December 7, 2009 @PACKAGE_NAME@ @VERSION@ Alan Robertson stonith alanr@unix.sh Simon Horman man page horms@vergenet.net Florian Haas man page florian.haas@linbit.com stonith 8 System administration utilities stonith extensible interface for remotely powering down a node in the cluster stonith stonith stonith stonith-device-type stonith stonith-device-type name=value stonith-device-parameters stonith-device-parameters-file count stonith stonith-device-type name=value stonith-device-parameters stonith-device-parameters-file count reset on off nodename Description The STONITH module provides an extensible interface for remotely powering down a node in the cluster (STONITH = Shoot The Other Node In The Head). The idea is quite simple: when the software running on one machine wants to make sure another machine in the cluster is not using a resource, pull the plug on the other machine. It's simple and reliable, albeit admittedly brutal. Options The following options are supported: count Perform any actions identified by the , and options count times. stonith-device-parameters-file Path of file specifying parameters for a stonith device. To determine the syntax of the parameters file for a given device type run: # stonith -t stonith-device-type -n All of the listed parameters need to appear in order on a single line in the parameters file and be delimited by whitespace. Display detailed information about a stonith device including description, configuration information, parameters and any other related information. When specified without a stonith-device-type, detailed information on all stonith devices is displayed. If you don't yet own a stonith device and want to know more about the ones we support, this information is likely to be helpful. List the valid stonith device types, suitable for passing as an argument to the option. List the hosts controlled by the stonith device. Output the parameter names of the stonith device. name=value Parameter, in the form of a name/value pair, to pass directly to the stonith device. To determine the syntax of the parameters for a given device type run: # stonith -t stonith-device-type -n All of the listed parameter names need to be passed with their corresponding values. stonith-device-parameters Parameters to pass directly to the stonith device. To determine the syntax of the parameters for a given device type run: # stonith -t stonith-device-type -n All of the listed parameter names need to appear in order and be delimited by whitespace. Show the status of the stonith device. Silent operation. Suppress logging of error messages to standard error. action The stonith action to perform on the node identified by nodename. Chosen from reset, on, and off. If a nodename is specified without the option, the stonith action defaults to reset. stonith-device-type The type of the stonith device to be used to effect stonith. A list of supported devices for an installation may be obtained using the option. Ignored. Examples To determine which stonith devices are available on your installation, use the option: # stonith -L All of the supported devices will be displayed one per line. Choose one from this list that is best for your environment - let's use wti_nps for the rest of this example. To get detailed information about this device, use the option: # stonith -t wti_nps -h Included in the output is the list of valid parameter names for wti_nps. To get just the list of valid parameter names, use the option instead: # stonith -t wti_nps -n All of the required parameter names will be displayed one per line. For wti_nps the output is: ipaddr password There are three ways to pass these parameters to the device. The first (and preferred) way is by passing name/value pairs on the stonith command line: # stonith -t wti_nps ipaddr=my-dev-ip password=my-dev-pw ... The second way, which is maintained only for backward compatibility with legacy clusters, is passing the values in order on the stonith command line with the option: # stonith -t wti_nps -p "my-dev-ip my-dev-pw" ... The third way, which is also maintained only for backward compatibility with legacy clusters, is placing the values in order on a single line in a config file: my-dev-ip my-dev-pw ... and passing the name of the file on the stonith command line with the option: # stonith -t wti_nps -F ~/my-wtinps-config ... To make sure you have the configuration set up correctly and that the device is available for stonith operations, use the option: # stonith -t wti_nps ipaddr=my-dev-ip password=my-dev-pw -S If all is well at this point, you should see something similar to: stonith: wti_nps device OK. If you don't, some debugging may be necessary to determine if the config info is correct, the device is powered on, etc. The option can come in handy here - you can add it to any stonith command to cause it to generate debug output. To get the list of hosts controlled by the device, use the option: # stonith -t wti_nps ipaddr=my-dev-ip password=my-dev-pw -l All of the hosts controlled by the device will be displayed one per line. For wti_nps the output could be: node1 node2 node3 To power off one of these hosts, use the option: # stonith -t wti_nps ipaddr=my-dev-ip password=my-dev-pw -T off node See also heartbeat8, meatclient8