If you have Invariant Sections, Front-Cover Texts and Back-Cover Texts, replace the “with...Texts.” line with this:
with the Invariant Sections being LIST THEIR TITLES, with the Front-Cover Texts being LIST, and with the Back-Cover Texts being LIST.
If you have Invariant Sections without Cover Texts, or some other combination of the three, merge those two alternatives to suit the situation.
If your document contains nontrivial examples of program code, we recommend releasing these examples in parallel under your choice of free software license, such as the GNU General Public License, to permit their use in free software.