diff options
author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-17 06:48:59 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-17 06:48:59 +0000 |
commit | d835b2cae8abc71958b69362162e6a70c3d7ef63 (patch) | |
tree | 81052e3d2ce3e1bcda085f73d925e9d6257dec15 /doc/website-v1 | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | crmsh-upstream.tar.xz crmsh-upstream.zip |
Adding upstream version 4.6.0.upstream/4.6.0upstream
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to '')
87 files changed, 25958 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/website-v1/404.adoc b/doc/website-v1/404.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..926d803 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/404.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,9 @@ +404: Page not found +=================== + +Apologies, but there is nothing here! + +The page you are looking for may have moved. + +* link:/documentation[Documentation] +* link:/faq[Frequently Asked Questions] diff --git a/doc/website-v1/Makefile b/doc/website-v1/Makefile new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8ea2f46 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/Makefile @@ -0,0 +1,145 @@ +ASCIIDOC := asciidoc +CRMCONF := crm.conf +SRC := faq.adoc documentation.adoc development.adoc installation.adoc \ + configuration.adoc about.adoc rsctest-guide.adoc download.adoc \ + history-guide.adoc start-guide.adoc man-1.2.adoc scripts.adoc man-2.0.adoc man-3.adoc man-4.3.adoc +HISTORY_LISTINGS = include/history-guide/nfs-probe-err.typescript \ + include/history-guide/sample-cluster.conf.crm \ + include/history-guide/status-probe-fail.typescript \ + include/history-guide/resource-trace.typescript \ + include/history-guide/stonith-corosync-stopped.typescript \ + include/history-guide/basic-transition.typescript \ + include/history-guide/diff.typescript \ + include/history-guide/info.typescript \ + include/history-guide/resource.typescript \ + include/history-guide/transition-log.typescript +TGT := $(patsubst %.adoc,gen/%/index.html,$(SRC)) +CSS := css/crm.css css/font-awesome.min.css +CSS := $(patsubst %,gen/%,$(CSS)) +ICONS := \ + img/icons/caution.png \ + img/icons/example.png \ + img/icons/home.png \ + img/icons/important.png \ + img/icons/next.png \ + img/icons/note.png \ + img/icons/prev.png \ + img/icons/tip.png \ + img/icons/up.png \ + img/icons/warning.png \ + img/icons/callouts/10.png \ + img/icons/callouts/11.png \ + img/icons/callouts/12.png \ + img/icons/callouts/13.png \ + img/icons/callouts/14.png \ + img/icons/callouts/15.png \ + img/icons/callouts/1.png \ + img/icons/callouts/2.png \ + img/icons/callouts/3.png \ + img/icons/callouts/4.png \ + img/icons/callouts/5.png \ + img/icons/callouts/6.png \ + img/icons/callouts/7.png \ + img/icons/callouts/8.png \ + img/icons/callouts/9.png +IMG := $(ICONS) img/loader.gif img/laptop.png img/servers.gif \ + img/history-guide/sample-cluster.conf.png \ + img/history-guide/smallapache-start.png +IMG := $(patsubst %,gen/%,$(IMG)) +FONTS := fonts/FontAwesome.otf fonts/fontawesome-webfont.eot \ + fonts/fontawesome-webfont.svg fonts/fontawesome-webfont.ttf \ + fonts/fontawesome-webfont.woff +FONTS := $(patsubst %,gen/%,$(FONTS)) +WATCHDIR := watchdir +XDGOPEN := xdg-open +NEWS := $(wildcard news/*.adoc) +NEWSDOC := $(patsubst %.adoc,gen/%/index.html,$(NEWS)) + +.PHONY: all clean deploy open + +all: site + +gen/index.html: index.adoc $(CRMCONF) + @mkdir -p $(dir $@) + @$(ASCIIDOC) --unsafe -b html5 -a icons -a iconsdir=/img/icons -f $(CRMCONF) -o $@ $< + @python ./postprocess.py -o $@ $< + +gen/%/index.html: %.adoc $(CRMCONF) + @mkdir -p $(dir $@) + @$(ASCIIDOC) --unsafe -b html5 -a icons -a iconsdir=/img/icons -f $(CRMCONF) -o $@ $< + @python ./postprocess.py -o $@ $< + +gen/history-guide/index.html: $(HISTORY_LISTINGS) + +gen/man/index.html: ../crm.8.adoc $(CRMCONF) + @mkdir -p $(dir $@) + @$(ASCIIDOC) --unsafe -b html5 -f $(CRMCONF) -o $@ $< + @python ./postprocess.py -o $@ $< + +gen/404.html: 404.adoc $(CRMCONF) + @mkdir -p $(dir $@) + @$(ASCIIDOC) --unsafe -b html5 -f $(CRMCONF) -o $@ $< + @python ./postprocess.py -o $@ $< + +news.adoc: $(NEWS) $(CRMCONF) + @echo "news:" $(NEWS) + python ./make-news.py $@ $(NEWS) + +gen/news/index.html: news.adoc + @mkdir -p $(dir $@) + $(ASCIIDOC) --unsafe -b html5 -f $(CRMCONF) -o $@ $< + @python ./postprocess.py -o $@ $< + +gen/css/%.css: css/%.css + @mkdir -p gen/css + @cp -r $< $@ + @echo "+ $@" + +gen/js/%.js: js/%.js + @mkdir -p gen/js + @cp -r $< $@ + @echo "+ $@" + +gen/img/icons/callouts/%: img/icons/callouts/% + @mkdir -p gen/img/icons/callouts + @cp -r $< $@ + @echo "+ $@" + +gen/img/icons/%: img/icons/% + @mkdir -p gen/img/icons + @cp -r $< $@ + @echo "+ $@" + +gen/img/history-guide/%: img/history-guide/% + @mkdir -p gen/img/history-guide + @cp -r $< $@ + @echo "+ $@" + +gen/img/%: img/% + @mkdir -p gen/img + @cp -r $< $@ + @echo "+ $@" + +gen/fonts/%: fonts/% + @mkdir -p gen/fonts + @cp -r $< $@ + @echo "+ $@" + +gen/atom.xml: $(NEWSDOC) + @echo "atom:" $(NEWSDOC) + python ./make-news.py gen/atom.xml $(NEWS) + +site: gen/atom.xml gen/index.html gen/404.html gen/news/index.html gen/man/index.html $(TGT) $(CSS) $(IMG) $(FONTS) $(NEWSDOC) + @which dos2unix >/dev/null && find gen -name "*.html" -type f -exec dos2unix {} \; + +deploy: site + @echo "TODO: CVS upload" + +open: site + @$(XDGOPEN) gen/index.html + +watch: + @$(WATCHDIR) --verbose --cmd "make" . css img fonts + +clean: + -@$(RM) -rf gen/* news.adoc diff --git a/doc/website-v1/about.adoc b/doc/website-v1/about.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2656625 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/about.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,19 @@ += About = + +== Authors == + +include::../../AUTHORS[] + +== Site == + +This site was generated from http://asciidoc.org[AsciiDoc] sources. + +The CSS for this site started as a clone of the +bare+ theme by https://github.com/rtomayko/adoc-themes[Ryan Tomayko]. + +Fonts used are https://www.google.com/fonts/specimen/Open+Sans[Open Sans] and http://fontawesome.io[Font Awesome]. + +== License == + +`crmsh` is licensed under the GNU General Public License (GPL). + +For more information, see https://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html diff --git a/doc/website-v1/configuration.adoc b/doc/website-v1/configuration.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..fb48c93 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/configuration.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,132 @@ += Configuration = + +.Version information +NOTE: This section applies to `crmsh 2.0+` only. + + +`crm` can be configured using both a system-wide configuration file, +and a per-user configuration file. The values set in the user-local +file take precedence over the system-wide settings. + +The global configuration file is usually installed at +`/etc/crm/crm.conf`, and the user-local configuration file at +`~/.config/crm/crm.conf`. + + +== Upgrading from crm 1.x to 2.x == + +The configuration file format and location changed significantly going +from crm 1.x to 2.x. If `crm` cannot find a user-local configuration +file when starting up, it will look for an old-style configuration +file at `~/.crm.rc`. If this file exists, `crm` will prompt the user +asking if the old-style configuration should be automatically +converted to a new-style configuration file. + + +== Format description == + +The `settings` file consists of sections introduced by a `[section]` +header, and followed by `name=value` pairs. + +Leading whitespace is stripped from values. + +Values can contain format strings referring to other values in the +same section. + +Lines starting with `#` or `;` are interpreted as comments. + +Values starting with `$` are interpreted as environment variable +references, and the value will be retrieved from the named environment +variable if set. + +== Example configuration == + +The example configuration below lists all available options and their +default values. + +---------------------- +[core] +editor = $EDITOR +pager = $PAGER +user = +skill_level = expert +sort_elements = yes +check_frequency = always +check_mode = strict +wait = no +add_quotes = yes +manage_children = ask +force = no +debug = no +ptest = ptest, crm_simulate +dotty = dotty +dot = dot + +[path] +sharedir = /usr/share/crmsh +cache = /var/cache/crm +crm_config = /var/lib/pacemaker/cib +crm_daemon_dir = /usr/lib64/pacemaker +crm_daemon_user = hacluster +ocf_root = /usr/lib/ocf +crm_dtd_dir = /usr/share/pacemaker +pe_state_dir = /var/lib/pacemaker/pengine +heartbeat_dir = /var/lib/heartbeat +hb_delnode = /usr/share/heartbeat/hb_delnode +nagios_plugins = /usr/lib64/nagios/plugins + +[color] +style = color +error = red bold +ok = green bold +warn = yellow bold +info = cyan +help_keyword = blue bold underline +help_header = normal bold +help_topic = yellow bold +help_block = cyan +keyword = yellow +identifier = normal +attr_name = cyan +attr_value = red +resource_reference = green +id_reference = green +score = magenta +ticket = magenta +---------------------- + + +== Loading and saving options == + +Options are loaded from the global configuration file first, and the +user-local file second. This means that the user-local options take +precedence over the global configuration. + +When changing an option using the `options` sublevel, the +configuration file is written to disk with the new value. + +== Syntax highlighting == + +By default, `crm` will try to syntax highlight its output when +connected to a TTY. To disable this behavior, set the configuration +value `style = none` in the `[color]` section. + +The available color choices may depend on the terminal used, but +normally include the following: + +---- +black blue green cyan red magenta yellow white +---- + +Colors can be combined with styles: + +---- +bold blink dim reverse underline normal +---- + +== Setting options from the interactive shell == + +Options can be set directly from the interactive shell using the +`options` sublevel. These options will be written to the per-user +configuration file. Note that changing an option in this way may erase +comments added to the configuration file. diff --git a/doc/website-v1/crm.conf b/doc/website-v1/crm.conf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d1502cf --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/crm.conf @@ -0,0 +1,601 @@ +# +# html5.conf +# +# Asciidoc configuration file. +# html5 backend. +# + +[miscellaneous] +outfilesuffix=.html + +[attributes] +basebackend=html +basebackend-html= +basebackend-html5= +b +[replacements2] +# Line break. +(?m)^(.*)\s\+$=\1<br> + +[replacements] +ifdef::asciidoc7compatible[] +# Superscripts. +\^(.+?)\^=<sup>\1</sup> +# Subscripts. +~(.+?)~=<sub>\1</sub> +endif::asciidoc7compatible[] + +[ruler-blockmacro] +<hr> + +[pagebreak-blockmacro] +<div style="page-break-after:always"></div> + +[blockdef-pass] +asciimath-style=template="asciimathblock",subs=() +latexmath-style=template="latexmathblock",subs=() + +[macros] +(?u)^(?P<name>audio|video)::(?P<target>\S*?)(\[(?P<attrlist>.*?)\])$=# +# math macros. +# Special characters are escaped in HTML math markup. +(?su)[\\]?(?P<name>asciimath|latexmath):(?P<subslist>\S*?)\[(?P<passtext>.*?)(?<!\\)\]=[specialcharacters] +(?u)^(?P<name>asciimath|latexmath)::(?P<subslist>\S*?)(\[(?P<passtext>.*?)\])$=#[specialcharacters] + +[asciimath-inlinemacro] +`{passtext}` + +[asciimath-blockmacro] +<div class="mathblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="content"> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +`{passtext}` +</div></div> + +[asciimathblock] +<div class="mathblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="content"> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +`|` +</div></div> + +[latexmath-inlinemacro] +{passtext} + +[latexmath-blockmacro] +<div class="mathblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="content"> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +{passtext} +</div></div> + +[latexmathblock] +<div class="mathblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="content"> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +| +</div></div> + +[image-inlinemacro] +<span class="image{role? {role}}"> +<a class="image" href="{link}"> +{data-uri%}<img src="{imagesdir=}{imagesdir?/}{target}" alt="{alt={target}}"{width? width="{width}"}{height? height="{height}"}{title? title="{title}"}> +{data-uri#}<img alt="{alt={target}}"{width? width="{width}"}{height? height="{height}"}{title? title="{title}"} +{data-uri#}{sys:"{python}" -u -c "import mimetypes,base64,sys; print 'src=\"data:'+mimetypes.guess_type(r'{target}')[0]+';base64,'; base64.encode(sys.stdin,sys.stdout)" < "{eval:os.path.join(r"{indir={outdir}}",r"{imagesdir=}",r"{target}")}"}"> +{link#}</a> +</span> + +[image-blockmacro] +<div class="imageblock{style? {style}}{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}{align? style="text-align:{align};"}{float? style="float:{float};"}> +<div class="content"> +<a class="image" href="{link}"> +{data-uri%}<img src="{imagesdir=}{imagesdir?/}{target}" alt="{alt={target}}"{width? width="{width}"}{height? height="{height}"}> +{data-uri#}<img alt="{alt={target}}"{width? width="{width}"}{height? height="{height}"} +{data-uri#}{sys:"{python}" -u -c "import mimetypes,base64,sys; print 'src=\"data:'+mimetypes.guess_type(r'{target}')[0]+';base64,'; base64.encode(sys.stdin,sys.stdout)" < "{eval:os.path.join(r"{indir={outdir}}",r"{imagesdir=}",r"{target}")}"}"> +{link#}</a> +</div> +<div class="title">{caption={figure-caption} {counter:figure-number}. }{title}</div> +</div> + +[audio-blockmacro] +<div class="audioblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="title">{caption=}{title}</div> +<div class="content"> +<audio src="{imagesdir=}{imagesdir?/}{target}"{autoplay-option? autoplay}{nocontrols-option! controls}{loop-option? loop}> +Your browser does not support the audio tag. +</audio> +</div></div> + +[video-blockmacro] +<div class="videoblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="title">{caption=}{title}</div> +<div class="content"> +<video src="{imagesdir=}{imagesdir?/}{target}"{width? width="{width}"}{height? height="{height}"}{poster? poster="{poster}"}{autoplay-option? autoplay}{nocontrols-option! controls}{loop-option? loop}> +Your browser does not support the video tag. +</video> +</div></div> + +[unfloat-blockmacro] +<div style="clear:both;"></div> + +[toc-blockmacro] +template::[toc] + +[indexterm-inlinemacro] +# Index term. +{empty} + +[indexterm2-inlinemacro] +# Index term. +# Single entry index term that is visible in the primary text flow. +{1} + +[footnote-inlinemacro] +# footnote:[<text>]. +<span class="footnote"><br>[{0}]<br></span> + +[footnoteref-inlinemacro] +# footnoteref:[<id>], create reference to footnote. +{2%}<span class="footnoteref"><br><a href="#_footnote_{1}">[{1}]</a><br></span> +# footnoteref:[<id>,<text>], create footnote with ID. +{2#}<span class="footnote" id="_footnote_{1}"><br>[{2}]<br></span> + +[callout-inlinemacro] +ifndef::icons[] +<b><{index}></b> +endif::icons[] +ifdef::icons[] +ifndef::data-uri[] +<img src="{icon={iconsdir}/callouts/{index}.png}" alt="{index}"> +endif::data-uri[] +ifdef::data-uri[] +<img alt="{index}" src="data:image/png;base64, +{sys:"{python}" -u -c "import base64,sys; base64.encode(sys.stdin,sys.stdout)" < "{eval:os.path.join(r"{indir={outdir}}",r"{icon={iconsdir}/callouts/{index}.png}")}"}"> +endif::data-uri[] +endif::icons[] + +# Comment line macros. +[comment-inlinemacro] +{showcomments#}<br><span class="comment">{passtext}</span><br> + +[comment-blockmacro] +{showcomments#}<p><span class="comment">{passtext}</span></p> + +[literal-inlinemacro] +# Inline literal. +<span class="monospaced">{passtext}</span> + +# List tags. +[listtags-bulleted] +list=<div class="ulist{style? {style}}{compact-option? compact}{role? {role}}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<ul>|</ul></div> +item=<li>|</li> +text=<p>|</p> + +[listtags-numbered] +# The start attribute is not valid XHTML 1.1 but all browsers support it. +list=<div class="olist{style? {style}}{compact-option? compact}{role? {role}}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<ol class="{style}"{start? start="{start}"}>|</ol></div> +item=<li>|</li> +text=<p>|</p> + +[listtags-labeled] +list=<div class="dlist{compact-option? compact}{role? {role}}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<dl>|</dl></div> +entry= +label= +term=<dt class="hdlist1{strong-option? strong}">|</dt> +item=<dd>|</dd> +text=<p>|</p> + +[listtags-horizontal] +list=<div class="hdlist{compact-option? compact}{role? {role}}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<table>{labelwidth?<col width="{labelwidth}%">}{itemwidth?<col width="{itemwidth}%">}|</table></div> +label=<td class="hdlist1{strong-option? strong}">|</td> +term=|<br> +entry=<tr>|</tr> +item=<td class="hdlist2">|</td> +text=<p style="margin-top: 0;">|</p> + +[listtags-qanda] +list=<div class="qlist{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<ol>|</ol></div> +entry=<li>|</li> +label= +term=<p><em>|</em></p> +item= +text=<p>|</p> + +[listtags-callout] +ifndef::icons[] +list=<div class="colist{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<ol>|</ol></div> +item=<li>|</li> +text=<p>|</p> +endif::icons[] +ifdef::icons[] +list=<div class="colist{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<table>|</table></div> +ifndef::data-uri[] +item=<tr><td><img src="{iconsdir}/callouts/{listindex}.png" alt="{listindex}"></td><td>|</td></tr> +endif::data-uri[] +ifdef::data-uri[] +item=<tr><td><img alt="{listindex}" src="data:image/png;base64, {sys:"{python}" -u -c "import base64,sys; base64.encode(sys.stdin,sys.stdout)" < "{eval:os.path.join(r"{indir={outdir}}",r"{icon={iconsdir}/callouts/{listindex}.png}")}"}"></td><td>|</td></tr> +endif::data-uri[] +text=| +endif::icons[] + +[listtags-glossary] +list=<div class="dlist{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<dl>|</dl></div> +label= +entry= +term=<dt>|</dt> +item=<dd>|</dd> +text=<p>|</p> + +[listtags-bibliography] +list=<div class="ulist{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<ul>|</ul></div> +item=<li>|</li> +text=<p>|</p> + +[tags] +# Quoted text. +emphasis=<em>{1?<span class="{1}">}|{1?</span>}</em> +strong=<strong>{1?<span class="{1}">}|{1?</span>}</strong> +monospaced=<span class="monospaced{1? {1}}">|</span> +singlequoted={lsquo}{1?<span class="{1}">}|{1?</span>}{rsquo} +doublequoted={ldquo}{1?<span class="{1}">}|{1?</span>}{rdquo} +unquoted={1?<span class="{1}">}|{1?</span>} +superscript=<sup>{1?<span class="{1}">}|{1?</span>}</sup> +subscript=<sub>{1?<span class="{1}">}|{1?</span>}</sub> + +ifdef::deprecated-quotes[] +# Override with deprecated quote attributes. +emphasis={role?<span class="{role}">}<em{1,2,3? style="}{1?color:{1};}{2?background-color:{2};}{3?font-size:{3}em;}{1,2,3?"}>|</em>{role?</span>} +strong={role?<span class="{role}">}<strong{1,2,3? style="}{1?color:{1};}{2?background-color:{2};}{3?font-size:{3}em;}{1,2,3?"}>|</strong>{role?</span>} +monospaced=<span class="monospaced{role? {role}}"{1,2,3? style="}{1?color:{1};}{2?background-color:{2};}{3?font-size:{3}em;}{1,2,3?"}>|</span> +singlequoted={role?<span class="{role}">}{1,2,3?<span style="}{1?color:{1};}{2?background-color:{2};}{3?font-size:{3}em;}{1,2,3?">}{amp}#8216;|{amp}#8217;{1,2,3?</span>}{role?</span>} +doublequoted={role?<span class="{role}">}{1,2,3?<span style="}{1?color:{1};}{2?background-color:{2};}{3?font-size:{3}em;}{1,2,3?">}{amp}#8220;|{amp}#8221;{1,2,3?</span>}{role?</span>} +unquoted={role?<span class="{role}">}{1,2,3?<span style="{1?color:{1};}{2?background-color:{2};}{3?font-size:{3}em;}">}|{1,2,3?</span>}{role?</span>} +superscript={role?<span class="{role}">}<sup{1,2,3? style="}{1?color:{1};}{2?background-color:{2};}{3?font-size:{3}em;}{1,2,3?"}>|</sup>{role?</span>} +subscript={role?<span class="{role}">}<sub{1,2,3? style="}{1?color:{1};}{2?background-color:{2};}{3?font-size:{3}em;}{1,2,3?"}>|</sub>{role?</span>} +endif::deprecated-quotes[] + +# Inline macros +[http-inlinemacro] +<a href="{name}:{target}">{0={name}:{target}}</a> +[https-inlinemacro] +<a href="{name}:{target}">{0={name}:{target}}</a> +[ftp-inlinemacro] +<a href="{name}:{target}">{0={name}:{target}}</a> +[file-inlinemacro] +<a href="{name}:{target}">{0={name}:{target}}</a> +[irc-inlinemacro] +<a href="{name}:{target}">{0={name}:{target}}</a> +[mailto-inlinemacro] +<a href="mailto:{target}">{0={target}}</a> +[link-inlinemacro] +<a href="{target}">{0={target}}</a> +[callto-inlinemacro] +<a href="{name}:{target}">{0={target}}</a> +# anchor:id[text] +[anchor-inlinemacro] +<a id="{target}"></a> +# [[id,text]] +[anchor2-inlinemacro] +<a id="{1}"></a> +# [[[id]]] +[anchor3-inlinemacro] +<a id="{1}"></a>[{1}] +# xref:id[text] +[xref-inlinemacro] +<a href="#{target}">{0=[{target}]}</a> +# <<id,text>> +[xref2-inlinemacro] +<a href="#{1}">{2=[{1}]}</a> + +# Special word substitution. +[emphasizedwords] +<em>{words}</em> +[monospacedwords] +<span class="monospaced">{words}</span> +[strongwords] +<strong>{words}</strong> + +# Paragraph substitution. +[paragraph] +<div class="paragraph{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<p> +| +</p></div> + +[admonitionparagraph] +template::[admonitionblock] + +# Delimited blocks. +[listingblock] +<div class="listingblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="title">{caption=}{title}</div> +<div class="content monospaced"> +<pre> +| +</pre> +</div></div> + +[literalblock] +<div class="literalblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +<div class="content monospaced"> +<pre> +| +</pre> +</div></div> + +[sidebarblock] +<div class="sidebarblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="content"> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +| +</div></div> + +[openblock] +<div class="openblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +<div class="content"> +| +</div></div> + +[partintroblock] +template::[openblock] + +[abstractblock] +template::[quoteblock] + +[quoteblock] +<div class="quoteblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +<div class="content"> +| +</div> +<div class="attribution"> +<em>{citetitle}</em>{attribution?<br>} +— {attribution} +</div></div> + +[verseblock] +<div class="verseblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +<pre class="content"> +| +</pre> +<div class="attribution"> +<em>{citetitle}</em>{attribution?<br>} +— {attribution} +</div></div> + +[exampleblock] +<div class="exampleblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="title">{caption={example-caption} {counter:example-number}. }{title}</div> +<div class="content"> +| +</div></div> + +[admonitionblock] +<div class="admonitionblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<table><tr> +<td class="icon"> +{data-uri%}{icons#}<img src="{icon={iconsdir}/{name}.png}" alt="{caption}"> +{data-uri#}{icons#}<img alt="{caption}" src="data:image/png;base64, +{data-uri#}{icons#}{sys:"{python}" -u -c "import base64,sys; base64.encode(sys.stdin,sys.stdout)" < "{eval:os.path.join(r"{indir={outdir}}",r"{icon={iconsdir}/{name}.png}")}"}"> +{icons%}<div class="title">{caption}</div> +</td> +<td class="content"> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +| +</td> +</tr></table> +</div> + +# Tables. +[tabletags-default] +colspec=<col{autowidth-option! style="width:{colpcwidth}%;"}> +bodyrow=<tr>|</tr> +headdata=<th class="tableblock halign-{halign=left} valign-{valign=top}" {colspan@1::colspan="{colspan}" }{rowspan@1::rowspan="{rowspan}" }>|</th> +bodydata=<td class="tableblock halign-{halign=left} valign-{valign=top}" {colspan@1::colspan="{colspan}" }{rowspan@1::rowspan="{rowspan}" }>|</td> +paragraph=<p class="tableblock">|</p> + +[tabletags-header] +paragraph=<p class="tableblock header">|</p> + +[tabletags-emphasis] +paragraph=<p class="tableblock"><em>|</em></p> + +[tabletags-strong] +paragraph=<p class="tableblock"><strong>|</strong></p> + +[tabletags-monospaced] +paragraph=<p class="tableblock monospaced">|</p> + +[tabletags-verse] +bodydata=<td class="tableblock halign-{halign=left} valign-{valign=top}" {colspan@1::colspan="{colspan}" }{rowspan@1::rowspan="{rowspan}" }><div class="verse">|</div></td> +paragraph= + +[tabletags-literal] +bodydata=<td class="tableblock halign-{halign=left} valign-{valign=top}" {colspan@1::colspan="{colspan}" }{rowspan@1::rowspan="{rowspan}" }><div class="literal monospaced"><pre>|</pre></div></td> +paragraph= + +[tabletags-asciidoc] +bodydata=<td class="tableblock halign-{halign=left} valign-{valign=top}" {colspan@1::colspan="{colspan}" }{rowspan@1::rowspan="{rowspan}" }><div>|</div></td> +paragraph= + +[table] +<table class="tableblock frame-{frame=all} grid-{grid=all}{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"} +style=" +margin-left:{align@left:0}{align@center|right:auto}; margin-right:{align@left|center:auto}{align@right:0}; +float:{float}; +{autowidth-option%}width:{tablepcwidth}%; +{autowidth-option#}{width#style=width:{tablepcwidth}%;} +"> +<caption class="title">{caption={table-caption} {counter:table-number}. }{title}</caption> +{colspecs} +{headrows#}<thead> +{headrows} +{headrows#}</thead> +{footrows#}<tfoot> +{footrows} +{footrows#}</tfoot> +<tbody> +{bodyrows} +</tbody> +</table> + +#-------------------------------------------------------------------- +# Deprecated old table definitions. +# + +[miscellaneous] +# Screen width in pixels. +pagewidth=800 +pageunits=px + +[old_tabledef-default] +template=old_table +colspec=<col style="width:{colwidth}{pageunits};" /> +bodyrow=<tr>|</tr> +headdata=<th class="tableblock halign-{colalign=left}">|</th> +footdata=<td class="tableblock halign-{colalign=left}">|</td> +bodydata=<td class="tableblock halign-{colalign=left}">|</td> + +[old_table] +<table class="tableblock frame-{frame=all} grid-{grid=all}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<caption class="title">{caption={table-caption}}{title}</caption> +{colspecs} +{headrows#}<thead> +{headrows} +{headrows#}</thead> +{footrows#}<tfoot> +{footrows} +{footrows#}</tfoot> +<tbody style="vertical-align:top;"> +{bodyrows} +</tbody> +</table> + +# End of deprecated old table definitions. +#-------------------------------------------------------------------- + +[floatingtitle] +<h{level@0:1}{level@1:2}{level@2:3}{level@3:4}{level@4:5}{id? id="{id}"} class="float">{title}</h{level@0:1}{level@1:2}{level@2:3}{level@3:4}{level@4:5}> + +[preamble] +# Untitled elements between header and first section title. +<div id="preamble"> +<div class="sectionbody"> +| +</div> +</div> + +# Document sections. +[sect0] +<h1{id? id="{id}"}>{title}</h1> +| + +[sect1] +<div class="sect1{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"> +<h2{id? id="{id}"}>{numbered?{sectnum} }{title}</h2> +<div class="sectionbody"> +| +</div> +</div> + +[sect2] +<div class="sect2{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"> +<h3{id? id="{id}"}>{numbered?{sectnum} }{title}</h3> +| +</div> + +[sect3] +<div class="sect3{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"> +<h4{id? id="{id}"}>{numbered?{sectnum} }{title}</h4> +| +</div> + +[sect4] +<div class="sect4{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"> +<h5{id? id="{id}"}>{title}</h5> +| +</div> + +[appendix] +<div class="sect1{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"> +<h2{id? id="{id}"}>{numbered?{sectnum} }{appendix-caption} {counter:appendix-number:A}: {title}</h2> +<div class="sectionbody"> +| +</div> +</div> + +[toc] +<div id="toc"> + <div id="toctitle">{toc-title}</div> + <noscript><p><b>JavaScript must be enabled in your browser to display the table of contents.</b></p></noscript> +</div> + +[header] +<!DOCTYPE html> +<html lang="{lang=en}"> +<head> +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset={encoding}"> +<meta name="generator" content="AsciiDoc {asciidoc-version}"> +<meta name="description" content="{description}"> +<meta name="keywords" content="{keywords}"> +<title>crmsh - {title}</title> +{title%}<title>crmsh - {doctitle=}</title> +<link rel="stylesheet" href="/css/font-awesome.min.css"> +<link rel="stylesheet" href="/css/crm.css" type="text/css"> +<link href='//fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Open+Sans:400,700' rel='stylesheet' type='text/css'> +<link href="/atom.xml" type="application/atom+xml" rel="alternate" title="crmsh atom feed"> +</head> +<body> +<div id="header"> +<h1> +<a href="/"><span class="fa-stack"> + <i class="fa fa-square fa-stack-2x"></i> + <i class="fa fa-terminal fa-stack-1x fa-inverse"></i> +</span>crmsh</a> +</h1> + +<div id="topbar-small"> +<ul> +<li><a href="/news" title="News"><i class="fa fa-rss fa-2x"></i></a></li> +<li><a href="/documentation" title="Documentation"><i class="fa fa-book fa-2x"></i></a></li> +<li><a href="/download" title="Download"><i class="fa fa-download fa-2x"></i></a></li> +<li><a href="/development" title="Development"><i class="fa fa-code-fork fa-2x"></i></a></li> +<li><a href="/about" title="About"><i class="fa fa-question fa-2x"></i></a></li> +</ul> +</div> + +<div id="topbar"> +<ul> +<li><a href="/news">News</a></li> +<li><a href="/documentation">Documentation</a></li> +<li><a href="/download">Download</a></li> +<li><a href="/development">Development</a></li> +<li><a href="/about">About</a></li> +</ul> +</div> +</div> +<!--TOC--> +<div id="container"> +<div id="content"> +<h1>{doctitle}</h1> + +[footer] +</div> +</div> +<div id="footer"> +<div id="footer-text"> +</div> +</div> + +<a href="https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh"><img style="position: absolute; top: 0; right: 0; border: 0;" src="https://camo.githubusercontent.com/a6677b08c955af8400f44c6298f40e7d19cc5b2d/68747470733a2f2f73332e616d617a6f6e6177732e636f6d2f6769746875622f726962626f6e732f666f726b6d655f72696768745f677261795f3664366436642e706e67" alt="Fork me on GitHub" data-canonical-src="https://s3.amazonaws.com/github/ribbons/forkme_right_gray_6d6d6d.png"></a> + +</body> +</html> + +ifdef::doctype-manpage[] +[synopsis] +template::[sect1] +endif::doctype-manpage[] + diff --git a/doc/website-v1/crmold.conf b/doc/website-v1/crmold.conf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..271d88d --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/crmold.conf @@ -0,0 +1,602 @@ +# +# html5.conf +# +# Asciidoc configuration file. +# html5 backend. +# + +[miscellaneous] +outfilesuffix=.html + +[attributes] +basebackend=html +basebackend-html= +basebackend-html5= +b +[replacements2] +# Line break. +(?m)^(.*)\s\+$=\1<br> + +[replacements] +ifdef::asciidoc7compatible[] +# Superscripts. +\^(.+?)\^=<sup>\1</sup> +# Subscripts. +~(.+?)~=<sub>\1</sub> +endif::asciidoc7compatible[] + +[ruler-blockmacro] +<hr> + +[pagebreak-blockmacro] +<div style="page-break-after:always"></div> + +[blockdef-pass] +asciimath-style=template="asciimathblock",subs=() +latexmath-style=template="latexmathblock",subs=() + +[macros] +(?u)^(?P<name>audio|video)::(?P<target>\S*?)(\[(?P<attrlist>.*?)\])$=# +# math macros. +# Special characters are escaped in HTML math markup. +(?su)[\\]?(?P<name>asciimath|latexmath):(?P<subslist>\S*?)\[(?P<passtext>.*?)(?<!\\)\]=[specialcharacters] +(?u)^(?P<name>asciimath|latexmath)::(?P<subslist>\S*?)(\[(?P<passtext>.*?)\])$=#[specialcharacters] + +[asciimath-inlinemacro] +`{passtext}` + +[asciimath-blockmacro] +<div class="mathblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="content"> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +`{passtext}` +</div></div> + +[asciimathblock] +<div class="mathblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="content"> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +`|` +</div></div> + +[latexmath-inlinemacro] +{passtext} + +[latexmath-blockmacro] +<div class="mathblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="content"> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +{passtext} +</div></div> + +[latexmathblock] +<div class="mathblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="content"> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +| +</div></div> + +[image-inlinemacro] +<span class="image{role? {role}}"> +<a class="image" href="{link}"> +{data-uri%}<img src="{imagesdir=}{imagesdir?/}{target}" alt="{alt={target}}"{width? width="{width}"}{height? height="{height}"}{title? title="{title}"}> +{data-uri#}<img alt="{alt={target}}"{width? width="{width}"}{height? height="{height}"}{title? title="{title}"} +{data-uri#}{sys:"{python}" -u -c "import mimetypes,base64,sys; print 'src=\"data:'+mimetypes.guess_type(r'{target}')[0]+';base64,'; base64.encode(sys.stdin,sys.stdout)" < "{eval:os.path.join(r"{indir={outdir}}",r"{imagesdir=}",r"{target}")}"}"> +{link#}</a> +</span> + +[image-blockmacro] +<div class="imageblock{style? {style}}{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}{align? style="text-align:{align};"}{float? style="float:{float};"}> +<div class="content"> +<a class="image" href="{link}"> +{data-uri%}<img src="{imagesdir=}{imagesdir?/}{target}" alt="{alt={target}}"{width? width="{width}"}{height? height="{height}"}> +{data-uri#}<img alt="{alt={target}}"{width? width="{width}"}{height? height="{height}"} +{data-uri#}{sys:"{python}" -u -c "import mimetypes,base64,sys; print 'src=\"data:'+mimetypes.guess_type(r'{target}')[0]+';base64,'; base64.encode(sys.stdin,sys.stdout)" < "{eval:os.path.join(r"{indir={outdir}}",r"{imagesdir=}",r"{target}")}"}"> +{link#}</a> +</div> +<div class="title">{caption={figure-caption} {counter:figure-number}. }{title}</div> +</div> + +[audio-blockmacro] +<div class="audioblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="title">{caption=}{title}</div> +<div class="content"> +<audio src="{imagesdir=}{imagesdir?/}{target}"{autoplay-option? autoplay}{nocontrols-option! controls}{loop-option? loop}> +Your browser does not support the audio tag. +</audio> +</div></div> + +[video-blockmacro] +<div class="videoblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="title">{caption=}{title}</div> +<div class="content"> +<video src="{imagesdir=}{imagesdir?/}{target}"{width? width="{width}"}{height? height="{height}"}{poster? poster="{poster}"}{autoplay-option? autoplay}{nocontrols-option! controls}{loop-option? loop}> +Your browser does not support the video tag. +</video> +</div></div> + +[unfloat-blockmacro] +<div style="clear:both;"></div> + +[toc-blockmacro] +template::[toc] + +[indexterm-inlinemacro] +# Index term. +{empty} + +[indexterm2-inlinemacro] +# Index term. +# Single entry index term that is visible in the primary text flow. +{1} + +[footnote-inlinemacro] +# footnote:[<text>]. +<span class="footnote"><br>[{0}]<br></span> + +[footnoteref-inlinemacro] +# footnoteref:[<id>], create reference to footnote. +{2%}<span class="footnoteref"><br><a href="#_footnote_{1}">[{1}]</a><br></span> +# footnoteref:[<id>,<text>], create footnote with ID. +{2#}<span class="footnote" id="_footnote_{1}"><br>[{2}]<br></span> + +[callout-inlinemacro] +ifndef::icons[] +<b><{index}></b> +endif::icons[] +ifdef::icons[] +ifndef::data-uri[] +<img src="{icon={iconsdir}/callouts/{index}.png}" alt="{index}"> +endif::data-uri[] +ifdef::data-uri[] +<img alt="{index}" src="data:image/png;base64, +{sys:"{python}" -u -c "import base64,sys; base64.encode(sys.stdin,sys.stdout)" < "{eval:os.path.join(r"{indir={outdir}}",r"{icon={iconsdir}/callouts/{index}.png}")}"}"> +endif::data-uri[] +endif::icons[] + +# Comment line macros. +[comment-inlinemacro] +{showcomments#}<br><span class="comment">{passtext}</span><br> + +[comment-blockmacro] +{showcomments#}<p><span class="comment">{passtext}</span></p> + +[literal-inlinemacro] +# Inline literal. +<span class="monospaced">{passtext}</span> + +# List tags. +[listtags-bulleted] +list=<div class="ulist{style? {style}}{compact-option? compact}{role? {role}}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<ul>|</ul></div> +item=<li>|</li> +text=<p>|</p> + +[listtags-numbered] +# The start attribute is not valid XHTML 1.1 but all browsers support it. +list=<div class="olist{style? {style}}{compact-option? compact}{role? {role}}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<ol class="{style}"{start? start="{start}"}>|</ol></div> +item=<li>|</li> +text=<p>|</p> + +[listtags-labeled] +list=<div class="dlist{compact-option? compact}{role? {role}}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<dl>|</dl></div> +entry= +label= +term=<dt class="hdlist1{strong-option? strong}">|</dt> +item=<dd>|</dd> +text=<p>|</p> + +[listtags-horizontal] +list=<div class="hdlist{compact-option? compact}{role? {role}}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<table>{labelwidth?<col width="{labelwidth}%">}{itemwidth?<col width="{itemwidth}%">}|</table></div> +label=<td class="hdlist1{strong-option? strong}">|</td> +term=|<br> +entry=<tr>|</tr> +item=<td class="hdlist2">|</td> +text=<p style="margin-top: 0;">|</p> + +[listtags-qanda] +list=<div class="qlist{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<ol>|</ol></div> +entry=<li>|</li> +label= +term=<p><em>|</em></p> +item= +text=<p>|</p> + +[listtags-callout] +ifndef::icons[] +list=<div class="colist{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<ol>|</ol></div> +item=<li>|</li> +text=<p>|</p> +endif::icons[] +ifdef::icons[] +list=<div class="colist{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<table>|</table></div> +ifndef::data-uri[] +item=<tr><td><img src="{iconsdir}/callouts/{listindex}.png" alt="{listindex}"></td><td>|</td></tr> +endif::data-uri[] +ifdef::data-uri[] +item=<tr><td><img alt="{listindex}" src="data:image/png;base64, {sys:"{python}" -u -c "import base64,sys; base64.encode(sys.stdin,sys.stdout)" < "{eval:os.path.join(r"{indir={outdir}}",r"{icon={iconsdir}/callouts/{listindex}.png}")}"}"></td><td>|</td></tr> +endif::data-uri[] +text=| +endif::icons[] + +[listtags-glossary] +list=<div class="dlist{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<dl>|</dl></div> +label= +entry= +term=<dt>|</dt> +item=<dd>|</dd> +text=<p>|</p> + +[listtags-bibliography] +list=<div class="ulist{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<ul>|</ul></div> +item=<li>|</li> +text=<p>|</p> + +[tags] +# Quoted text. +emphasis=<em>{1?<span class="{1}">}|{1?</span>}</em> +strong=<strong>{1?<span class="{1}">}|{1?</span>}</strong> +monospaced=<span class="monospaced{1? {1}}">|</span> +singlequoted={lsquo}{1?<span class="{1}">}|{1?</span>}{rsquo} +doublequoted={ldquo}{1?<span class="{1}">}|{1?</span>}{rdquo} +unquoted={1?<span class="{1}">}|{1?</span>} +superscript=<sup>{1?<span class="{1}">}|{1?</span>}</sup> +subscript=<sub>{1?<span class="{1}">}|{1?</span>}</sub> + +ifdef::deprecated-quotes[] +# Override with deprecated quote attributes. +emphasis={role?<span class="{role}">}<em{1,2,3? style="}{1?color:{1};}{2?background-color:{2};}{3?font-size:{3}em;}{1,2,3?"}>|</em>{role?</span>} +strong={role?<span class="{role}">}<strong{1,2,3? style="}{1?color:{1};}{2?background-color:{2};}{3?font-size:{3}em;}{1,2,3?"}>|</strong>{role?</span>} +monospaced=<span class="monospaced{role? {role}}"{1,2,3? style="}{1?color:{1};}{2?background-color:{2};}{3?font-size:{3}em;}{1,2,3?"}>|</span> +singlequoted={role?<span class="{role}">}{1,2,3?<span style="}{1?color:{1};}{2?background-color:{2};}{3?font-size:{3}em;}{1,2,3?">}{amp}#8216;|{amp}#8217;{1,2,3?</span>}{role?</span>} +doublequoted={role?<span class="{role}">}{1,2,3?<span style="}{1?color:{1};}{2?background-color:{2};}{3?font-size:{3}em;}{1,2,3?">}{amp}#8220;|{amp}#8221;{1,2,3?</span>}{role?</span>} +unquoted={role?<span class="{role}">}{1,2,3?<span style="{1?color:{1};}{2?background-color:{2};}{3?font-size:{3}em;}">}|{1,2,3?</span>}{role?</span>} +superscript={role?<span class="{role}">}<sup{1,2,3? style="}{1?color:{1};}{2?background-color:{2};}{3?font-size:{3}em;}{1,2,3?"}>|</sup>{role?</span>} +subscript={role?<span class="{role}">}<sub{1,2,3? style="}{1?color:{1};}{2?background-color:{2};}{3?font-size:{3}em;}{1,2,3?"}>|</sub>{role?</span>} +endif::deprecated-quotes[] + +# Inline macros +[http-inlinemacro] +<a href="{name}:{target}">{0={name}:{target}}</a> +[https-inlinemacro] +<a href="{name}:{target}">{0={name}:{target}}</a> +[ftp-inlinemacro] +<a href="{name}:{target}">{0={name}:{target}}</a> +[file-inlinemacro] +<a href="{name}:{target}">{0={name}:{target}}</a> +[irc-inlinemacro] +<a href="{name}:{target}">{0={name}:{target}}</a> +[mailto-inlinemacro] +<a href="mailto:{target}">{0={target}}</a> +[link-inlinemacro] +<a href="{target}">{0={target}}</a> +[callto-inlinemacro] +<a href="{name}:{target}">{0={target}}</a> +# anchor:id[text] +[anchor-inlinemacro] +<a id="{target}"></a> +# [[id,text]] +[anchor2-inlinemacro] +<a id="{1}"></a> +# [[[id]]] +[anchor3-inlinemacro] +<a id="{1}"></a>[{1}] +# xref:id[text] +[xref-inlinemacro] +<a href="#{target}">{0=[{target}]}</a> +# <<id,text>> +[xref2-inlinemacro] +<a href="#{1}">{2=[{1}]}</a> + +# Special word substitution. +[emphasizedwords] +<em>{words}</em> +[monospacedwords] +<span class="monospaced">{words}</span> +[strongwords] +<strong>{words}</strong> + +# Paragraph substitution. +[paragraph] +<div class="paragraph{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}>{title?<div class="title">{title}</div>}<p> +| +</p></div> + +[admonitionparagraph] +template::[admonitionblock] + +# Delimited blocks. +[listingblock] +<div class="listingblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="title">{caption=}{title}</div> +<div class="content monospaced"> +<pre> +| +</pre> +</div></div> + +[literalblock] +<div class="literalblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +<div class="content monospaced"> +<pre> +| +</pre> +</div></div> + +[sidebarblock] +<div class="sidebarblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="content"> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +| +</div></div> + +[openblock] +<div class="openblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +<div class="content"> +| +</div></div> + +[partintroblock] +template::[openblock] + +[abstractblock] +template::[quoteblock] + +[quoteblock] +<div class="quoteblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +<div class="content"> +| +</div> +<div class="attribution"> +<em>{citetitle}</em>{attribution?<br>} +— {attribution} +</div></div> + +[verseblock] +<div class="verseblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +<pre class="content"> +| +</pre> +<div class="attribution"> +<em>{citetitle}</em>{attribution?<br>} +— {attribution} +</div></div> + +[exampleblock] +<div class="exampleblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<div class="title">{caption={example-caption} {counter:example-number}. }{title}</div> +<div class="content"> +| +</div></div> + +[admonitionblock] +<div class="admonitionblock{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<table><tr> +<td class="icon"> +{data-uri%}{icons#}<img src="{icon={iconsdir}/{name}.png}" alt="{caption}"> +{data-uri#}{icons#}<img alt="{caption}" src="data:image/png;base64, +{data-uri#}{icons#}{sys:"{python}" -u -c "import base64,sys; base64.encode(sys.stdin,sys.stdout)" < "{eval:os.path.join(r"{indir={outdir}}",r"{icon={iconsdir}/{name}.png}")}"}"> +{icons%}<div class="title">{caption}</div> +</td> +<td class="content"> +<div class="title">{title}</div> +| +</td> +</tr></table> +</div> + +# Tables. +[tabletags-default] +colspec=<col{autowidth-option! style="width:{colpcwidth}%;"}> +bodyrow=<tr>|</tr> +headdata=<th class="tableblock halign-{halign=left} valign-{valign=top}" {colspan@1::colspan="{colspan}" }{rowspan@1::rowspan="{rowspan}" }>|</th> +bodydata=<td class="tableblock halign-{halign=left} valign-{valign=top}" {colspan@1::colspan="{colspan}" }{rowspan@1::rowspan="{rowspan}" }>|</td> +paragraph=<p class="tableblock">|</p> + +[tabletags-header] +paragraph=<p class="tableblock header">|</p> + +[tabletags-emphasis] +paragraph=<p class="tableblock"><em>|</em></p> + +[tabletags-strong] +paragraph=<p class="tableblock"><strong>|</strong></p> + +[tabletags-monospaced] +paragraph=<p class="tableblock monospaced">|</p> + +[tabletags-verse] +bodydata=<td class="tableblock halign-{halign=left} valign-{valign=top}" {colspan@1::colspan="{colspan}" }{rowspan@1::rowspan="{rowspan}" }><div class="verse">|</div></td> +paragraph= + +[tabletags-literal] +bodydata=<td class="tableblock halign-{halign=left} valign-{valign=top}" {colspan@1::colspan="{colspan}" }{rowspan@1::rowspan="{rowspan}" }><div class="literal monospaced"><pre>|</pre></div></td> +paragraph= + +[tabletags-asciidoc] +bodydata=<td class="tableblock halign-{halign=left} valign-{valign=top}" {colspan@1::colspan="{colspan}" }{rowspan@1::rowspan="{rowspan}" }><div>|</div></td> +paragraph= + +[table] +<table class="tableblock frame-{frame=all} grid-{grid=all}{role? {role}}{unbreakable-option? unbreakable}"{id? id="{id}"} +style=" +margin-left:{align@left:0}{align@center|right:auto}; margin-right:{align@left|center:auto}{align@right:0}; +float:{float}; +{autowidth-option%}width:{tablepcwidth}%; +{autowidth-option#}{width#style=width:{tablepcwidth}%;} +"> +<caption class="title">{caption={table-caption} {counter:table-number}. }{title}</caption> +{colspecs} +{headrows#}<thead> +{headrows} +{headrows#}</thead> +{footrows#}<tfoot> +{footrows} +{footrows#}</tfoot> +<tbody> +{bodyrows} +</tbody> +</table> + +#-------------------------------------------------------------------- +# Deprecated old table definitions. +# + +[miscellaneous] +# Screen width in pixels. +pagewidth=800 +pageunits=px + +[old_tabledef-default] +template=old_table +colspec=<col style="width:{colwidth}{pageunits};" /> +bodyrow=<tr>|</tr> +headdata=<th class="tableblock halign-{colalign=left}">|</th> +footdata=<td class="tableblock halign-{colalign=left}">|</td> +bodydata=<td class="tableblock halign-{colalign=left}">|</td> + +[old_table] +<table class="tableblock frame-{frame=all} grid-{grid=all}"{id? id="{id}"}> +<caption class="title">{caption={table-caption}}{title}</caption> +{colspecs} +{headrows#}<thead> +{headrows} +{headrows#}</thead> +{footrows#}<tfoot> +{footrows} +{footrows#}</tfoot> +<tbody style="vertical-align:top;"> +{bodyrows} +</tbody> +</table> + +# End of deprecated old table definitions. +#-------------------------------------------------------------------- + +[floatingtitle] +<h{level@0:1}{level@1:2}{level@2:3}{level@3:4}{level@4:5}{id? id="{id}"} class="float">{title}</h{level@0:1}{level@1:2}{level@2:3}{level@3:4}{level@4:5}> + +[preamble] +# Untitled elements between header and first section title. +<div id="preamble"> +<div class="sectionbody"> +| +</div> +</div> + +# Document sections. +[sect0] +<h1{id? id="{id}"}>{title}</h1> +| + +[sect1] +<div class="sect1{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"> +<h2{id? id="{id}"}>{numbered?{sectnum} }{title}</h2> +<div class="sectionbody"> +| +</div> +</div> + +[sect2] +<div class="sect2{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"> +<h3{id? id="{id}"}>{numbered?{sectnum} }{title}</h3> +| +</div> + +[sect3] +<div class="sect3{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"> +<h4{id? id="{id}"}>{numbered?{sectnum} }{title}</h4> +| +</div> + +[sect4] +<div class="sect4{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"> +<h5{id? id="{id}"}>{title}</h5> +| +</div> + +[appendix] +<div class="sect1{style? {style}}{role? {role}}"> +<h2{id? id="{id}"}>{numbered?{sectnum} }{appendix-caption} {counter:appendix-number:A}: {title}</h2> +<div class="sectionbody"> +| +</div> +</div> + +[toc] +<div id="toc"> + <div id="toctitle">{toc-title}</div> + <noscript><p><b>JavaScript must be enabled in your browser to display the table of contents.</b></p></noscript> +</div> + +[header] +<!DOCTYPE html> +<html lang="{lang=en}"> +<head> +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset={encoding}"> +<meta name="generator" content="AsciiDoc {asciidoc-version}"> +<meta name="description" content="{description}"> +<meta name="keywords" content="{keywords}"> +<title>crmsh - {title}</title> +{title%}<title>crmsh - {doctitle=}</title> +<link rel="stylesheet" href="http://crmsh.nongnu.org/css/font-awesome.min.css"> +<link rel="stylesheet" href="http://crmsh.nongnu.org/css/crm.css" type="text/css"> +<link href='http://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Open+Sans:400,700|Ubuntu+Mono' rel='stylesheet' type='text/css'> +<link href="http://crmsh.github.io/atom.xml" type="application/atom+xml" rel="alternate" title="crmsh atom feed"> +<style> +\#movenotice { + width: 600px; + margin-top: 1em; + margin-bottom: 1em; + margin-left: auto; + margin-right: auto; + font-size: 100%; + padding: 4px; + border: 2px dashed red; +} +</style> +</head> +<body> +<div id="header"> +<h1><a href="http://crmsh.github.io/index.html"><span class="fa-stack"> + <i class="fa fa-square fa-stack-2x"></i> + <i class="fa fa-terminal fa-stack-1x fa-inverse"></i> +</span>crmsh</a></h1> +<div id="topbar"> +<ul> +<li><a href="http://crmsh.github.io/news">News</a></li> +<li><a href="http://crmsh.github.io/documentation">Documentation</a></li> +<li><a href="http://crmsh.github.io/development">Development</a></li> +<li><a href="http://crmsh.github.io/about">About</a></li> +</ul> +</div> +</div> +<!--TOC--> +<div id="container"> +<div id="content"> + +<div id="movenotice">We have moved! The website for crmsh is now <a href="http://crmsh.github.io">http://crmsh.github.io</a>.</div> + +<h1>{doctitle}</h1> + +[footer] +</div> +</div> +<div id="footer"> +<div id="footer-text"> +</div> +</div> + +<a href="https://github.com/crmsh/crmsh"><img style="position: absolute; top: 0; right: 0; border: 0;" src="https://camo.githubusercontent.com/652c5b9acfaddf3a9c326fa6bde407b87f7be0f4/68747470733a2f2f73332e616d617a6f6e6177732e636f6d2f6769746875622f726962626f6e732f666f726b6d655f72696768745f6f72616e67655f6666373630302e706e67" alt="Fork me on GitHub" data-canonical-src="https://s3.amazonaws.com/github/ribbons/forkme_right_orange_ff7600.png"></a> + +</body> +</html> + +ifdef::doctype-manpage[] +[synopsis] +template::[sect1] +endif::doctype-manpage[] + diff --git a/doc/website-v1/css/crm.css b/doc/website-v1/css/crm.css new file mode 100644 index 0000000..9fdfba2 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/css/crm.css @@ -0,0 +1,570 @@ +/* --------------------------------------------------------------------------- + Based on + Bare AsciiDoc styles + Ryan Tomayko <r@tomayko.com> + + Heavily modified by + Kristoffer Gronlund <kgronlund@suse.com> + --------------------------------------------------------------------------- */ + +/* Fonts */ + +body { + font-family:'Open Sans', 'lucida grande',verdana,helvetica,arial,sans-serif; + font-size: 16px; + line-height: 21px; +} + +.small { + font-size: 12px; /* 75% of the baseline */ +} + +.large { + font-size: 20px; /* 125% of the baseline */ +} + +em { + font-style:italic; +} + +strong { + font-weight:bold; +} + +.monospaced { + font-family: 'Menlo', 'Monaco', 'Consolas', 'lucida console', 'bitstream vera sans mono', 'courier new', monospace; +} + +dt { + font-weight:normal; +} + +h1, h2, h3, h4, h5 { + font-family:'Open Sans', 'lucida grande',verdana,helvetica,arial,sans-serif; + font-weight:normal; +} + +h1 { + font-size:2.6rem; + line-height:1.428; +} + +h2 { + font-size:2rem; + line-height:1.36363636; /* repeating, of course */ +} + +h3 { + font-size:1.6rem; + line-height:1.1; +} + +h4 { + font-weight: bold; + font-size:1.3rem; + line-height:1.538; +} + +h5 { + font-size:1.2rem; + font-style:italic; + line-height:1.538; +} + +pre { + font-family:'Menlo', 'Monaco', consolas, 'lucida console', 'bitstream vera sans mono', 'courier new', monospace; + font-size: 14px; +} + +#header h1 { + font-size: 42px; + margin: 0px; + display: inline; +} + +#topbar { + display: inline; + font-size: 18px; +} + +#topbar-small { + display: none; + font-size: 14px; +} + + + +/* Style */ + +body { + margin: 0px 0px; + padding: 0px; + width: 100%; + color:#333; + background: #fff; +} + +.monospaced { + color: #211; + background-color: #fafaf8; +} + +p { + margin-bottom: 1.3636rem; +} + +ul, ol, dl { + margin-top: 1rem; + margin-bottom: 2rem; +} + +ul p { + margin: 10px 0; +} + +dl { + margin-left:40px +} + +dt { + color:#000; +} + +h1, h2, h3, h4, h5 { + color:#000; +} + +h2, h3, h4, h5 { + padding-bottom: 0.333rem; + border-bottom: 1px solid #eee; +} + +h1 { + margin:0px; + margin-top: 48px; +} + +h2 { + margin-top: 36px; + margin-bottom: 1.5rem; +} + +h3 { + margin: 0px; + margin-top: 30px; +} + +pre { + color: #211; + overflow-x: auto; +} + +#header { + background: #ecf0f1; + padding-left: 24px; + padding-top: 4px; + padding-bottom: 0px; + border-bottom: 2px solid #efefea; + width: 100%; + height: 86px; + overflow: hidden; +} + +#header a { + text-decoration: none; + color: #34495e; +} + +#header a:hover { + color:#ee3300; +} + +#topbar ul { + list-style: none; + display: inline; +} + +#topbar li { + list-style: none; + display: inline; + padding-right: 1rem; +} + +#topbar-small ul { + list-style: none; + display: inline; + padding-left: 0.5rem; +} + +#topbar-small li { + list-style: none; + display: inline; + padding-right: 0.5rem; +} + + +#container { + max-width: 720px; + margin-left: 240px; + padding-left: 8px; + text-align:left; +} + +#author { + color:#999; +} + +a { + text-decoration: none; + color:#419eda; +} + +a:active { + color:#6ec654; +} + +a:hover { + color:#ee3300; + text-decoration: underline; +} + + +#content { +} + +h1 { + margin-left: auto; + margin-right: auto; + width: 551px; + text-align: center; + margin-bottom: 1.5rem; +} + +.frontpage-image { + margin-left: auto; + margin-right: auto; + width: 551px; +} + +.title, .sidebar-title { + font-weight:normal; + color:#000; + margin-bottom:0; +} + +div.content { + margin: 8px; + padding: 0; +} + +div.admonitionblock .title { + font-weight:bold; +} + +div.admonitionblock { + margin:30px 0px; + color:#555; +} + +div.admonitionblock td.icon { + width:30px; + padding-right:20px; + padding-left:20px; + text-transform:uppercase; + font-weight:bold; + color:#888; +} + +div.listingblock .content { + border-left:4px solid #419eda; + padding:8px; + + background: #faf7f8; + + background-image: -moz-linear-gradient(left, right, + from(#faf7f8), + to(#ffffff)); + + background-image: -webkit-gradient(linear, left top, right bottom, + color-stop(0.00, #faf7f8), + color-stop(1.00, #ffffff)); + +} + +div.listingblock .content pre { + margin:0; +} + +div.literalblock .content { + margin-left: 20px; +} + +div.verseblock .content { + white-space:pre +} + +div.sidebarblock { + margin-top: 1.5rem; + margin-bottom: 2rem; +} + +div.sidebarblock > div.content { + border-left:4px solid #ee3300; + background: #faf7f8; + padding:0 10px; + color:#222; + font-size: 14px; + line-height:18px; + max-width: 720px; + + background-image: -moz-linear-gradient(left, right, + from(#faf7f8), + to(#ffffff)); + + background-image: -webkit-gradient(linear, left top, right bottom, + color-stop(0.00, #faf7f8), + color-stop(1.00, #ffffff)); + +} + +div.sidebarblock .title { + margin:10px 0; + font-weight:bold; + font-size: 14px; + color:#442; +} + +.quoteblock-content { + font-style:italic; + color:#444; + margin-left:40px; +} + +.quoteblock-content .attribution { + font-style:normal; + text-align:right; + color:#000; +} + +.exampleblock-content *:first-child { margin-top:0 } +.exampleblock-content { + border-left:2px solid silver; + padding-left:8px; +} + +#footnotes { + text-align:left; +} + +#footnotes hr { + height: 1px; + color: #ccc; + width: 80%; +} + +#footer { + font-size: 12px; + color:#888; + margin-top:40px; + text-align: right; +} + +.nav { + margin-bottom: 0; + padding-left: 0; + list-style: none; +} + +.nav li { + line-height: 4rem; +} + +.nav a { + font-size: 20px; + text-decoration: none; +} + +.feedEkList .newsItem { + list-style-type: none; +} + +.feedEkList .itemTitle { + font-size: large; +} + +.feedEkList .itemDate { + font-size: smaller; +} + +.feedEkList .itemContent { +} + +@media screen { + #toc { + position: fixed; + top: 120px; + left: 4px; + margin: 0px; + font-size: 12px; + line-height: 1.2em; + } + + #toc a .monospaced { + color:#419eda; + } + + #toc a { + text-decoration: none; + } + + #toc .toclevel1 { + padding: 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a/doc/website-v1/css/font-awesome.css b/doc/website-v1/css/font-awesome.css new file mode 100644 index 0000000..048cff9 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/css/font-awesome.css @@ -0,0 +1,1338 @@ +/*! + * Font Awesome 4.0.3 by @davegandy - http://fontawesome.io - @fontawesome + * License - http://fontawesome.io/license (Font: SIL OFL 1.1, CSS: MIT License) + */ +/* FONT PATH + * -------------------------- */ +@font-face { + font-family: 'FontAwesome'; + src: url('../fonts/fontawesome-webfont.eot?v=4.0.3'); + src: url('../fonts/fontawesome-webfont.eot?#iefix&v=4.0.3') format('embedded-opentype'), url('../fonts/fontawesome-webfont.woff?v=4.0.3') format('woff'), url('../fonts/fontawesome-webfont.ttf?v=4.0.3') format('truetype'), url('../fonts/fontawesome-webfont.svg?v=4.0.3#fontawesomeregular') format('svg'); + font-weight: normal; + font-style: normal; +} +.fa { + display: inline-block; + font-family: FontAwesome; + font-style: normal; + font-weight: normal; + line-height: 1; + -webkit-font-smoothing: antialiased; + -moz-osx-font-smoothing: grayscale; +} +/* makes the font 33% larger relative to the icon container */ +.fa-lg { + font-size: 1.3333333333333333em; + line-height: 0.75em; + vertical-align: -15%; +} +.fa-2x { + font-size: 2em; +} +.fa-3x { + font-size: 3em; +} +.fa-4x { + font-size: 4em; +} +.fa-5x { + font-size: 5em; +} +.fa-fw { + width: 1.2857142857142858em; + text-align: center; +} +.fa-ul { + padding-left: 0; + margin-left: 2.142857142857143em; + list-style-type: none; +} +.fa-ul > li { + position: relative; +} +.fa-li { + position: absolute; + left: -2.142857142857143em; + width: 2.142857142857143em; + top: 0.14285714285714285em; + text-align: center; +} +.fa-li.fa-lg { + left: -1.8571428571428572em; +} +.fa-border { + padding: .2em .25em .15em; + border: solid 0.08em #eeeeee; + border-radius: .1em; +} +.pull-right { + float: right; +} +.pull-left { + float: left; +} +.fa.pull-left { + margin-right: .3em; +} +.fa.pull-right { + margin-left: .3em; +} +.fa-spin { + -webkit-animation: spin 2s infinite linear; + -moz-animation: spin 2s infinite linear; + -o-animation: spin 2s infinite linear; + animation: spin 2s infinite linear; +} +@-moz-keyframes spin { + 0% { + -moz-transform: rotate(0deg); + } + 100% { + -moz-transform: rotate(359deg); + } +} +@-webkit-keyframes spin { + 0% { + -webkit-transform: rotate(0deg); + } + 100% { + -webkit-transform: rotate(359deg); + } +} +@-o-keyframes spin { + 0% { + -o-transform: rotate(0deg); + } + 100% { + -o-transform: rotate(359deg); + } +} +@-ms-keyframes spin { + 0% { + -ms-transform: rotate(0deg); + } + 100% { + -ms-transform: rotate(359deg); + } +} +@keyframes spin { + 0% { + transform: rotate(0deg); + } + 100% { + transform: rotate(359deg); + } +} +.fa-rotate-90 { + filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.BasicImage(rotation=1); + -webkit-transform: rotate(90deg); + -moz-transform: rotate(90deg); + -ms-transform: rotate(90deg); + -o-transform: rotate(90deg); + transform: rotate(90deg); +} +.fa-rotate-180 { + filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.BasicImage(rotation=2); + -webkit-transform: rotate(180deg); + -moz-transform: rotate(180deg); + -ms-transform: rotate(180deg); + -o-transform: rotate(180deg); + transform: rotate(180deg); +} +.fa-rotate-270 { + filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.BasicImage(rotation=3); + -webkit-transform: rotate(270deg); + -moz-transform: rotate(270deg); + -ms-transform: rotate(270deg); + -o-transform: rotate(270deg); + transform: rotate(270deg); +} +.fa-flip-horizontal { + filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.BasicImage(rotation=0, mirror=1); + -webkit-transform: scale(-1, 1); + -moz-transform: scale(-1, 1); + -ms-transform: scale(-1, 1); + -o-transform: scale(-1, 1); + transform: scale(-1, 1); +} +.fa-flip-vertical { + filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.BasicImage(rotation=2, mirror=1); + -webkit-transform: scale(1, -1); + -moz-transform: scale(1, -1); + -ms-transform: scale(1, -1); + -o-transform: scale(1, -1); + transform: scale(1, -1); +} +.fa-stack { + position: relative; + display: inline-block; + width: 2em; + height: 2em; + line-height: 2em; + vertical-align: middle; +} +.fa-stack-1x, +.fa-stack-2x { + position: absolute; + left: 0; + width: 100%; + text-align: center; +} +.fa-stack-1x { + line-height: inherit; +} +.fa-stack-2x { + font-size: 2em; +} +.fa-inverse { + color: #ffffff; +} +/* Font Awesome uses the Unicode Private Use Area (PUA) to ensure screen + readers do not read off random characters that represent icons */ +.fa-glass:before { + content: "\f000"; +} +.fa-music:before { + content: "\f001"; +} +.fa-search:before { + content: "\f002"; +} +.fa-envelope-o:before { + content: "\f003"; +} +.fa-heart:before { + content: "\f004"; +} +.fa-star:before { + content: "\f005"; +} +.fa-star-o:before { + content: "\f006"; +} +.fa-user:before { + content: "\f007"; +} +.fa-film:before { + content: "\f008"; +} +.fa-th-large:before { + content: "\f009"; +} +.fa-th:before { + content: "\f00a"; +} +.fa-th-list:before { + content: "\f00b"; +} +.fa-check:before { + content: "\f00c"; +} +.fa-times:before { + content: "\f00d"; +} +.fa-search-plus:before { + content: "\f00e"; +} +.fa-search-minus:before { + content: "\f010"; +} +.fa-power-off:before { + content: "\f011"; +} +.fa-signal:before { + content: "\f012"; +} +.fa-gear:before, +.fa-cog:before { + content: "\f013"; +} +.fa-trash-o:before { + content: "\f014"; +} +.fa-home:before { + content: "\f015"; +} +.fa-file-o:before { + content: "\f016"; +} +.fa-clock-o:before { + content: "\f017"; +} +.fa-road:before { + content: "\f018"; +} +.fa-download:before { + content: "\f019"; +} +.fa-arrow-circle-o-down:before { + content: "\f01a"; +} +.fa-arrow-circle-o-up:before { + content: "\f01b"; +} +.fa-inbox:before { + content: "\f01c"; +} +.fa-play-circle-o:before { + content: "\f01d"; +} +.fa-rotate-right:before, +.fa-repeat:before { + content: "\f01e"; +} +.fa-refresh:before { + content: "\f021"; +} +.fa-list-alt:before { + content: "\f022"; +} +.fa-lock:before { + content: "\f023"; +} +.fa-flag:before { + content: "\f024"; +} +.fa-headphones:before { + content: "\f025"; +} +.fa-volume-off:before { + content: "\f026"; +} +.fa-volume-down:before { + content: "\f027"; +} +.fa-volume-up:before { + content: "\f028"; +} +.fa-qrcode:before { + content: "\f029"; +} +.fa-barcode:before { + content: "\f02a"; +} +.fa-tag:before { + content: "\f02b"; +} +.fa-tags:before { + content: "\f02c"; +} +.fa-book:before { + content: "\f02d"; +} +.fa-bookmark:before { + content: "\f02e"; +} +.fa-print:before { + content: "\f02f"; +} +.fa-camera:before { + content: "\f030"; +} +.fa-font:before { + content: "\f031"; +} +.fa-bold:before { + content: "\f032"; +} +.fa-italic:before { + content: "\f033"; +} +.fa-text-height:before { + content: "\f034"; +} +.fa-text-width:before { + content: "\f035"; +} +.fa-align-left:before { + content: "\f036"; +} +.fa-align-center:before { + content: "\f037"; +} +.fa-align-right:before { + content: "\f038"; +} +.fa-align-justify:before { + content: "\f039"; +} +.fa-list:before { + content: "\f03a"; +} +.fa-dedent:before, +.fa-outdent:before { + content: "\f03b"; +} +.fa-indent:before { + content: "\f03c"; +} +.fa-video-camera:before { + content: "\f03d"; +} +.fa-picture-o:before { + content: "\f03e"; +} +.fa-pencil:before { + content: "\f040"; +} +.fa-map-marker:before { + content: "\f041"; +} +.fa-adjust:before { + content: "\f042"; +} +.fa-tint:before { + content: "\f043"; +} +.fa-edit:before, +.fa-pencil-square-o:before { + content: "\f044"; +} +.fa-share-square-o:before { + content: "\f045"; +} +.fa-check-square-o:before { + content: "\f046"; +} +.fa-arrows:before { + content: "\f047"; +} +.fa-step-backward:before { + content: "\f048"; +} +.fa-fast-backward:before { + content: "\f049"; +} +.fa-backward:before { + content: "\f04a"; +} +.fa-play:before { + content: "\f04b"; +} +.fa-pause:before { + content: "\f04c"; +} +.fa-stop:before { + content: "\f04d"; +} +.fa-forward:before { + content: "\f04e"; +} +.fa-fast-forward:before { + content: "\f050"; +} +.fa-step-forward:before { + content: "\f051"; +} +.fa-eject:before { + content: "\f052"; +} +.fa-chevron-left:before { + content: "\f053"; +} +.fa-chevron-right:before { + content: "\f054"; +} +.fa-plus-circle:before { + content: "\f055"; +} +.fa-minus-circle:before { + content: "\f056"; +} +.fa-times-circle:before { + content: "\f057"; +} +.fa-check-circle:before { + content: "\f058"; +} +.fa-question-circle:before { + content: "\f059"; +} +.fa-info-circle:before { + content: "\f05a"; +} +.fa-crosshairs:before { + content: "\f05b"; +} +.fa-times-circle-o:before { + content: "\f05c"; +} +.fa-check-circle-o:before { + content: "\f05d"; +} +.fa-ban:before { + content: "\f05e"; +} +.fa-arrow-left:before { + content: "\f060"; +} +.fa-arrow-right:before { + content: "\f061"; +} +.fa-arrow-up:before { + content: "\f062"; +} +.fa-arrow-down:before { + content: "\f063"; +} +.fa-mail-forward:before, +.fa-share:before { + content: "\f064"; +} +.fa-expand:before { + content: "\f065"; +} +.fa-compress:before { + content: "\f066"; +} +.fa-plus:before { + content: "\f067"; +} +.fa-minus:before { + content: "\f068"; +} +.fa-asterisk:before { + content: "\f069"; +} +.fa-exclamation-circle:before { + content: "\f06a"; +} +.fa-gift:before { + content: "\f06b"; +} +.fa-leaf:before { + content: "\f06c"; +} +.fa-fire:before { + content: "\f06d"; +} +.fa-eye:before { + content: "\f06e"; +} +.fa-eye-slash:before { + content: "\f070"; +} +.fa-warning:before, +.fa-exclamation-triangle:before { + content: "\f071"; +} +.fa-plane:before { + content: "\f072"; +} +.fa-calendar:before { + content: "\f073"; +} +.fa-random:before { + content: "\f074"; +} +.fa-comment:before { + content: "\f075"; +} +.fa-magnet:before { + content: "\f076"; +} +.fa-chevron-up:before { + content: "\f077"; +} +.fa-chevron-down:before { + content: "\f078"; +} +.fa-retweet:before { + content: "\f079"; +} +.fa-shopping-cart:before { + content: "\f07a"; +} +.fa-folder:before { + content: "\f07b"; +} +.fa-folder-open:before { + content: "\f07c"; +} +.fa-arrows-v:before { + content: "\f07d"; +} +.fa-arrows-h:before { + content: "\f07e"; +} +.fa-bar-chart-o:before { + content: "\f080"; +} +.fa-twitter-square:before { + content: "\f081"; +} +.fa-facebook-square:before { + content: "\f082"; +} +.fa-camera-retro:before { + content: "\f083"; +} +.fa-key:before { + content: "\f084"; +} +.fa-gears:before, +.fa-cogs:before { + content: "\f085"; +} +.fa-comments:before { + content: "\f086"; +} +.fa-thumbs-o-up:before { + content: "\f087"; +} +.fa-thumbs-o-down:before { + content: "\f088"; +} +.fa-star-half:before { + content: "\f089"; +} +.fa-heart-o:before { + content: "\f08a"; +} +.fa-sign-out:before { + content: "\f08b"; +} +.fa-linkedin-square:before { + content: "\f08c"; +} +.fa-thumb-tack:before { + content: "\f08d"; +} +.fa-external-link:before { + content: "\f08e"; +} +.fa-sign-in:before { + content: "\f090"; +} +.fa-trophy:before { + content: "\f091"; +} +.fa-github-square:before { + content: "\f092"; +} +.fa-upload:before { + content: "\f093"; +} +.fa-lemon-o:before { + content: "\f094"; +} +.fa-phone:before { + content: "\f095"; +} +.fa-square-o:before { + content: "\f096"; +} +.fa-bookmark-o:before { + content: "\f097"; +} +.fa-phone-square:before { + content: "\f098"; +} +.fa-twitter:before { + content: "\f099"; +} +.fa-facebook:before { + content: "\f09a"; +} +.fa-github:before { + content: "\f09b"; +} +.fa-unlock:before { + content: "\f09c"; +} +.fa-credit-card:before { + content: "\f09d"; +} +.fa-rss:before { + content: "\f09e"; +} +.fa-hdd-o:before { + content: "\f0a0"; +} +.fa-bullhorn:before { + content: "\f0a1"; +} +.fa-bell:before { + content: "\f0f3"; +} +.fa-certificate:before { + content: "\f0a3"; +} +.fa-hand-o-right:before { + content: "\f0a4"; +} +.fa-hand-o-left:before { + content: "\f0a5"; +} +.fa-hand-o-up:before { + content: "\f0a6"; +} +.fa-hand-o-down:before { + content: "\f0a7"; +} +.fa-arrow-circle-left:before { + content: "\f0a8"; +} +.fa-arrow-circle-right:before { + content: "\f0a9"; +} +.fa-arrow-circle-up:before { + content: "\f0aa"; +} +.fa-arrow-circle-down:before { + content: "\f0ab"; +} +.fa-globe:before { + content: "\f0ac"; +} +.fa-wrench:before { + content: "\f0ad"; +} +.fa-tasks:before { + content: "\f0ae"; +} +.fa-filter:before { + content: "\f0b0"; +} +.fa-briefcase:before { + content: "\f0b1"; +} +.fa-arrows-alt:before { + content: "\f0b2"; +} +.fa-group:before, +.fa-users:before { + content: "\f0c0"; +} +.fa-chain:before, +.fa-link:before { + content: "\f0c1"; +} +.fa-cloud:before { + content: "\f0c2"; +} +.fa-flask:before { + content: "\f0c3"; +} +.fa-cut:before, +.fa-scissors:before { + content: "\f0c4"; +} +.fa-copy:before, +.fa-files-o:before { + content: "\f0c5"; +} +.fa-paperclip:before { + content: "\f0c6"; +} +.fa-save:before, +.fa-floppy-o:before { + content: "\f0c7"; +} +.fa-square:before { + content: "\f0c8"; +} +.fa-bars:before { + content: "\f0c9"; +} +.fa-list-ul:before { + content: "\f0ca"; +} +.fa-list-ol:before { + content: "\f0cb"; +} +.fa-strikethrough:before { + content: "\f0cc"; +} +.fa-underline:before { + content: "\f0cd"; +} +.fa-table:before { + content: "\f0ce"; +} +.fa-magic:before { + content: "\f0d0"; +} +.fa-truck:before { + content: "\f0d1"; +} +.fa-pinterest:before { + content: "\f0d2"; +} +.fa-pinterest-square:before { + content: "\f0d3"; +} +.fa-google-plus-square:before { + content: "\f0d4"; +} +.fa-google-plus:before { + content: "\f0d5"; +} +.fa-money:before { + content: "\f0d6"; +} +.fa-caret-down:before { + content: "\f0d7"; +} +.fa-caret-up:before { + content: "\f0d8"; +} +.fa-caret-left:before { + content: "\f0d9"; +} +.fa-caret-right:before { + content: "\f0da"; +} +.fa-columns:before { + content: "\f0db"; +} +.fa-unsorted:before, +.fa-sort:before { + content: "\f0dc"; +} +.fa-sort-down:before, +.fa-sort-asc:before { + content: "\f0dd"; +} +.fa-sort-up:before, +.fa-sort-desc:before { + content: "\f0de"; +} +.fa-envelope:before { + content: "\f0e0"; +} +.fa-linkedin:before { + content: "\f0e1"; +} +.fa-rotate-left:before, +.fa-undo:before { + content: "\f0e2"; +} +.fa-legal:before, +.fa-gavel:before { + content: "\f0e3"; +} +.fa-dashboard:before, +.fa-tachometer:before { + content: "\f0e4"; +} +.fa-comment-o:before { + content: "\f0e5"; +} +.fa-comments-o:before { + content: "\f0e6"; +} +.fa-flash:before, +.fa-bolt:before { + content: "\f0e7"; +} +.fa-sitemap:before { + content: "\f0e8"; +} +.fa-umbrella:before { + content: "\f0e9"; +} +.fa-paste:before, +.fa-clipboard:before { + content: "\f0ea"; +} +.fa-lightbulb-o:before { + content: "\f0eb"; +} +.fa-exchange:before { + content: "\f0ec"; +} +.fa-cloud-download:before { + content: "\f0ed"; +} +.fa-cloud-upload:before { + content: "\f0ee"; +} +.fa-user-md:before { + content: "\f0f0"; +} +.fa-stethoscope:before { + content: "\f0f1"; +} +.fa-suitcase:before { + content: "\f0f2"; +} +.fa-bell-o:before { + content: "\f0a2"; +} +.fa-coffee:before { + content: "\f0f4"; +} +.fa-cutlery:before { + content: "\f0f5"; +} +.fa-file-text-o:before { + content: "\f0f6"; +} +.fa-building-o:before { + content: "\f0f7"; +} +.fa-hospital-o:before { + content: "\f0f8"; +} +.fa-ambulance:before { + content: "\f0f9"; +} +.fa-medkit:before { + content: "\f0fa"; +} +.fa-fighter-jet:before { + content: "\f0fb"; +} +.fa-beer:before { + content: "\f0fc"; +} +.fa-h-square:before { + content: "\f0fd"; +} +.fa-plus-square:before { + content: "\f0fe"; +} +.fa-angle-double-left:before { + content: "\f100"; +} +.fa-angle-double-right:before { + content: "\f101"; +} +.fa-angle-double-up:before { + content: "\f102"; +} +.fa-angle-double-down:before { + content: "\f103"; +} +.fa-angle-left:before { + content: "\f104"; +} +.fa-angle-right:before { + content: "\f105"; +} +.fa-angle-up:before { + content: "\f106"; +} +.fa-angle-down:before { + content: "\f107"; +} +.fa-desktop:before { + content: "\f108"; +} +.fa-laptop:before { + content: "\f109"; +} +.fa-tablet:before { + content: "\f10a"; +} +.fa-mobile-phone:before, +.fa-mobile:before { + content: "\f10b"; +} +.fa-circle-o:before { + content: "\f10c"; +} +.fa-quote-left:before { + content: "\f10d"; +} +.fa-quote-right:before { + content: "\f10e"; +} +.fa-spinner:before { + content: "\f110"; +} +.fa-circle:before { + content: "\f111"; +} +.fa-mail-reply:before, +.fa-reply:before { + content: "\f112"; +} +.fa-github-alt:before { + content: "\f113"; +} +.fa-folder-o:before { + content: "\f114"; +} +.fa-folder-open-o:before { + content: "\f115"; +} +.fa-smile-o:before { + content: "\f118"; +} +.fa-frown-o:before { + content: "\f119"; +} +.fa-meh-o:before { + content: "\f11a"; +} +.fa-gamepad:before { + content: "\f11b"; +} +.fa-keyboard-o:before { + content: "\f11c"; +} +.fa-flag-o:before { + content: "\f11d"; +} +.fa-flag-checkered:before { + content: "\f11e"; +} +.fa-terminal:before { + content: "\f120"; +} +.fa-code:before { + content: "\f121"; +} +.fa-reply-all:before { + content: "\f122"; +} +.fa-mail-reply-all:before { + content: "\f122"; +} +.fa-star-half-empty:before, +.fa-star-half-full:before, +.fa-star-half-o:before { + content: "\f123"; +} +.fa-location-arrow:before { + content: "\f124"; +} +.fa-crop:before { + content: "\f125"; +} +.fa-code-fork:before { + content: "\f126"; +} +.fa-unlink:before, +.fa-chain-broken:before { + content: "\f127"; +} +.fa-question:before { + content: "\f128"; +} +.fa-info:before { + content: "\f129"; +} +.fa-exclamation:before { + content: "\f12a"; +} +.fa-superscript:before { + content: "\f12b"; +} +.fa-subscript:before { + content: "\f12c"; +} +.fa-eraser:before { + content: "\f12d"; +} +.fa-puzzle-piece:before { + content: "\f12e"; +} +.fa-microphone:before { + content: "\f130"; +} +.fa-microphone-slash:before { + content: "\f131"; +} +.fa-shield:before { + content: "\f132"; +} +.fa-calendar-o:before { + content: "\f133"; +} +.fa-fire-extinguisher:before { + content: "\f134"; +} +.fa-rocket:before { + content: "\f135"; +} +.fa-maxcdn:before { + content: "\f136"; +} +.fa-chevron-circle-left:before { + content: "\f137"; +} +.fa-chevron-circle-right:before { + content: "\f138"; +} +.fa-chevron-circle-up:before { + content: "\f139"; +} +.fa-chevron-circle-down:before { + content: "\f13a"; +} +.fa-html5:before { + content: "\f13b"; +} +.fa-css3:before { + content: "\f13c"; +} +.fa-anchor:before { + content: "\f13d"; +} +.fa-unlock-alt:before { + content: "\f13e"; +} +.fa-bullseye:before { + content: "\f140"; +} +.fa-ellipsis-h:before { + content: "\f141"; +} +.fa-ellipsis-v:before { + content: "\f142"; +} +.fa-rss-square:before { + content: "\f143"; +} +.fa-play-circle:before { + content: "\f144"; +} +.fa-ticket:before { + content: "\f145"; +} +.fa-minus-square:before { + content: "\f146"; +} +.fa-minus-square-o:before { + content: "\f147"; +} +.fa-level-up:before { + content: "\f148"; 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\ No newline at end of file diff --git a/doc/website-v1/development.adoc b/doc/website-v1/development.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a334a6b --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/development.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,74 @@ += Development = + +== Tools == + +++++ +<ul class="nav"> +<li><a href="https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh"><i class="fa fa-code-fork fa-3x fa-fw"></i> Source Repository</a></li> +<li><a href="http://clusterlabs.org/mailman/listinfo/users"><i class="fa fa-envelope fa-3x fa-fw"></i> Mailing List</a></li> +<li><a href="https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/issues"><i class="fa fa-bug fa-3x fa-fw"></i> Issue Tracker</a></li> +<li><a href="irc://freenode.net/#clusterlabs"><i class="fa fa-comments fa-3x fa-fw"></i> IRC: #clusterlabs on Freenode</a></li> +<li><a href="https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/commits/master.atom"><i class="fa fa-rss fa-3x fa-fw"></i> Atom feed</a></li> +</ul> +++++ + +== Source Code == + +The source code for `crmsh` is kept in a +http://git-scm.com/[git] repository +hosted at https://github.com[github]. Use +git+ to get a working copy: + +---- +git clone https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh.git +---- + +Dependencies +~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Building and installing crmsh requires Python version 2.6 and up (but not 3, yet). + +Additionally, the following Python modules are needed: + +* `lxml` +* `PyYAML` +* `setuptools` +* `parallax` +* `python-dateutil` + +Building +~~~~~~~~ + +`crmsh` uses the autotools suite to manage the build process. + +---- +./autogen.sh +./configure +make +make install +---- + +=== Tests === + +The unit tests for `crmsh` require +nose+ to run. On most distributions, this can be installed +by installing the package +python-nose+, or using +pip+. + +To run the unit test suite, go to the source code directory of `crmsh` +and call: + +---- +./test/run +---- + +`crmsh` also comes with a comprehensive regression test suite. The regression tests need +to run after installation, on a system which has both crmsh and pacemaker installed. You +will also need to install +pacemaker+ and the +cluster-glue+ development headers. + +* link:http://hg.linux-ha.org/glue[cluster-glue] +* link:https://github.com/ClusterLabs/pacemaker[pacemaker] + +To execute the tests, call: + +---- +/usr/share/crmsh/tests/regression.sh +cat crmtestout/regression.out +---- diff --git a/doc/website-v1/documentation.adoc b/doc/website-v1/documentation.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..dce5a0d --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/documentation.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,42 @@ += Documentation = + +The main documentation for `crmsh` comes in the form of the +`manual`, which is the same help as found using the `help` +command in the interactive shell. + +Additionally, there are a couple of guides and other documents +that will hopefully make using the shell as easy as possible. + +== Manual == + +* link:/man[Manual (Development)] +* link:/man-4.3[Manual (v4.3.x)] +* link:/man-3[Manual (v3.x)] +* link:/man-2.0[Manual (v2.x)] +* link:/man-1.2[Manual (v1.2.x)] + +== Guides == + +* link:/start-guide[Getting Started] +* link:/history-guide[History Guide] +* link:/rsctest-guide[Resource Testing Guide] +* link:/configuration[Configuration] +* link:/scripts[Cluster scripts] +* link:/faq[Frequently Asked Questions] + +== Translations == + +* https://blog.3ware.co.jp/2015/05/crmsh-getting-started/[Getting Started (Japanese)] + +== External documentation == + +The SUSE +https://www.suse.com/documentation/sle_ha/book_sleha/?page=/documentation/sle_ha/book_sleha/data/book_sleha.html[High +Availability Guide] provides a guide to +installing and configuring a complete cluster solution including both +the `crm` shell and Hawk, the web GUI which uses the `crm` shell as +its backend. + +For more information on Pacemaker in general, see the +http://clusterlabs.org/doc/[Pacemaker documentation] at `clusterlabs.org`. + diff --git a/doc/website-v1/download.adoc b/doc/website-v1/download.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8d81153 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/download.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,40 @@ += Download = + +The easiest way to install `crmsh` is via the package manager of your distribution. + +== SLES / openSUSE == + +`crmsh` is commercially supported on SLE via the https://www.suse.com/products/highavailability/[SUSE Linux Enterprise High Availability Extension]. It is also available for openSUSE with the package name `crmsh`. Development packages can be downloaded from the OBS: + +* https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/network:ha-clustering:Stable/crmsh[Stable version] +* https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/network:ha-clustering:Factory/crmsh[Development version] + +== Red Hat / CentOS / Fedora == + +We try to build Red Hat / CentOS / Fedora-compatible RPM packages on the OBS (see above). + +=== CentOS 7 === + +--- +dnf config-manager --add-repo http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/network:/ha-clustering:/Stable/CentOS_CentOS-7/network:ha-clustering:Stable.repo +--- + +== Debian == + +The versions of `crmsh` and `pacemaker` currently available in the latest Debian release are quite old. Newer packages are available via the Debian-HA team https://wiki.debian.org/Debian-HA[wiki] and the distribution packages will hopefully be updated soon. + +== Ubuntu == + +Packages for `crmsh` are available from the https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/crmsh[Launchpad]. + +== Gentoo == + +A fairly up-to-date version is available https://packages.gentoo.org/packages/sys-cluster/crmsh[here]. + +== Arch == + +`crmsh` is available via the https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/ha-pacemaker-crmsh/[AUR]. Unfortunately the package seems somewhat out of date. + +== Source Packages == + +Releases are available as `.tar.gz` or `.zip` archives via https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/releases[Github]. diff --git a/doc/website-v1/faq.adoc b/doc/website-v1/faq.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c9c5d02 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/faq.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,60 @@ += Frequently Asked Questions + +== What is the crm shell? + +The `crm` shell is a command-line interface to the Pacemaker cluster +resource management stack. If that doesn't make any sense to you, the +easiest way to get up to speed is to go to the +http://clusterlabs.org/[Pacemaker] website and read more about what it +does there. + +The `crm` shell provides a simpler interface to configuring Pacemaker +than manipulating the XML of the CIB (Cluster Information Base) +directly. With its command-line style interface, changes to the +cluster can be performed quickly and painlessly. It also works as a +scripting tool, allowing more complicated changes to be applied to the +cluster. + +The `crm` shell also functions as a management console, providing a +unified interface to a number of other auxilliary tools related to +Pacemaker and cluster management. + +== What distributions does the shell run on? + +Many distributions provide packages for the `crm` shell in their +respective package repositories. The best and safest way to obtain the +`crm` shell is via the distribution repositories, so look there first. + +The intention is for the `crm` shell to work well on all the major +distributions. Pre-built packages are provided for the +following distros: + + * openSUSE + * Fedora + * CentOS + * Red Hat Linux + +More information can be found on the +link:/documentation#_installation[Documentation] page. + +== Didn't crm use to be part of Pacemaker? + +Yes, initially, the `crm` shell was distributed as part of the +Pacemaker project. It was split into its own, separate project in +2011. + +A common misconception is that `crm` has been replaced by `pcs` +(available at https://github.com/feist/pcs[github.com/feist/pcs]). `pcs` +is an alternative command line interface similar to `crm`. Both +projects are being actively developed, with slightly different +goals. Our recommendation is to use whatever shell your distribution +of choice comes with and supports, unless you have a particular +preference or are on a distribution which doesn't bundle either. In +that case, we are obviously biased towards one of the available +choices. ;) + +== Command-line is well and good, but is there a web interface? + +Yes! Take a look at https://github.com/ClusterLabs/hawk[Hawk]. + +Hawk uses the `crm` shell as its backend to interact with the cluster. diff --git a/doc/website-v1/fonts/FontAwesome.otf b/doc/website-v1/fonts/FontAwesome.otf Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8b0f54e --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/fonts/FontAwesome.otf diff --git a/doc/website-v1/fonts/fontawesome-webfont.eot b/doc/website-v1/fonts/fontawesome-webfont.eot Binary files differnew file mode 100755 index 0000000..7c79c6a --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/fonts/fontawesome-webfont.eot diff --git a/doc/website-v1/fonts/fontawesome-webfont.svg b/doc/website-v1/fonts/fontawesome-webfont.svg new file mode 100755 index 0000000..45fdf33 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/fonts/fontawesome-webfont.svg @@ -0,0 +1,414 @@ +<?xml version="1.0" standalone="no"?> +<!DOCTYPE svg PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD SVG 1.1//EN" "http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/1.1/DTD/svg11.dtd" > +<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"> 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\ No newline at end of file diff --git a/doc/website-v1/fonts/fontawesome-webfont.ttf b/doc/website-v1/fonts/fontawesome-webfont.ttf Binary files differnew file mode 100755 index 0000000..e89738d --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/fonts/fontawesome-webfont.ttf diff --git a/doc/website-v1/fonts/fontawesome-webfont.woff b/doc/website-v1/fonts/fontawesome-webfont.woff Binary files differnew file mode 100755 index 0000000..8c1748a --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/fonts/fontawesome-webfont.woff diff --git a/doc/website-v1/history-guide.adoc b/doc/website-v1/history-guide.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a3dd9c6 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/history-guide.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,275 @@ += Cluster history = +:source-highlighter: pygments + +This guide should help administrators and consultants tackle +issues in Pacemaker cluster installations. We concentrate +on troubleshooting and analysis methods with the crmsh history. + +Cluster leaves numerous traces behind, more than any other +system. The logs and the rest are spread among all cluster nodes +and multiple directories. The obvious difficulty is to show that +information in a consolidated manner. This is where crmsh +history helps. + +Hopefully, the guide will help you investigate your +specific issue with more efficiency and less effort. + +== Sample cluster + +In <<Listing 1>> a modestly complex sample cluster is shown with +which we can experiment and break in some hopefully instructive +ways. + +NOTE: We won't be going into how to setup nodes or configure the + cluster. For that, please refer to the + link:/start-guide[Getting Started] document. + +[source,crmsh] +[caption="Listing 1: "] +.Sample cluster configuration[[Listing 1]] +----------------- +include::include/history-guide/sample-cluster.conf.crm[] +----------------- + +If you're new to clusters, that configuration may look +overwhelming. A graphical presentation in <<Image 1>> of the +essential elements and relations between them is easier on the eye +(and the mind). + +[caption="Image 1: "] +.Sample cluster configuration as a graph[[Image 1]] +image::/img/history-guide/sample-cluster.conf.png[link="/img/history-guide/sample-cluster.conf.png"] + +As homework, try to match the two cluster representations. + +== Quick (& dirty) start + +For the impatient, we give here a few examples of history use. + +Most of the time you will be dealing with various resource +(a.k.a. application) induced phenomena. For instance, while +preparing this document we noticed that a probe failed repeatedly +on a node which wasn't even running the resource <<Listing 2>>. + +[source,ansiclr] +[caption="Listing 2: "] +.crm status output[[Listing 2]] +----------------- +include::include/history-guide/status-probe-fail.typescript[] +----------------- + +The history +resource+ command shows log messages relevant to the +supplied resource <<Listing 3>>. + +[source,ansiclr] +[caption="Listing 3: "] +.Logs on failed +nfs-server+ probe operation[[Listing 3]] +----------------- +include::include/history-guide/nfs-probe-err.typescript[] +----------------- + +<1> NFS server error message. +<2> Warning about a non-existing user id. + +NOTE: Messages logged by resource agents are always tagged with + 'type(ID)' (in <<Listing 3>>: +nfsserver(nfs-server)+). + + + Everything dumped to +stderr/stdout+ (in <<Listing 3>>: + +id: rpcuser: no such user+) is captured and subsequently + logged by +lrmd+. The +stdout+ output is at the 'info' + severity which is by default _not_ logged by pacemaker + since version 1.1.12. + +At the very top we see error message reporting that the +NFS server is running, but some other stuff, apparently +unexpectedly, is not. However, we know that it cannot be +running on the 'c' node as it is already running on the 'a' node. +Not being able to figure out what is going on, we had to turn on +tracing of the resource agent. <<Listing 4>> shows how to do +that. + +[source,ansiclr] +[caption="Listing 4: "] +.Set `nfs-server` probe operation resource tracing[[Listing 4]] +----------------- +include::include/history-guide/resource-trace.typescript[] +----------------- + +Trace of the +nfsserver+ RA revealed that the +nfs-server+ init +script (used internally by the resource agent) _always_ exits +with success for status. That was actually due to the recent port +to systemd and erroneous interpretation of `systemctl status` +semantics: it always exits with success (due to some paradigm +shift, we guess). FYI, `systemctl is-active` should be used +instead and it does report a service status as expected. + +As a bonus, a minor issue about a non-existing user id +rpcuser+ +is also revealed. + +NOTE: Messages in the crm history log output are colored + depending on the originating host. + +The rest of this document gives more details about crmsh history. +If you're more of a just-try-it-out person, enter +crm history+ +and experiment. With +history+ commands you cannot really break +anything (fingers crossed). + +== Introduction to crmsh `history` + +The history crmsh feature, as the name suggests, deals with the +past. It was conceived as a facility to bring to the fore all +trails pacemaker cluster leaves behind which are relevant to a +particular resource, node, or event. It is used in the first +place as a troubleshooting tool, but it can also be helpful in +studying pacemaker clusters. + +To begin, we run the `info` command which gives an overview, as +shown in <<Listing 5>>. + +[source,ansiclr] +[caption="Listing 5: "] +.Basic history information[[Listing 5]] +----------------- +include::include/history-guide/info.typescript[] +----------------- + +The `timeframe` command limits the observed period and helps +focus on the events of interest. Here we wanted to look at the +10 minute period. Two transitions were executed during this time. + +== Transitions + +Transitions are basic units capturing cluster movements +(resource operations and node events). A transition +consists of a set of actions to reach a desired cluster +status as specified in the cluster configuration by the +user. + +Every configuration or status change results in a transition. + +Every transition is also a CIB, which is how cluster +configuration and status are stored. Transitions are saved +to files, the so called PE (Policy Engine) inputs. + +In <<Listing 6>> we show how to display transitions. +The listing is annotated to explain the output in more detail. + + +[source,ansiclr] +[caption="Listing 6: "] +.Viewing transitions[[Listing 6]] +----------------- +include::include/history-guide/basic-transition.typescript[] +----------------- + +<1> The transition command without arguments displays the latest +transition. +<2> Graph of transition actions is provided by `graphviz`. See +<<Image 2>>. +<3> Output of `crm_simulate` with irrelevant stuff edited out. +`crm_simulate` was formerly known as `ptest`. +<4> Transition summary followed by selection of log messages. +History weeds out messages which are of lesser importance. See +<<Listing 8>> if you want to see what history has been hiding +from you here. + +Incidentally, if you wonder why all transitions in these examples +are green, that is not because they were green in any sense of +the color, but just due to that being color of node 'c': as +chance would have it, 'c' was calling shots at the time (being +Designated Coordinator or DC). That is also why all `crmd` and +`pengine` messages are coming from 'c'. + +NOTE: Transitions are the basis of pacemaker operation, make sure +that you understand them. + +What you cannot see in the listing is a graph generated and shown +in a separate window in your X11 display. <<Image 2>> may not be +very involved, but we reckon it's as good a start as starts go. + +[caption="Image 2: "] +.Graph for transition 1907[[Image 2]] +image::/img/history-guide/smallapache-start.png[link="/img/history-guide/smallapache-start.png"] + +It may sometimes be useful to see what changed between two +transitions. History `diff` command is in action in <<Listing 7>>. + +[source,ansiclr] +[caption="Listing 7: "] +.Viewing transitions[[Listing 7]] +----------------- +include::include/history-guide/diff.typescript[] +----------------- + +<1> Configuration diff between two last transitions. Transitions +may be referenced with indexes starting at 0 and going backwards. +<2> Status diff between two last transitions. + +Whereas configuration diff is (hopefully) obvious, status diff +needs some explanation: the status section of the PE inputs +(transitions) always lags behind the configuration. This is +because at the time the transition is saved to a file, the +actions of that transition are yet to be executed. So, the status +section of transition _N_ corresponds to the configuration _N-1_. + +[source,ansiclr] +[caption="Listing 8: "] +.Full transition log[[Listing 8]] +----------------- +include::include/history-guide/transition-log.typescript[] +----------------- + +== Resource and node events + +Apart from transitions, events such as resource start or stop are +what we usually want to examine. In our extremely exciting +example of apache resource restart, the history `resource` +command picks the most interesting resource related messages as +shown in <<Listing 9>>. Again, history shows only the most +important log parts. + +NOTE: If you want to see more detail (which may not always be + recommendable), then use the history `detail` command to + increase the level of detail displayed. + +[source,ansiclr] +[caption="Listing 9: "] +.Resource related messages[[Listing 9]] +----------------- +include::include/history-guide/resource.typescript[] +----------------- + +Node related events are node start and stop (cluster-wise), +node membership changes, and stonith events (aka node fence). +We'll refrain from showing examples of the history `node` +command--it is analogue to the `resource` command. + +== Viewing logs + +History `log` command, unsurprisingly, displays logs. The +messages from various nodes are weaved and shown in different +colors for the sake of easier viewing. Unlike other history +commands, `log` shows all messages captured in the report. If you +find some of them irrelevant they can be filtered out: +the `exclude` command takes extended regular expressions and it +is additive. We usually set the exclude expression to at least +`ssh|systemd|kernel`. Use `exclude clear` to remove all +expressions. And don't forget the `timeframe` command that +imposes a time window on the report. + +== External reports, configurations, and graphs + +The information source history works with is `hb_report` +generated report. Even when examining live cluster, `hb_report` is +run behind the scene to collect the data before presenting it to +the user. Well, at least to generate the first report: there is a +special procedure for log refreshing and collecting new PE +inputs, which runs much faster than creating a report from +scratch. However, juggling with multiple sources, appending logs, +moving time windows, may not always be foolproof, and if +the source gets borked you can always ask for a brand new report +with `refresh force`. + +Analyzing reports from external source is no different from what +we've seen so far. In fact, there's a `source` command which +tells history where to look for data. diff --git a/doc/website-v1/img/history-guide/sample-cluster.conf.png b/doc/website-v1/img/history-guide/sample-cluster.conf.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0863923 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/img/history-guide/sample-cluster.conf.png diff --git a/doc/website-v1/img/history-guide/smallapache-start.png b/doc/website-v1/img/history-guide/smallapache-start.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..47853c9 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/img/history-guide/smallapache-start.png diff --git a/doc/website-v1/img/icons/README b/doc/website-v1/img/icons/README new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f12b2a7 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/img/icons/README @@ -0,0 +1,5 @@ +Replaced the plain DocBook XSL admonition icons with Jimmac's DocBook +icons (http://jimmac.musichall.cz/ikony.php3). 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/dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/img/servers.gif diff --git a/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/basic-transition.typescript b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/basic-transition.typescript new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a5a0a31 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/basic-transition.typescript @@ -0,0 +1,22 @@ +[32mcrm(live)history# [0;10mtransition <1> +[36mINFO[0;10m: running ptest with /var/cache/crm/history/live/sle12-c/pengine/pe-input-1907.bz2 +[36mINFO[0;10m: starting dotty to show transition graph <2> +Current cluster status: <3> +Online: [ sle12-a sle12-c ] + s-libvirt (stonith:external/libvirt): Started sle12-c + ... + small-apache (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Stopped +Transition Summary: + * Start small-apache (sle12-a) +Executing cluster transition: + * Resource action: small-apache start on sle12-a +Revised cluster status: +Online: [ sle12-a sle12-c ] + s-libvirt (stonith:external/libvirt): Started sle12-c + ... + small-apache (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Started sle12-a + +Transition sle12-c:pe-input-1907 (20:30:14 - 20:30:15): <4> + total 1 actions: 1 Complete +[32mApr 15 20:30:14 sle12-c crmd[1136]: notice: te_rsc_command: Initiating action 60: start small-apache_start_0 on sle12-a[0;10m +[0;10mApr 15 20:30:14 sle12-a apache(small-apache)[1586]: INFO: AH00558: httpd2: Could not reliably determine the server's fully qualified domain name, using 10.2.12.51. Set the 'ServerName' directive globally to suppress this message[0;10m diff --git a/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/diff.typescript b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/diff.typescript new file mode 100644 index 0000000..129febc --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/diff.typescript @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +[32mcrm(live)history# [0;10mdiff -1 0 <1> +--- -1 ++++ 0 +@@ -11 +11 @@ +-[33mprimitive[0;10m [0;10msmall-apache[0;10m apache [33mparams[0;10m [36mconfigfile[0;10m=[31m"/etc/apache2/small.conf"[0;10m [33mmeta[0;10m [36mtarget-role[0;10m=[31mStopped[0;10m ++[33mprimitive[0;10m [0;10msmall-apache[0;10m apache [33mparams[0;10m [36mconfigfile[0;10m=[31m"/etc/apache2/small.conf"[0;10m [33mmeta[0;10m [36mtarget-role[0;10m=[31mStarted[0;10m +[32mcrm(live)history# [0;10mdiff -1 0 status <2> +--- -1 ++++ 0 +@@ -15 +14,0 @@ +- small-apache (ocf::heartbeat:apache): Started sle12-a diff --git a/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/info.typescript b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/info.typescript new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d7aae8d --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/info.typescript @@ -0,0 +1,16 @@ +# crm history +[32mcrm(live)history# [0;10mtimeframe "Apr 15 20:25" "Apr 15 20:35" +[32mcrm(live)history# [0;10minfo +Source: live +Created on: Thu Apr 16 11:32:36 CEST 2015 +By: report -Z -Q -f Wed Apr 15 20:25:00 2015 -t 2015-04-15 20:35:00 /var/cache/crm/history/live +Period: 2015-04-15 20:25:00 - 2015-04-15 20:35:00 +Nodes: [0;10msle12-a[0;10m [32msle12-c[0;10m +Groups: nfs-srv nfs-disk +Resources: s-libvirt p_drbd_nfs nfs-vg fs1 virtual-ip nfs-server websrv websrv-ip small-apache +Transitions: [32m1906[0;10m [32m1907[0;10m +[32mcrm(live)history# [0;10mpeinputs v +Date Start End Filename Client User Origin +==== ===== === ======== ====== ==== ====== +2015-04-15 20:29:59 20:30:01 [32mpe-input-1906[0;10m no-client no-user no-origin +2015-04-15 20:30:14 20:30:15 [32mpe-input-1907[0;10m no-client no-user no-origin diff --git a/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/nfs-probe-err.typescript b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/nfs-probe-err.typescript new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ca34ba5 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/nfs-probe-err.typescript @@ -0,0 +1,20 @@ +# crm history resource nfs-server +[36mINFO[0;10m: fetching new logs, please wait ... +[32mDec 16 11:53:23 sle12-c nfsserver(nfs-server)[14911]: <1> ERROR: NFS server is up, but the locking daemons are down[0;10m +[32mDec 16 11:53:23 sle12-c crmd[2823]: notice: te_rsc_command: Initiating action 54: stop nfs-server_stop_0 on sle12-a[0;10m +[32mDec 16 11:53:23 sle12-c crmd[2823]: notice: te_rsc_command: Initiating action 3: stop nfs-server_stop_0 on sle12-c (local)[0;10m +[32mDec 16 11:53:23 sle12-c nfsserver(nfs-server)[14944]: INFO: Stopping NFS server ...[0;10m +[32mDec 16 11:53:23 sle12-c nfsserver(nfs-server)[14944]: INFO: Stopping sm-notify[0;10m +[32mDec 16 11:53:23 sle12-c nfsserver(nfs-server)[14944]: INFO: Stopping rpc.statd[0;10m +[32mDec 16 11:53:23 sle12-c nfsserver(nfs-server)[14944]: INFO: NFS server stopped[0;10m +[32mDec 16 11:53:23 sle12-c crmd[2823]: notice: te_rsc_command: Initiating action 55: start nfs-server_start_0 on sle12-a[0;10m +[0;10mDec 16 11:53:23 sle12-a nfsserver(nfs-server)[23255]: INFO: Stopping NFS server ...[0;10m +[0;10mDec 16 11:53:23 sle12-a nfsserver(nfs-server)[23255]: INFO: Stopping sm-notify[0;10m +[0;10mDec 16 11:53:23 sle12-a nfsserver(nfs-server)[23255]: INFO: Stopping rpc.statd[0;10m +[0;10mDec 16 11:53:23 sle12-a nfsserver(nfs-server)[23255]: INFO: NFS server stopped[0;10m +[0;10mDec 16 11:53:23 sle12-a nfsserver(nfs-server)[23320]: INFO: Starting NFS server ...[0;10m +[0;10mDec 16 11:53:23 sle12-a nfsserver(nfs-server)[23320]: INFO: Starting rpc.statd.[0;10m +[0;10mDec 16 11:53:24 sle12-a nfsserver(nfs-server)[23320]: INFO: executing sm-notify[0;10m +[0;10mDec 16 11:53:24 sle12-a nfsserver(nfs-server)[23320]: INFO: NFS server started[0;10m +[0;10mDec 16 11:53:24 sle12-a lrmd[6904]: <2> notice: operation_finished: nfs-server_start_0:23320:stderr [ id: rpcuser: no such user ][0;10m +[0;10mDec 16 11:53:24 sle12-a lrmd[6904]: message repeated 3 times: [ notice: operation_finished: nfs-server_start_0:23320:stderr [ id: rpcuser: no such user ]][0;10m diff --git a/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/resource-trace.typescript b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/resource-trace.typescript new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e66ff7c --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/resource-trace.typescript @@ -0,0 +1,7 @@ +# crm resource trace nfs-server monitor 0 +[36mINFO[0;10m: Trace for nfs-server:monitor is written to /var/lib/heartbeat/trace_ra/ +[36mINFO[0;10m: Trace set, restart nfs-server to trace non-monitor operations +# crm resource cleanup nfs-server +Cleaning up nfs-server on sle12-a +Cleaning up nfs-server on sle12-c +Waiting for 2 replies from the CRMd.. OK diff --git a/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/resource.typescript b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/resource.typescript new file mode 100644 index 0000000..90f0265 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/resource.typescript @@ -0,0 +1,6 @@ +[32mcrm(live)history# [0;10mresource small-apache +[32mApr 15 20:29:59 sle12-c crmd[1136]: notice: te_rsc_command: Initiating action 60: stop small-apache_stop_0 on sle12-a[0;10m +[0;10mApr 15 20:29:59 sle12-a apache(small-apache)[1366]: INFO: Attempting graceful stop of apache PID 9155[0;10m +[0;10mApr 15 20:30:01 sle12-a apache(small-apache)[1366]: INFO: apache stopped.[0;10m +[0;10mApr 15 20:30:14 sle12-a apache(small-apache)[1586]: INFO: AH00558: httpd2: Could not reliably determine the server's fully qualified domain name, using 10.2.12.51. Set the 'ServerName' directive globally to suppress this message[0;10m +[32mApr 15 20:30:14 sle12-c crmd[1136]: notice: te_rsc_command: Initiating action 60: start small-apache_start_0 on sle12-a[0;10m diff --git a/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/sample-cluster.conf.crm b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/sample-cluster.conf.crm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8b44663 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/sample-cluster.conf.crm @@ -0,0 +1,54 @@ +node 167906357: sle12-c +node 167906355: sle12-a +primitive s-libvirt stonith:external/libvirt \ + params hostlist="sle12-a sle12-c" hypervisor_uri="qemu+ssh://hex-10.suse.de/system?keyfile=/root/.ssh/xen" reset_method=reboot \ + op monitor interval=5m timeout=60s +primitive p_drbd_nfs ocf:linbit:drbd \ + params drbd_resource=nfs \ + op monitor interval=15 role=Master \ + op monitor interval=30 role=Slave \ + op start interval=0 timeout=300 \ + op stop interval=0 timeout=120 +primitive nfs-vg LVM \ + params volgrpname=nfs-vg +primitive fs1 Filesystem \ + params device="/dev/nfs-vg/fs1" directory="/srv/nfs" fstype=ext3 \ + op monitor interval=30s +primitive virtual-ip IPaddr2 \ + params ip=10.2.12.100 +primitive nfs-server nfsserver \ + params nfs_shared_infodir="/srv/nfs/state" nfs_ip=10.2.12.100 \ + op monitor interval=30s +primitive websrv apache \ + params configfile="/etc/apache2/httpd.conf" \ + op monitor interval=30 +primitive websrv-ip IPaddr2 \ + params ip=10.2.12.101 +primitive small-apache apache \ + params configfile="/etc/apache2/small.conf" +group nfs-disk nfs-vg fs1 +group nfs-srv virtual-ip nfs-server +ms ms_drbd_nfs p_drbd_nfs \ + meta notify=true clone-max=2 +location nfs-pref virtual-ip 100: sle12-a +location websrv-pref websrv 100: sle12-c +colocation vg-with-drbd inf: nfs-vg ms_drbd_nfs:Master +colocation c-nfs inf: nfs-srv nfs-disk +colocation c-websrv inf: websrv websrv-ip +colocation small-apache-with-virtual-ip inf: small-apache virtual-ip +# need fs1 for the NFS server +order o-nfs inf: nfs-disk nfs-srv +# websrv serves requests at IP websrv-ip +order o-websrv inf: websrv-ip websrv +# small apache serves requests at IP virtual-ip +order virtual-ip-before-small-apache inf: virtual-ip small-apache +# drbd device is the nfs-vg PV +order drbd-before-nfs-vg inf: ms_drbd_nfs:promote nfs-vg:start +property cib-bootstrap-options: \ + dc-version=1.1.12-ad083a8 \ + cluster-infrastructure=corosync \ + cluster-name=sle12-test3l-public \ + no-quorum-policy=ignore \ + last-lrm-refresh=1429192263 +op_defaults op-options: \ + timeout=120s diff --git a/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/status-probe-fail.typescript b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/status-probe-fail.typescript new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d1024e8 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/status-probe-fail.typescript @@ -0,0 +1,15 @@ +# crm status +Last updated: Tue Dec 16 11:57:04 2014 +Last change: Tue Dec 16 11:53:22 2014 +Stack: corosync +Current DC: sle12-c (167906357) - partition with quorum +Version: 1.1.12-ad083a8 +2 Nodes configured +10 Resources configured +Online: [ sle12-a sle12-c ] +[...] + nfs-server (ocf::heartbeat:nfsserver): Started sle12-a +[...] +Failed actions: + nfs-server_monitor_0 on sle12-c 'unknown error' (1): call=298, status=complete, + last-rc-change='Tue Dec 16 11:53:23 2014', queued=0ms, exec=135ms diff --git a/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/stonith-corosync-stopped.typescript b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/stonith-corosync-stopped.typescript new file mode 100644 index 0000000..1bca5ac --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/stonith-corosync-stopped.typescript @@ -0,0 +1,8 @@ +# crm history node sle12-c +[36mINFO[0;10m: fetching new logs, please wait ... +[32mDec 19 14:36:18 sle12-c corosync[29551]: [MAIN ] Corosync Cluster Engine ('2.3.3'): started and ready to provide service.[0;10m +[32mDec 19 14:36:19 sle12-c corosync[29545]: Starting Corosync Cluster Engine (corosync): [ OK ][0;10m +[0;10mDec 19 14:36:20 sle12-a pengine[6906]: warning: pe_fence_node: Node sle12-c will be fenced because our peer process is no longer available[0;10m +[0;10mDec 19 14:36:20 sle12-a pengine[6906]: warning: stage6: Scheduling Node sle12-c for STONITH[0;10m +[0;10mDec 19 14:36:20 sle12-a crmd[6907]: notice: te_fence_node: Executing reboot fencing operation (65) on sle12-c (timeout=60000)[0;10m +[0;10mDec 19 14:36:20 sle12-a crmd[6907]: notice: peer_update_callback: Node return implies stonith of sle12-c (action 65) completed[0;10m diff --git a/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/transition-log.typescript b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/transition-log.typescript new file mode 100644 index 0000000..eb689ec --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/include/history-guide/transition-log.typescript @@ -0,0 +1,13 @@ +[32mcrm(live)history# [0;10mtransition log +[36mINFO[0;10m: retrieving information from cluster nodes, please wait ... +[32mApr 15 20:30:14 sle12-c crmd[1136]: notice: do_state_transition: State transition S_IDLE -> S_POLICY_ENGINE [ input=I_PE_CALC cause=C_FSA_INTERNAL origin=abort_transition_graph ][0;10m +[32mApr 15 20:30:14 sle12-c stonithd[1132]: notice: unpack_config: On loss of CCM Quorum: Ignore[0;10m +[32mApr 15 20:30:14 sle12-c pengine[1135]: notice: unpack_config: On loss of CCM Quorum: Ignore[0;10m +[32mApr 15 20:30:14 sle12-c pengine[1135]: notice: LogActions: Start small-apache#011(sle12-a)[0;10m +[32mApr 15 20:30:14 sle12-c crmd[1136]: notice: do_te_invoke: Processing graph 123 (ref=pe_calc-dc-1429122614-234) derived from /var/lib/pacemaker/pengine/pe-input-1907.bz2[0;10m +[32mApr 15 20:30:14 sle12-c crmd[1136]: notice: te_rsc_command: Initiating action 60: start small-apache_start_0 on sle12-a[0;10m +[32mApr 15 20:30:14 sle12-c pengine[1135]: notice: process_pe_message: Calculated Transition 123: /var/lib/pacemaker/pengine/pe-input-1907.bz2[0;10m +[0;10mApr 15 20:30:14 sle12-a stonithd[1160]: notice: unpack_config: On loss of CCM Quorum: Ignore[0;10m +[0;10mApr 15 20:30:14 sle12-a apache(small-apache)[1586]: INFO: AH00558: httpd2: Could not reliably determine the server's fully qualified domain name, using 10.2.12.51. Set the 'ServerName' directive globally to suppress this message[0;10m +[0;10mApr 15 20:30:14 sle12-a crmd[1164]: notice: process_lrm_event: Operation small-apache_start_0: ok (node=sle12-a, call=69, rc=0, cib-update=48, confirmed=true)[0;10m +[32mApr 15 20:30:15 sle12-c crmd[1136]: notice: run_graph: Transition 123 (Complete=1, Pending=0, Fired=0, Skipped=0, Incomplete=0, Source=/var/lib/pacemaker/pengine/pe-input-1907.bz2): Complete[0;10m diff --git a/doc/website-v1/index.adoc b/doc/website-v1/index.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..1ebd635 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/index.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,25 @@ +The CRM Shell +============= + +++++ +<div class="frontpage-image"> +<br><br> +<img src="/img/laptop.png"> +<br><br><br> +</div> +++++ + +*`crmsh` is a cluster management shell* for the Pacemaker High Availability stack. + +Configure, manage and troubleshoot clusters from the command line, +with full tab completion and extensive help. `crmsh` also provides +advanced features like low-level cluster configuration, cluster scripting, +package management, and history exploration tools giving you a complete +insight into the state of your cluster. + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/[Source Code] +* http://crmsh.github.io/man-4.3/[Reference Manual (v4.3.1)] +* http://crmsh.github.io/man-3/[Reference Manual (v3.0.0)] +* http://crmsh.github.io/man-2.0/[Reference Manual (v2.3.2)] +* https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/network:ha-clustering:Stable/crmsh[Packages] +* http://clusterlabs.org[Cluster Labs] diff --git a/doc/website-v1/installation.adoc b/doc/website-v1/installation.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5a027a0 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/installation.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +Installation +============ + +See link:/download[Download]. diff --git a/doc/website-v1/make-news.py b/doc/website-v1/make-news.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f3c9073 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/make-news.py @@ -0,0 +1,136 @@ +#!/usr/bin/env python +""" +Output a combined news.adoc document +Also write an Atom feed document +""" + +import os +import sys +import hashlib +import datetime +import time + +OUTPUT_HEADER = """= News + +""" +OUTPUT_FOOTER = """ +link:https://savannah.nongnu.org/news/?group_id=10890[Old News Archive] +""" + +ATOM_TEMPLATE = """<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> +<feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"> +<title>crmsh</title> +<subtitle>Cluster manager shell news</subtitle> +<link href="http://crmsh.github.io/atom.xml" rel="self" /> +<link href="http://crmsh.github.io/" /> +<id>%(id)s</id> +<updated>%(updated)s</updated> +%(entries)s +</feed> +""" + +ATOM_NAME = "gen/atom.xml" + +root_id = "tag:crmsh.github.io,2014:/atom" + +def escape(s): + s = s.replace('&', '&') + s = s.replace('<', '<') + s = s.replace('>', '>') + s = s.replace('"', """) + return s + +class Entry(object): + def __init__(self, fname): + self.filename = fname + self.name = os.path.splitext(os.path.basename(fname))[0] + with open(fname) as f: + self.title = f.readline().strip() + f.readline() + l = f.readline() + while l.startswith(':'): + k, v = l[1:].split(':', 1) + k = k.lower() + v = v.strip() + setattr(self, k, v) + l = f.readline() + self.content = l + f.read() + if not hasattr(self, 'author'): + raise ValueError("Missing author") + if not hasattr(self, 'email'): + raise ValueError("Missing email") + if not hasattr(self, 'date'): + raise ValueError("Missing date") + + def atom_id(self): + return root_id + '::' + hashlib.sha1(self.filename).hexdigest() + + def atom_date(self): + return self.date.replace(' ', 'T') + ':00' + time.tzname[0] + + def date_obj(self): + from dateutil import parser + return (parser.parse(self.date)) + + def atom_content(self): + return escape('<pre>\n' + self.content + '\n</pre>\n') + + def atom(self): + data = {'title': self.title, + 'id': self.atom_id(), + 'updated': self.atom_date(), + 'name': self.name, + 'content': self.atom_content(), + 'author': self.author, + 'email': self.email} + return """<entry> +<title>%(title)s</title> +<id>%(id)s</id> +<updated>%(updated)s</updated> +<link>http://crmsh.github.io/news/%(name)s</link> +<content type="html"> +%(content)s +</content> +<author> +<name>%(author)s</name> +<email>%(email)s</email> +</author> +</entry> +""" % data + + +def sort_entries(entries): + return list(reversed(sorted(entries, key=lambda e: e.date_obj()))) + + +def make_atom(): + inputs = sort_entries([Entry(f) for f in sys.argv[2:]]) + with open(ATOM_NAME, 'w') as output: + output.write(ATOM_TEMPLATE % { + 'id': root_id, + 'updated': inputs[0].atom_date(), + 'entries': '\n'.join(f.atom() for f in inputs) + }) + + +def main(): + # TODO: sort by date + inputs = sort_entries([Entry(f) for f in sys.argv[2:]]) + with open(sys.argv[1], 'w') as output: + output.write(OUTPUT_HEADER) + e = inputs[0] + output.write("link:/news/%s[%s]\n\n" % (e.name, e.date)) + output.write(":leveloffset: 1\n\n") + output.write("include::%s[]\n\n" % (e.filename)) + output.write(":leveloffset: 0\n\n") + + output.write("''''\n") + for e in inputs[1:]: + output.write("* link:/news/%s[%s %s]\n" % (e.name, e.date, e.title)) + output.write(OUTPUT_FOOTER) + +if __name__ == "__main__": + if sys.argv[1] == ATOM_NAME: + make_atom() + else: + main() diff --git a/doc/website-v1/man-1.2.adoc b/doc/website-v1/man-1.2.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d945719 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/man-1.2.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,3437 @@ +:man source: crm +:man version: 1.2.6 +:man manual: crmsh documentation + +crm(8) +====== + +NOTE: This is the documentation for stable release 1.2.6 of `crmsh`. + + +NAME +---- +crm - Pacemaker command line interface for configuration and management + + +SYNOPSIS +-------- +*crm* [-D output_type] [-f file] [-c cib] [-H hist_src] [-hFRDw] [--version] [args] + + +[[topics_Description,Program description]] +DESCRIPTION +----------- +Pacemaker configuration is stored in a CIB file (Cluster +Information Base). The CIB is a set of instructions coded in XML. +Editing the CIB is a challenge, not only due to its complexity +and a wide variety of options, but also because XML is more +computer than user friendly. The `crm` shell alleviates this +issue significantly by introducing small and simple configuration +language. The CIB is translated into this language on the fly. + +`crm` is also a management tool. For management tasks it relies +almost exclusively on other command line tools, such as +`crm_resource(8)` or `crm_attribute(8)`. Use of these programs +is, however, plagued by the notorious weakness common to all UNIX +tools: a multitude of options, necessary for operation and yet +very hard to remember. `crm` tries to present a consistent +interface to the user and to hide the arcane detail. + +It may be used either as an interactive shell or for single +commands directly on the shell's command line. It is also +possible to feed it a set of commands from standard input or a +file, thus turning it into a scripting tool. Templates with ready +made configurations may help newbies learn about the cluster +configuration or facilitate testing procedures. + +The `crm` shell is line oriented: every command must start and +finish on the same line. It is possible to use a continuation +character (`\`) to write one command in two or more lines. The +continuation character is commonly used when displaying +configurations. + +OPTIONS +------- +*-f, --file*='FILE':: + Load commands from the given file. If the file is `-` then + use terminal `stdin`. + +*-c, --cib*='CIB':: + Start the session with the given shadow CIB file. + Equivalent to `cib use`. + +*-D, --display=*'OUTPUT_TYPE':: + Choose one of the output options: `plain`, `color`, or + `uppercase`. The default is `color` if the terminal emulation + supports colors. Otherwise, `plain` is used. + +*-F, --force*:: + Make `crm` proceed with doing changes even though it would + normally ask user to confirm some of them. Mostly useful in + scripts. + +*-w, --wait*:: + Make `crm` wait for the cluster transition to finish (for the + changes to take effect) after each processed line. + +*-H, --history*='DIR|FILE':: + The `history` commands can examine either live cluster + (default) or a report generated by `hb_report`. Use this + option to specify a directory or file containing the report. + +*-h, --help*:: + Print help page. + +*--version*:: + Print crmsh version and build information (Mercurial Hg + changeset hash). + +*-R, --regression-tests*:: + Run in the regression test mode. Used mainly by the + regression testing suite. + +*-d, --debug*:: + Print some debug information. Used by developers. [Not yet + refined enough to print useful information for other users.] + +[[topics_Introduction,Introduction to the user interface]] +== Introduction to the user interface + +Arguably the most important aspect of `crm` is the user +interface. We begin with an informal introduction so that the +reader may get acquainted with it and get a general feeling of +the tool. It is probably best just to give some examples: + +1. Command line (one-shot) use: + + # crm resource stop www_app + +2. Interactive use: + + # crm + crm(live)# resource + crm(live)resource# unmanage tetris_1 + crm(live)resource# end + crm(live)# node standby node4 + +3. Cluster configuration: + + # crm configure<<EOF + # + # resources + # + primitive disk0 iscsi \ + params portal=192.168.2.108:3260 target=iqn.2008-07.com.suse:disk0 + primitive fs0 Filesystem \ + params device=/dev/disk/by-label/disk0 directory=/disk0 fstype=ext3 + primitive internal_ip IPaddr params ip=192.168.1.101 + primitive apache apache \ + params configfile=/disk0/etc/apache2/site0.conf + primitive apcfence stonith:apcsmart \ + params ttydev=/dev/ttyS0 hostlist="node1 node2" \ + op start timeout=60s + primitive pingd pingd \ + params name=pingd dampen=5s multiplier=100 host_list="r1 r2" + # + # monitor apache and the UPS + # + monitor apache 60s:30s + monitor apcfence 120m:60s + # + # cluster layout + # + group internal_www \ + disk0 fs0 internal_ip apache + clone fence apcfence \ + meta globally-unique=false clone-max=2 clone-node-max=1 + clone conn pingd \ + meta globally-unique=false clone-max=2 clone-node-max=1 + location node_pref internal_www \ + rule 50: #uname eq node1 \ + rule pingd: defined pingd + # + # cluster properties + # + property stonith-enabled=true + commit + EOF + +If you've ever done a CRM style configuration, you should be able +to understand the above examples without much difficulties. The +shell should provide a means to manage the cluster efficiently or +put together a configuration in a concise manner. + +The `(live)` string in the prompt signifies that the current CIB +in use is the cluster live configuration. It is also possible to +work with the so-called shadow CIBs, i.e. configurations which +are stored in files and aren't active, but may be applied at any +time to the cluster. + +Since the CIB is hierarchical such is the interface too. There +are several levels and entering each of them enables the user to +use a certain set of commands. + +[[topics_Shadows,Shadow CIB usage]] +== Shadow CIB usage + +Shadow CIB is a normal cluster configuration stored in a file. +They may be manipulated in the same way like the _live_ CIB, but +these changes have no effect on the cluster resources. The +administrator may choose to apply any of them to the cluster, +thus replacing the running configuration with the one which is in +the shadow CIB. The `crm` prompt always contains the name of the +configuration which is currently in use or string _live_ if we +are using the current cluster configuration. + +At the configure level no changes take place before the `commit` +command. Sometimes though, the administrator may start working +with the running configuration, but change mind and instead of +committing the changes to the cluster save them to a shadow CIB. +This short `configure` session excerpt shows how: +............... + crm(live)configure# cib new test-2 + INFO: test-2 shadow CIB created + crm(test-2)configure# commit +............... + +[[topics_Templates,Configuration templates]] +== Configuration templates + +Configuration templates are ready made configurations created by +cluster experts. They are designed in such a way so that users +may generate valid cluster configurations with minimum effort. +If you are new to Pacemaker, templates may be the best way to +start. + +We will show here how to create a simple yet functional Apache +configuration: +............... + # crm configure + crm(live)configure# template + crm(live)configure template# list templates + apache filesystem virtual-ip + crm(live)configure template# new web <TAB><TAB> + apache filesystem virtual-ip + crm(live)configure template# new web apache + INFO: pulling in template apache + INFO: pulling in template virtual-ip + crm(live)configure template# list + web2-d web2 vip2 web3 vip web +............... + +We enter the `template` level from `configure`. Use the `list` +command to show templates available on the system. The `new` +command creates a configuration from the `apache` template. You +can use tab completion to pick templates. Note that the apache +template depends on a virtual IP address which is automatically +pulled along. The `list` command shows the just created `web` +configuration, among other configurations (I hope that you, +unlike me, will use more sensible and descriptive names). + +The `show` command, which displays the resulting configuration, +may be used to get an idea about the minimum required changes +which have to be done. All `ERROR` messages show the line numbers +in which the respective parameters are to be defined: +............... + crm(live)configure template# show + ERROR: 23: required parameter ip not set + ERROR: 61: required parameter id not set + ERROR: 65: required parameter configfile not set + crm(live)configure template# edit +............... + +The `edit` command invokes the preferred text editor with the +`web` configuration. At the top of the file, the user is advised +how to make changes. A good template should require from the user +to specify only parameters. For example, the `web` configuration +we created above has the following required and optional +parameters (all parameter lines start with `%%`): +............... + $ grep -n ^%% ~/.crmconf/web + 23:%% ip + 31:%% netmask + 35:%% lvs_support + 61:%% id + 65:%% configfile + 71:%% options + 76:%% envfiles +............... + +These lines are the only ones that should be modified. Simply +append the parameter value at the end of the line. For instance, +after editing this template, the result could look like this (we +used tabs instead of spaces to make the values stand out): +............... + $ grep -n ^%% ~/.crmconf/web + 23:%% ip 192.168.1.101 + 31:%% netmask + 35:%% lvs_support + 61:%% id websvc + 65:%% configfile /etc/apache2/httpd.conf + 71:%% options + 76:%% envfiles +............... + +As you can see, the parameter line format is very simple: +............... + %% <name> <value> +............... + +After editing the file, use `show` again to display the +configuration: +............... + crm(live)configure template# show + primitive virtual-ip ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr \ + params ip="192.168.1.101" + primitive apache ocf:heartbeat:apache \ + params configfile="/etc/apache2/httpd.conf" + monitor apache 120s:60s + group websvc \ + apache virtual-ip +............... + +The target resource of the apache template is a group which we +named `websvc` in this sample session. + +This configuration looks exactly as you could type it at the +`configure` level. The point of templates is to save you some +typing. It is important, however, to understand the configuration +produced. + +Finally, the configuration may be applied to the current +crm configuration (note how the configuration changed slightly, +though it is still equivalent, after being digested at the +`configure` level): +............... + crm(live)configure template# apply + crm(live)configure template# cd .. + crm(live)configure# show + node xen-b + node xen-c + primitive apache ocf:heartbeat:apache \ + params configfile="/etc/apache2/httpd.conf" \ + op monitor interval="120s" timeout="60s" + primitive virtual-ip ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr \ + params ip="192.168.1.101" + group websvc apache virtual-ip +............... + +Note that this still does not commit the configuration to the CIB +which is used in the shell, either the running one (`live`) or +some shadow CIB. For that you still need to execute the `commit` +command. + +To complete our example, we should also define the preferred node +to run the service: +............... + crm(live)configure# location websvc-pref websvc 100: xen-b +............... + +If you are not happy with some resource names which are provided +by default, you can rename them now: +............... + crm(live)configure# rename virtual-ip intranet-ip + crm(live)configure# show + node xen-b + node xen-c + primitive apache ocf:heartbeat:apache \ + params configfile="/etc/apache2/httpd.conf" \ + op monitor interval="120s" timeout="60s" + primitive intranet-ip ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr \ + params ip="192.168.1.101" + group websvc apache intranet-ip + location websvc-pref websvc 100: xen-b +............... + +To summarize, working with templates typically consists of the +following steps: + +- `new`: create a new configuration from templates +- `edit`: define parameters, at least the required ones +- `show`: see if the configuration is valid +- `apply`: apply the configuration to the `configure` level + +[[topics_Testing,Resource testing]] +== Resource testing + +The amount of detail in a cluster makes all configurations prone +to errors. By far the largest number of issues in a cluster is +due to bad resource configuration. The shell can help quickly +diagnose such problems. And considerably reduce your keyboard +wear. + +Let's say that we entered the following configuration: +............... + node xen-b + node xen-c + node xen-d + primitive fencer stonith:external/libvirt \ + params hypervisor_uri="qemu+tcp://10.2.13.1/system" \ + hostlist="xen-b xen-c xen-d" \ + op monitor interval="2h" + primitive svc ocf:heartbeat:Xinetd \ + params service="systat" \ + op monitor interval="30s" + primitive intranet-ip ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2 \ + params ip="10.2.13.100" \ + op monitor interval="30s" + primitive apache ocf:heartbeat:apache \ + params configfile="/etc/apache2/httpd.conf" \ + op monitor interval="120s" timeout="60s" + group websvc apache intranet-ip + location websvc-pref websvc 100: xen-b +............... + +Before typing `commit` to submit the configuration to the cib we +can make sure that all resources are usable on all nodes: +............... + crm(live)configure# rsctest websvc svc fencer +............... + +It is important that resources being tested are not running on +any nodes. Otherwise, the `rsctest` command will refuse to do +anything. Of course, if the current configuration resides in a +CIB shadow, then a `commit` is irrelevant. The point being that +resources are not running on any node. + +.Note on stopping all resources +**************************** +Alternatively to not committing a configuration, it is also +possible to tell Pacemaker not to start any resources: + +............... + crm(live)configure# property stop-all-resources="yes" +............... +Almost none---resources of class stonith are still started. But +shell is not as strict when it comes to stonith resources. +**************************** + +Order of resources is significant insofar that a resource depends +on all resources to its left. In most configurations, it's +probably practical to test resources in several runs, based on +their dependencies. + +Apart from groups, `crm` does not interpret constraints and +therefore knows nothing about resource dependencies. It also +doesn't know if a resource can run on a node at all in case of an +asymmetric cluster. It is up to the user to specify a list of +eligible nodes if a resource is not meant to run on every node. + +[[topics_Completion,Tab completion]] +== Tab completion + +The `crm` makes extensive use of tab completion. The completion +is both static (i.e. for `crm` commands) and dynamic. The latter +takes into account the current status of the cluster or +information from installed resource agents. Sometimes, completion +may also be used to get short help on resource parameters. Here a +few examples: +............... + crm(live)# resource + crm(live)resource# <TAB><TAB> + bye failcount move restart unmigrate + cd help param show unmove + cleanup list promote start up + demote manage quit status utilization + end meta refresh stop + exit migrate reprobe unmanage + crm(live)resource# end + crm(live)# configure + crm(live)configure# primitive fence-1 <TAB><TAB> + heartbeat: lsb: ocf: stonith: + crm(live)configure# primitive fence-1 stonith:<TAB><TAB> + apcmaster external/ippower9258 fence_legacy + apcmastersnmp external/kdumpcheck ibmhmc + apcsmart external/libvirt ipmilan + baytech external/nut meatware + bladehpi external/rackpdu null + cyclades external/riloe nw_rpc100s + drac3 external/sbd rcd_serial + external/drac5 external/ssh rps10 + external/dracmc-telnet external/ssh-bad ssh + external/hmchttp external/ssh-slow suicide + external/ibmrsa external/vmware wti_mpc + external/ibmrsa-telnet external/xen0 wti_nps + external/ipmi external/xen0-ha + crm(live)configure# primitive fence-1 stonith:ipmilan params <TAB><TAB> + auth= hostname= ipaddr= login= password= port= priv= + crm(live)configure# primitive fence-1 stonith:ipmilan params auth=<TAB><TAB> + auth* (string) + The authorization type of the IPMI session ("none", "straight", "md2", or "md5") + crm(live)configure# primitive fence-1 stonith:ipmilan params auth= +............... + +[[topics_Checks,Configuration semantic checks]] +== Configuration semantic checks + +Resource definitions may be checked against the meta-data +provided with the resource agents. These checks are currently +carried out: + +- are required parameters set +- existence of defined parameters +- timeout values for operations + +The parameter checks are obvious and need no further explanation. +Failures in these checks are treated as configuration errors. + +The timeouts for operations should be at least as long as those +recommended in the meta-data. Too short timeout values are a +common mistake in cluster configurations and, even worse, they +often slip through if cluster testing was not thorough. Though +operation timeouts issues are treated as warnings, make sure that +the timeouts are usable in your environment. Note also that the +values given are just _advisory minimum_---your resources may +require longer timeouts. + +User may tune the frequency of checks and the treatment of errors +by the <<cmdhelp_options_check-frequency,`check-frequency`>> and +<<cmdhelp_options_check-mode,`check-mode`>> preferences. + +Note that if the `check-frequency` is set to `always` and the +`check-mode` to `strict`, errors are not tolerated and such +configuration cannot be saved. + +[[topics_Security,Access Control Lists (ACL)]] +== Access Control Lists (ACL) + +By default, the users from the `haclient` group have full access +to the cluster (or, more precisely, to the CIB). Access control +lists allow for finer access control to the cluster. + +Access control lists consist of an ordered set of access rules. +Each rule allows read or write access or denies access +completely. Rules are typically combined to produce a specific +role. Then, users may be assigned a role. + +For instance, this is a role which defines a set of rules +allowing management of a single resource: + +............... + role bigdb_admin \ + write meta:bigdb:target-role \ + write meta:bigdb:is-managed \ + write location:bigdb \ + read ref:bigdb +............... + +The first two rules allow modifying the `target-role` and +`is-managed` meta attributes which effectively enables users in +this role to stop/start and manage/unmanage the resource. The +constraints write access rule allows moving the resource around. +Finally, the user is granted read access to the resource +definition. + +For proper operation of all Pacemaker programs, it is advisable +to add the following role to all users: + +............... + role read_all \ + read cib +............... + +For finer grained read access try with the rules listed in the +following role: + +............... + role basic_read \ + read node attribute:uname \ + read node attribute:type \ + read property \ + read status +............... + +It is however possible that some Pacemaker programs (e.g. +`ptest`) may not function correctly if the whole CIB is not +readable. + +Some of the ACL rules in the examples above are expanded by the +shell to XPath specifications. For instance, +`meta:bigdb:target-role` is a shortcut for +`//primitive[@id='bigdb']/meta_attributes/nvpair[@name='target-role']`. +You can see the expansion by showing XML: + +............... + crm(live) configure# show xml bigdb_admin + ... + <acls> + <acl_role id="bigdb_admin"> + <write id="bigdb_admin-write" + xpath="//primitive[@id='bigdb']/meta_attributes/nvpair[@name='target-role']"/> +............... + +Many different XPath expressions can have equal meaning. For +instance, the following two are equal, but only the first one is +going to be recognized as shortcut: + +............... + //primitive[@id='bigdb']/meta_attributes/nvpair[@name='target-role'] + //resources/primitive[@id='bigdb']/meta_attributes/nvpair[@name='target-role'] +............... + +XPath is a powerful language, but you should try to keep your ACL +xpaths simple and the builtin shortcuts should be used whenever +possible. + +[[topics_Reference,Command reference]] +== Command reference + +We define a small and simple language. Most commands consist of +just a list of simple tokens. The only complex constructs are +found at the `configure` level. + +The syntax is described in a somewhat informal manner: `<>` +denotes a string, `[]` means that the construct is optional, the +ellipsis (`...`) signifies that the previous construct may be +repeated, `|` means pick one of many, and the rest are literals +(strings, `:`, `=`). + +=== `status` + +Show cluster status. The status is displayed by `crm_mon`. Supply +additional arguments for more information or different format. +See `crm_mon(8)` for more details. + +Usage: +............... + status [<option> ...] + + option :: bynode | inactive | ops | timing | failcounts +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib,CIB shadow management]] +=== `cib` (shadow CIBs) + +This level is for management of shadow CIBs. It is available both +at the top level and the `configure` level. + +All the commands are implemented using `cib_shadow(8)` and the +`CIB_shadow` environment variable. The user prompt always +includes the name of the currently active shadow or the live CIB. + +[[cmdhelp_cib_new,create a new shadow CIB]] +==== `new` + +Create a new shadow CIB. The live cluster configuration and +status is copied to the shadow CIB. Specify `withstatus` if you +want to edit the status section of the shadow CIB (see the +<<cmdhelp_cibstatus,cibstatus section>>). Add `force` to force overwriting the +existing shadow CIB. + +To start with an empty configuration that is not copied from the live +CIB, specify the `empty` keyword. (This also allows a shadow CIB to be +created in case no cluster is running.) + +Usage: +............... + new <cib> [withstatus] [force] [empty] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_delete,delete a shadow CIB]] +==== `delete` + +Delete an existing shadow CIB. + +Usage: +............... + delete <cib> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_reset,copy live cib to a shadow CIB]] +==== `reset` + +Copy the current cluster configuration into the shadow CIB. + +Usage: +............... + reset <cib> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_commit,copy a shadow CIB to the cluster]] +==== `commit` + +Apply a shadow CIB to the cluster. + +Usage: +............... + commit <cib> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_use,change working CIB]] +==== `use` + +Choose a CIB source. If you want to edit the status from the +shadow CIB specify `withstatus` (see <<cmdhelp_cibstatus,`cibstatus`>>). +Leave out the CIB name to switch to the running CIB. + +Usage: +............... + use [<cib>] [withstatus] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_diff,diff between the shadow CIB and the live CIB]] +==== `diff` + +Print differences between the current cluster configuration and +the active shadow CIB. + +Usage: +............... + diff +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_list,list all shadow CIBs]] +==== `list` + +List existing shadow CIBs. + +Usage: +............... + list +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_import,import a CIB or PE input file to a shadow]] +==== `import` + +At times it may be useful to create a shadow file from the +existing CIB. The CIB may be specified as file or as a PE input +file number. The shell will look up files in the local directory +first and then in the PE directory (typically `/var/lib/pengine`). +Once the CIB file is found, it is copied to a shadow and this +shadow is immediately available for use at both `configure` and +`cibstatus` levels. + +If the shadow name is omitted then the target shadow is named +after the input CIB file. + +Note that there are often more than one PE input file, so you may +need to specify the full name. + +Usage: +............... + import {<file>|<number>} [<shadow>] +............... +Examples: +............... + import pe-warn-2222 + import 2289 issue2 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_cibstatus,CIB status management and editing]] +==== `cibstatus` + +Enter edit and manage the CIB status section level. See the +<<cmdhelp_cibstatus,CIB status management section>>. + +[[cmdhelp_ra,Resource Agents (RA) lists and documentation]] +=== `ra` + +This level contains commands which show various information about +the installed resource agents. It is available both at the top +level and at the `configure` level. + +[[cmdhelp_ra_classes,list classes and providers]] +==== `classes` + +Print all resource agents' classes and, where appropriate, a list +of available providers. + +Usage: +............... + classes +............... + +[[cmdhelp_ra_list,list RA for a class (and provider)]] +==== `list` + +List available resource agents for the given class. If the class +is `ocf`, supply a provider to get agents which are available +only from that provider. + +Usage: +............... + list <class> [<provider>] +............... +Example: +............... + list ocf pacemaker +............... + +[[cmdhelp_ra_meta,show meta data for a RA]] +==== `meta` (`info`) + +Show the meta-data of a resource agent type. This is where users +can find information on how to use a resource agent. It is also +possible to get information from some programs: `pengine`, +`crmd`, `cib`, and `stonithd`. Just specify the program name +instead of an RA. + +Usage: +............... + info [<class>:[<provider>:]]<type> + info <type> <class> [<provider>] (obsolete) +............... +Example: +............... + info apache + info ocf:pacemaker:Dummy + info stonith:ipmilan + info pengine +............... + +[[cmdhelp_ra_providers,show providers for a RA and a class]] +==== `providers` + +List providers for a resource agent type. The class parameter +defaults to `ocf`. + +Usage: +............... + providers <type> [<class>] +............... +Example: +............... + providers apache +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource,Resource management]] +=== `resource` + +At this level resources may be managed. + +All (or almost all) commands are implemented with the CRM tools +such as `crm_resource(8)`. + +[[cmdhelp_resource_status,show status of resources]] +==== `status` (`show`, `list`) + +Print resource status. If the resource parameter is left out +status of all resources is printed. + +Usage: +............... + status [<rsc>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_start,start a resource]] +==== `start` + +Start a resource by setting the `target-role` attribute. If there +are multiple meta attributes sets, the attribute is set in all of +them. If the resource is a clone, all `target-role` attributes +are removed from the children resources. + +For details on group management see <<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... + start <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_stop,stop a resource]] +==== `stop` + +Stop a resource using the `target-role` attribute. If there +are multiple meta attributes sets, the attribute is set in all of +them. If the resource is a clone, all `target-role` attributes +are removed from the children resources. + +For details on group management see <<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... + stop <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_restart,restart a resource]] +==== `restart` + +Restart a resource. This is essentially a shortcut for resource +stop followed by a start. The shell is first going to wait for +the stop to finish, that is for all resources to really stop, and +only then to order the start action. Due to this command +entailing a whole set of operations, informational messages are +printed to let the user see some progress. + +For details on group management see <<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... + restart <rsc> +............... +Example: +............... + # crm resource restart g_webserver + INFO: ordering g_webserver to stop + waiting for stop to finish .... done + INFO: ordering g_webserver to start + # +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_promote,promote a master-slave resource]] +==== `promote` + +Promote a master-slave resource using the `target-role` +attribute. + +Usage: +............... + promote <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_demote,demote a master-slave resource]] +==== `demote` + +Demote a master-slave resource using the `target-role` +attribute. + +Usage: +............... + demote <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_manage,put a resource into managed mode]] +==== `manage` + +Manage a resource using the `is-managed` attribute. If there +are multiple meta attributes sets, the attribute is set in all of +them. If the resource is a clone, all `is-managed` attributes are +removed from the children resources. + +For details on group management see <<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... + manage <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_unmanage,put a resource into unmanaged mode]] +==== `unmanage` + +Unmanage a resource using the `is-managed` attribute. If there +are multiple meta attributes sets, the attribute is set in all of +them. If the resource is a clone, all `is-managed` attributes are +removed from the children resources. + +For details on group management see <<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... + unmanage <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_migrate,migrate a resource to another node]] +==== `migrate` (`move`) + +Migrate a resource to a different node. If node is left out, the +resource is migrated by creating a constraint which prevents it from +running on the current node. Additionally, you may specify a +lifetime for the constraint---once it expires, the location +constraint will no longer be active. + +Usage: +............... + migrate <rsc> [<node>] [<lifetime>] [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_unmigrate,unmigrate a resource to another node]] +==== `unmigrate` (`unmove`) + +Remove the constraint generated by the previous migrate command. + +Usage: +............... + unmigrate <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_param,manage a parameter of a resource]] +==== `param` + +Show/edit/delete a parameter of a resource. + +Usage: +............... + param <rsc> set <param> <value> + param <rsc> delete <param> + param <rsc> show <param> +............... +Example: +............... + param ip_0 show ip +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_secret,manage sensitive parameters]] +==== `secret` + +Sensitive parameters can be kept in local files rather than CIB +in order to prevent accidental data exposure. Use the `secret` +command to manage such parameters. `stash` and `unstash` move the +value from the CIB and back to the CIB respectively. The `set` +subcommand sets the parameter to the provided value. `delete` +removes the parameter completely. `show` displays the value of +the parameter from the local file. Use `check` to verify if the +local file content is valid. + +Usage: +............... + secret <rsc> set <param> <value> + secret <rsc> stash <param> + secret <rsc> unstash <param> + secret <rsc> delete <param> + secret <rsc> show <param> + secret <rsc> check <param> +............... +Example: +............... + secret fence_1 show password + secret fence_1 stash password + secret fence_1 set password secret_value +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_meta,manage a meta attribute]] +==== `meta` + +Show/edit/delete a meta attribute of a resource. Currently, all +meta attributes of a resource may be managed with other commands +such as `resource stop`. + +Usage: +............... + meta <rsc> set <attr> <value> + meta <rsc> delete <attr> + meta <rsc> show <attr> +............... +Example: +............... + meta ip_0 set target-role stopped +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_utilization,manage a utilization attribute]] +==== `utilization` + +Show/edit/delete a utilization attribute of a resource. These +attributes describe hardware requirements. By setting the +`placement-strategy` cluster property appropriately, it is +possible then to distribute resources based on resource +requirements and node size. See also <<cmdhelp_node_utilization,node utilization attributes>>. + +Usage: +............... + utilization <rsc> set <attr> <value> + utilization <rsc> delete <attr> + utilization <rsc> show <attr> +............... +Example: +............... + utilization xen1 set memory 4096 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_failcount,manage failcounts]] +==== `failcount` + +Show/edit/delete the failcount of a resource. + +Usage: +............... + failcount <rsc> set <node> <value> + failcount <rsc> delete <node> + failcount <rsc> show <node> +............... +Example: +............... + failcount fs_0 delete node2 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_cleanup,cleanup resource status]] +==== `cleanup` + +Cleanup resource status. Typically done after the resource has +temporarily failed. If a node is omitted, cleanup on all nodes. +If there are many nodes, the command may take a while. + +Usage: +............... + cleanup <rsc> [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_refresh,refresh CIB from the LRM status]] +==== `refresh` + +Refresh CIB from the LRM status. + +Usage: +............... + refresh [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_reprobe,probe for resources not started by the CRM]] +==== `reprobe` + +Probe for resources not started by the CRM. + +Usage: +............... + reprobe [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_trace,start RA tracing]] +==== `trace` + +Start tracing RA for the given operation. The trace files are +stored in `$HA_VARLIB/trace_ra`. If the operation to be traced is +monitor, note that the number of trace files can grow very +quickly. + +Usage: +............... + trace <rsc> <op> [<interval>] +............... +Example: +............... + trace fs start +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_untrace,stop RA tracing]] +==== `untrace` + +Stop tracing RA for the given operation. + +Usage: +............... + untrace <rsc> <op> [<interval>] +............... +Example: +............... + untrace fs start +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node,Nodes management]] +=== `node` + +Node management and status commands. + +[[cmdhelp_node_status,show nodes' status as XML]] +==== `status` + +Show nodes' status as XML. If the node parameter is omitted then +all nodes are shown. + +Usage: +............... + status [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_show,show node]] +==== `show` + +Show a node definition. If the node parameter is omitted then all +nodes are shown. + +Usage: +............... + show [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_standby,put node into standby]] +==== `standby` + +Set a node to standby status. The node parameter defaults to the +node where the command is run. Additionally, you may specify a +lifetime for the standby---if set to `reboot`, the node will be +back online once it reboots. `forever` will keep the node in +standby after reboot. + +Usage: +............... + standby [<node>] [<lifetime>] + + lifetime :: reboot | forever +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_online,set node online]] +==== `online` + +Set a node to online status. The node parameter +defaults to the node where the command is run. + +Usage: +............... + online [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_maintenance,put node into maintenance mode]] +==== `maintenance` + +Set the node status to maintenance. This is equivalent to the +cluster-wide `maintenance-mode` property but puts just one node +into the maintenance mode. The node parameter defaults to the +node where the command is run. + +Usage: +............... + maintenance [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_ready,put node into ready mode]] +==== `ready` + +Set the node's maintenance status to `off`. The node should be +now again fully operational and capable of running resource +operations. + +Usage: +............... + ready [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_fence,fence node]] +==== `fence` + +Make CRM fence a node. This functionality depends on stonith +resources capable of fencing the specified node. No such stonith +resources, no fencing will happen. + +Usage: +............... + fence <node> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_clearstate,Clear node state]] +==== `clearnodestate` + +Resets and clears the state of the specified node. This node is +afterwards assumed clean and offline. This command can be used to +manually confirm that a node has been fenced (e.g., powered off). + +Be careful! This can cause data corruption if you confirm that a node is +down that is, in fact, not cleanly down - the cluster will proceed as if +the fence had succeeded, possibly starting resources multiple times. + +Usage: +............... + clearstate <node> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_delete,delete node]] +==== `delete` + +Delete a node. This command will remove the node from the CIB +and, in case the cluster stack is running, use the appropriate +program (`crm_node` or `hb_delnode`) to remove the node from the +membership. + +If the node is still listed as active and a member of our +partition we refuse to remove it. With the global force option +(`-F`) we will try to delete the node anyway. + +Usage: +............... + delete <node> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_attribute,manage attributes]] +==== `attribute` + +Edit node attributes. This kind of attribute should refer to +relatively static properties, such as memory size. + +Usage: +............... + attribute <node> set <attr> <value> + attribute <node> delete <attr> + attribute <node> show <attr> +............... +Example: +............... + attribute node_1 set memory_size 4096 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_utilization,manage utilization attributes]] +==== `utilization` + +Edit node utilization attributes. These attributes describe +hardware characteristics as integer numbers such as memory size +or the number of CPUs. By setting the `placement-strategy` +cluster property appropriately, it is possible then to distribute +resources based on resource requirements and node size. See also +<<cmdhelp_resource_utilization,resource utilization attributes>>. + +Usage: +............... + utilization <node> set <attr> <value> + utilization <node> delete <attr> + utilization <node> show <attr> +............... +Examples: +............... + utilization node_1 set memory 16384 + utilization node_1 show cpu +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_status-attr,manage status attributes]] +==== `status-attr` + +Edit node attributes which are in the CIB status section, i.e. +attributes which hold properties of a more volatile nature. One +typical example is attribute generated by the `pingd` utility. + +Usage: +............... + status-attr <node> set <attr> <value> + status-attr <node> delete <attr> + status-attr <node> show <attr> +............... +Example: +............... + status-attr node_1 show pingd +............... + +[[cmdhelp_site,site support]] +=== `site` + +A cluster may consist of two or more subclusters in different and +distant locations. This set of commands supports such setups. + +[[cmdhelp_site_ticket,manage site tickets]] +==== `ticket` + +Tickets are cluster-wide attributes. They can be managed at the +site where this command is executed. + +It is then possible to constrain resources depending on the +ticket availability (see the <<cmdhelp_configure_rsc_ticket,`rsc_ticket`>> command +for more details). + +Usage: +............... + ticket {grant|revoke|standby|activate|show|time|delete} <ticket> +............... +Example: +............... + ticket grant ticket1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options,user preferences]] +=== `options` + +The user may set various options for the crm shell itself. + +[[cmdhelp_options_skill-level,set skill level]] +==== `skill-level` + +Based on the skill-level setting, the user is allowed to use only +a subset of commands. There are three levels: operator, +administrator, and expert. The operator level allows only +commands at the `resource` and `node` levels, but not editing +or deleting resources. The administrator may do that and may also +configure the cluster at the `configure` level and manage the +shadow CIBs. The expert may do all. + +Usage: +............... + skill-level <level> + + level :: operator | administrator | expert +............... + +.Note on security +**************************** +The `skill-level` option is advisory only. There is nothing +stopping any users change their skill level (see +<<topics_Security,Access Control Lists (ACL)>> on how to enforce +access control). +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_options_user,set the cluster user]] +==== `user` + +Sufficient privileges are necessary in order to manage a +cluster: programs such as `crm_verify` or `crm_resource` and, +ultimately, `cibadmin` have to be run either as `root` or as the +CRM owner user (typically `hacluster`). You don't have to worry +about that if you run `crm` as `root`. A more secure way is to +run the program with your usual privileges, set this option to +the appropriate user (such as `hacluster`), and setup the +`sudoers` file. + +Usage: +............... + user system-user +............... +Example: +............... + user hacluster +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options_editor,set preferred editor program]] +==== `editor` + +The `edit` command invokes an editor. Use this to specify your +preferred editor program. If not set, it will default to either +the value of the `EDITOR` environment variable or to one of the +standard UNIX editors (`vi`,`emacs`,`nano`). + +Usage: +............... + editor program +............... +Example: +............... + editor vim +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options_pager,set preferred pager program]] +==== `pager` + +The `view` command displays text through a pager. Use this to +specify your preferred pager program. If not set, it will default +to either the value of the `PAGER` environment variable or to one +of the standard UNIX system pagers (`less`,`more`,`pg`). + +[[cmdhelp_options_sort-elements,sort CIB elements]] +==== `sort-elements` + +`crm` by default sorts CIB elements. If you want them appear in +the order they were created, set this option to `no`. + +Usage: +............... + sort-elements {yes|no} +............... +Example: +............... + sort-elements no +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options_wait,synchronous operation]] +==== `wait` + +In normal operation, `crm` runs a command and gets back +immediately to process other commands or get input from the user. +With this option set to `yes` it will wait for the started +transition to finish. In interactive mode dots are printed to +indicate progress. + +Usage: +............... + wait {yes|no} +............... +Example: +............... + wait yes +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options_output,set output type]] +==== `output` + +`crm` can adorn configurations in two ways: in color (similar to +for instance the `ls --color` command) and by showing keywords in +upper case. Possible values are `plain`, `color`, and +'uppercase'. It is possible to combine the latter two in order to +get an upper case xmass tree. Just set this option to +`color,uppercase`. + +[[cmdhelp_options_colorscheme,set colors for output]] +==== `colorscheme` + +With `output` set to `color`, a comma separated list of colors +from this option are used to emphasize: + +- keywords +- object ids +- attribute names +- attribute values +- scores +- resource references + +`crm` can show colors only if there is curses support for python +installed (usually provided by the `python-curses` package). The +colors are whatever is available in your terminal. Use `normal` +if you want to keep the default foreground color. + +This user preference defaults to +`yellow,normal,cyan,red,green,magenta` which is good for +terminals with dark background. You may want to change the color +scheme and save it in the preferences file for other color +setups. + +Example: +............... + colorscheme yellow,normal,blue,red,green,magenta +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options_check-frequency,when to perform semantic check]] +==== `check-frequency` + +Semantic check of the CIB or elements modified or created may be +done on every configuration change (`always`), when verifying +(`on-verify`) or `never`. It is by default set to `always`. +Experts may want to change the setting to `on-verify`. + +The checks require that resource agents are present. If they are +not installed at the configuration time set this preference to +`never`. + +See <<topics_Checks,Configuration semantic checks>> for more details. + +[[cmdhelp_options_check-mode,how to treat semantic errors]] +==== `check-mode` + +Semantic check of the CIB or elements modified or created may be +done in the `strict` mode or in the `relaxed` mode. In the former +certain problems are treated as configuration errors. In the +`relaxed` mode all are treated as warnings. The default is `strict`. + +See <<topics_Checks,Configuration semantic checks>> for more details. + +[[cmdhelp_options_add-quotes,add quotes around parameters containing spaces]] +==== `add-quotes` + +The shell (as in `/bin/sh`) parser strips quotes from the command +line. This may sometimes make it really difficult to type values +which contain white space. One typical example is the configure +filter command. The crm shell will supply extra quotes around +arguments which contain white space. The default is `yes`. + +.Note on quotes use +**************************** +Adding quotes around arguments automatically has been introduced +with version 1.2.2 and it is technically a regression. Being a +regression is the only reason the `add-quotes` option exists. If +you have custom shell scripts which would break, just set the +`add-quotes` option to `no`. + +For instance, with adding quotes enabled, it is possible to do +the following: +............... + # crm configure primitive d1 ocf:heartbeat:Dummy meta description="some description here" + # crm configure filter 'sed "s/hostlist=./&node-c /"' fencing +............... +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_options_manage-children,how to handle children resource attributes]] +==== `manage-children` + +Some resource management commands, such as `resource stop`, when +the target resource is a group, may not always produce desired +result. Each element, group and the primitive members, can have a +meta attribute and those attributes may end up with conflicting +values. Consider the following construct: +............... + crm(live)# configure show svc fs virtual-ip + primitive fs ocf:heartbeat:Filesystem \ + params device="/dev/drbd0" directory="/srv/nfs" fstype="ext3" \ + op monitor interval="10s" \ + meta target-role="Started" + primitive virtual-ip ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2 \ + params ip="10.2.13.110" iflabel="1" \ + op monitor interval="10s" \ + op start interval="0" \ + meta target-role="Started" + group svc fs virtual-ip \ + meta target-role="Stopped" +............... + +Even though the element `svc` should be stopped, the group is +actually running because all its members have the `target-role` +set to `Started`: +............... + crm(live)# resource show svc + resource svc is running on: xen-f +............... + +Hence, if the user invokes `resource stop svc` the intention is +not clear. This preference gives the user an opportunity to +better control what happens if attributes of group members have +values which are in conflict with the same attribute of the group +itself. + +Possible values are `ask` (the default), `always`, and `never`. +If set to `always`, the crm shell removes all children attributes +which have values different from the parent. If set to `never`, +all children attributes are left intact. Finally, if set to +`ask`, the user will be asked for each member what is to be done. + +[[cmdhelp_options_show,show current user preference]] +==== `show` + +Display all current settings. + +[[cmdhelp_options_save,save the user preferences to the rc file]] +==== `save` + +Save current settings to the rc file (`$HOME/.config/crm/rc`). On +further `crm` runs, the rc file is automatically read and parsed. + +[[cmdhelp_options_reset,reset user preferences to factory defaults]] +==== `reset` + +This command resets all user options to the defaults. If used as +a single-shot command, the rc file (`$HOME/.config/crm/rc`) is +reset to the defaults too. + +[[cmdhelp_configure,CIB configuration]] +=== `configure` + +This level enables all CIB object definition commands. + +The configuration may be logically divided into four parts: +nodes, resources, constraints, and (cluster) properties and +attributes. Each of these commands support one or more basic CIB +objects. + +Nodes and attributes describing nodes are managed using the +`node` command. + +Commands for resources are: + +- `primitive` +- `monitor` +- `group` +- `clone` +- `ms`/`master` (master-slave) + +In order to streamline large configurations, it is possible to +define a template which can later be referenced in primitives: + +- `rsc_template` + +In that case the primitive inherits all attributes defined in the +template. + +There are three types of constraints: + +- `location` +- `colocation` +- `order` + +It is possible to define fencing order (stonith resource +priorities): + +- `fencing_topology` + +Finally, there are the cluster properties, resource meta +attributes defaults, and operations defaults. All are just a set +of attributes. These attributes are managed by the following +commands: + +- `property` +- `rsc_defaults` +- `op_defaults` + +In addition to the cluster configuration, the Access Control +Lists (ACL) can be setup to allow access to parts of the CIB for +users other than `root` and `hacluster`. The following commands +manage ACL: + +- `user` +- `role` + +The changes are applied to the current CIB only on ending the +configuration session or using the `commit` command. + +Comments start with `#` in the first line. The comments are tied +to the element which follows. If the element moves, its comments +will follow. + +[[cmdhelp_configure_node,define a cluster node]] +==== `node` + +The node command describes a cluster node. Nodes in the CIB are +commonly created automatically by the CRM. Hence, you should not +need to deal with nodes unless you also want to define node +attributes. Note that it is also possible to manage node +attributes at the `node` level. + +Usage: +............... + node <uname>[:<type>] + [attributes <param>=<value> [<param>=<value>...]] + [utilization <param>=<value> [<param>=<value>...]] + + type :: normal | member | ping +............... +Example: +............... + node node1 + node big_node attributes memory=64 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_primitive,define a resource]] +==== `primitive` + +The primitive command describes a resource. It may be referenced +only once in group, clone, or master-slave objects. If it's not +referenced, then it is placed as a single resource in the CIB. + +Operations may be specified in three ways. "Anonymous" as a +simple list of "op" specifications. Use that if you don't want to +reference the set of operations elsewhere. That's by far the most +common way to define operations. If reusing operation sets is +desired, use the "operations" keyword along with the id to give +the operations set a name and the id-ref to reference another set +of operations. + +Operation's attributes which are not recognized are saved as +instance attributes of that operation. A typical example is +`OCF_CHECK_LEVEL`. + +For multistate resources, roles are specified as `role=<role>`. + +A template may be defined for resources which are of the same +type and which share most of the configuration. See +<<cmdhelp_configure_rsc_template,`rsc_template`>> for more information. + +Usage: +............... + primitive <rsc> {[<class>:[<provider>:]]<type>|@<template>} + [params attr_list] + [meta attr_list] + [utilization attr_list] + [operations id_spec] + [op op_type [<attribute>=<value>...] ...] + + attr_list :: [$id=<id>] <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...] | $id-ref=<id> + id_spec :: $id=<id> | $id-ref=<id> + op_type :: start | stop | monitor +............... +Example: +............... + primitive apcfence stonith:apcsmart \ + params ttydev=/dev/ttyS0 hostlist="node1 node2" \ + op start timeout=60s \ + op monitor interval=30m timeout=60s + + primitive www8 apache \ + params configfile=/etc/apache/www8.conf \ + operations $id-ref=apache_ops + + primitive db0 mysql \ + params config=/etc/mysql/db0.conf \ + op monitor interval=60s \ + op monitor interval=300s OCF_CHECK_LEVEL=10 + + primitive r0 ocf:linbit:drbd \ + params drbd_resource=r0 \ + op monitor role=Master interval=60s \ + op monitor role=Slave interval=300s + + primitive xen0 @vm_scheme1 \ + params xmfile=/etc/xen/vm/xen0 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_monitor,add monitor operation to a primitive]] +==== `monitor` + +Monitor is by far the most common operation. It is possible to +add it without editing the whole resource. Also, long primitive +definitions may be a bit uncluttered. In order to make this +command as concise as possible, less common operation attributes +are not available. If you need them, then use the `op` part of +the `primitive` command. + +Usage: +............... + monitor <rsc>[:<role>] <interval>[:<timeout>] +............... +Example: +............... + monitor apcfence 60m:60s +............... + +Note that after executing the command, the monitor operation may +be shown as part of the primitive definition. + +[[cmdhelp_configure_group,define a group]] +==== `group` + +The `group` command creates a group of resources. This can be useful +when resources depend on other resources and require that those +resources start in order on the same node. A common use of resource +groups is to ensure that a server and a virtual IP are located +together, and that the virtual IP is started before the server. + +Grouped resources are started in the order they appear in the group, +and stopped in the reverse order. If a resource in the group cannot +run anywhere, resources following it in the group will not start. + +`group` can be passed the "container" meta attribute, to indicate that +it is to be used to group VM resources monitored using Nagios. The +resource referred to by the container attribute must be of type +`ocf:heartbeat:Xen`, `ocf:heartbeat:VirtualDomain` or `ocf:heartbeat:lxc`. + +Usage: +............... + group <name> <rsc> [<rsc>...] + [meta attr_list] + [params attr_list] + + attr_list :: [$id=<id>] <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...] | $id-ref=<id> +............... +Example: +............... + group internal_www disk0 fs0 internal_ip apache \ + meta target_role=stopped + + group vm-and-services vm vm-sshd meta container="vm" +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_clone,define a clone]] +==== `clone` + +The `clone` command creates a resource clone. It may contain a +single primitive resource or one group of resources. + +Usage: +............... + clone <name> <rsc> + [meta attr_list] + [params attr_list] + + attr_list :: [$id=<id>] <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...] | $id-ref=<id> +............... +Example: +............... + clone cl_fence apc_1 \ + meta clone-node-max=1 globally-unique=false +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_ms,define a master-slave resource]] +==== `ms` (`master`) + +The `ms` command creates a master/slave resource type. It may contain a +single primitive resource or one group of resources. + +Usage: +............... + ms <name> <rsc> + [meta attr_list] + [params attr_list] + + attr_list :: [$id=<id>] <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...] | $id-ref=<id> +............... +Example: +............... + ms disk1 drbd1 \ + meta notify=true globally-unique=false +............... + +.Note on `id-ref` usage +**************************** +Instance or meta attributes (`params` and `meta`) may contain +a reference to another set of attributes. In that case, no other +attributes are allowed. Since attribute sets' ids, though they do +exist, are not shown in the `crm`, it is also possible to +reference an object instead of an attribute set. `crm` will +automatically replace such a reference with the right id: + +............... + crm(live)configure# primitive a2 www-2 meta $id-ref=a1 + crm(live)configure# show a2 + primitive a2 ocf:heartbeat:apache \ + meta $id-ref="a1-meta_attributes" + [...] +............... +It is advisable to give meaningful names to attribute sets which +are going to be referenced. +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rsc_template,define a resource template]] +==== `rsc_template` + +The `rsc_template` command creates a resource template. It may be +referenced in primitives. It is used to reduce large +configurations with many similar resources. + +Usage: +............... + rsc_template <name> [<class>:[<provider>:]]<type> + [params attr_list] + [meta attr_list] + [utilization attr_list] + [operations id_spec] + [op op_type [<attribute>=<value>...] ...] + + attr_list :: [$id=<id>] <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...] | $id-ref=<id> + id_spec :: $id=<id> | $id-ref=<id> + op_type :: start | stop | monitor +............... +Example: +............... + rsc_template public_vm ocf:heartbeat:Xen \ + op start timeout=300s \ + op stop timeout=300s \ + op monitor interval=30s timeout=60s \ + op migrate_from timeout=600s \ + op migrate_to timeout=600s + primitive xen0 @public_vm \ + params xmfile=/etc/xen/xen0 + primitive xen1 @public_vm \ + params xmfile=/etc/xen/xen1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_location,a location preference]] +==== `location` + +`location` defines the preference of nodes for the given +resource. The location constraints consist of one or more rules +which specify a score to be awarded if the rule matches. + +Usage: +............... + location <id> <rsc> {node_pref|rules} + + node_pref :: <score>: <node> + + rules :: + rule [id_spec] [$role=<role>] <score>: <expression> + [rule [id_spec] [$role=<role>] <score>: <expression> ...] + + id_spec :: $id=<id> | $id-ref=<id> + score :: <number> | <attribute> | [-]inf + expression :: <simple_exp> [bool_op <simple_exp> ...] + bool_op :: or | and + simple_exp :: <attribute> [type:]<binary_op> <value> + | <unary_op> <attribute> + | date <date_expr> + type :: string | version | number + binary_op :: lt | gt | lte | gte | eq | ne + unary_op :: defined | not_defined + + date_expr :: lt <end> + | gt <start> + | in_range start=<start> end=<end> + | in_range start=<start> <duration> + | date_spec <date_spec> + duration|date_spec :: + hours=<value> + | monthdays=<value> + | weekdays=<value> + | yearsdays=<value> + | months=<value> + | weeks=<value> + | years=<value> + | weekyears=<value> + | moon=<value> +............... +Examples: +............... + location conn_1 internal_www 100: node1 + + location conn_1 internal_www \ + rule 50: #uname eq node1 \ + rule pingd: defined pingd + + location conn_2 dummy_float \ + rule -inf: not_defined pingd or pingd number:lte 0 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_colocation,colocate resources]] +==== `colocation` (`collocation`) + +This constraint expresses the placement relation between two +or more resources. If there are more than two resources, then the +constraint is called a resource set. + +The score is used to indicate the priority of the constraint. A +positive score indicates that the resources should run on the same +node. A negative score that they should not run on the same +node. Values of positive or negative `infinity` indicate a mandatory +constraint. + +In the two resource form, the cluster will place `<with-rsc>` first, +and then decide where to put the `<rsc>` resource. + +Collocation resource sets have an extra attribute (`sequential`) +to allow for sets of resources which don't depend on each other +in terms of state. The shell syntax for such sets is to put +resources in parentheses. + +Sets cannot be nested. + +The optional `node-attribute` references an attribute in nodes' +instance attributes. + +Usage: +............... + colocation <id> <score>: <rsc>[:<role>] <with-rsc>[:<role>] + [node-attribute=<node_attr>] + + colocation <id> <score>: <rsc>[:<role>] <rsc>[:<role>] ... + [node-attribute=<node_attr>] +............... +Example: +............... + colocation never_put_apache_with_dummy -inf: apache dummy + colocation c1 inf: A ( B C ) +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_order,order resources]] +==== `order` + +This constraint expresses the order of actions on two resources +or more resources. If there are more than two resources, then the +constraint is called a resource set. + +Ordered resource sets have an extra attribute to allow for sets +of resources whose actions may run in parallel. The shell syntax +for such sets is to put resources in parentheses. + +If the subsequent resource can start or promote after any one of the +resources in a set has done, enclose the set in brackets (`[` and `]`). + +Sets cannot be nested. + +Three strings are reserved to specify a kind of order constraint: +`Mandatory`, `Optional`, and `Serialize`. It is preferred to use +one of these settings instead of score. Previous versions mapped +scores `0` and `inf` to keywords `advisory` and `mandatory`. +That is still valid but deprecated. + +.Note on resource sets' XML attributes +**************************** +The XML attribute `require-all` controls whether all resources in +a set are, well, required. The bracketed sets actually have this +attribute as well as `sequential` set to `false`. If you need a +different combination, for whatever reason, just set one of the +attributes within the set. Something like this: + +............... + crm(live)configure# order o1 Mandatory: [ A B sequential=true ] C +............... +It is up to you to find out whether such a combination makes +sense. +**************************** + +Usage: +............... + order <id> {kind|<score>}: <rsc>[:<action>] <rsc>[:<action>] ... + [symmetrical=<bool>] + + kind :: Mandatory | Optional | Serialize +............... +Example: +............... + order c_apache_1 Mandatory: apache:start ip_1 + order o1 Serialize: A ( B C ) + order order_2 Mandatory: [ A B ] C +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rsc_ticket,resources ticket dependency]] +==== `rsc_ticket` + +This constraint expresses dependency of resources on cluster-wide +attributes, also known as tickets. Tickets are mainly used in +geo-clusters, which consist of multiple sites. A ticket may be +granted to a site, thus allowing resources to run there. + +The `loss-policy` attribute specifies what happens to the +resource (or resources) if the ticket is revoked. The default is +either `stop` or `demote` depending on whether a resource is +multi-state. + +See also the <<cmdhelp_site_ticket,`site`>> set of commands. + +Usage: +............... + rsc_ticket <id> <ticket_id>: <rsc>[:<role>] [<rsc>[:<role>] ...] + [loss-policy=<loss_policy_action>] + + loss_policy_action :: stop | demote | fence | freeze +............... +Example: +............... + rsc_ticket ticket-A_public-ip ticket-A: public-ip + rsc_ticket ticket-A_bigdb ticket-A: bigdb loss-policy=fence + rsc_ticket ticket-B_storage ticket-B: drbd-a:Master drbd-b:Master +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_configure_property,set a cluster property]] +==== `property` + +Set the cluster (`crm_config`) options. + +Usage: +............... + property [$id=<set_id>] <option>=<value> [<option>=<value> ...] +............... +Example: +............... + property stonith-enabled=true +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rsc_defaults,set resource defaults]] +==== `rsc_defaults` + +Set defaults for the resource meta attributes. + +Usage: +............... + rsc_defaults [$id=<set_id>] <option>=<value> [<option>=<value> ...] +............... +Example: +............... + rsc_defaults failure-timeout=3m +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_fencing_topology,node fencing order]] +==== `fencing_topology` + +If multiple fencing (stonith) devices are available capable of +fencing a node, their order may be specified by `fencing_topology`. +The order is specified per node. + +Stonith resources can be separated by `,` in which case all of +them need to succeed. If they fail, the next stonith resource (or +set of resources) is used. In other words, use comma to separate +resources which all need to succeed and whitespace for serial +order. It is not allowed to use whitespace around comma. + +If the node is left out, the order is used for all nodes. +That should reduce the configuration size in some stonith setups. + +Usage: +............... + fencing_topology stonith_resources [stonith_resources ...] + fencing_topology fencing_order [fencing_order ...] + + fencing_order :: <node>: stonith_resources [stonith_resources ...] + + stonith_resources :: <rsc>[,<rsc>...] +............... +Example: +............... + fencing_topology poison-pill power + fencing_topology \ + node-a: poison-pill power + node-b: ipmi serial +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_role,define role access rights]] +==== `role` + +An ACL role is a set of rules which describe access rights to +CIB. Rules consist of an access right `read`, `write`, or `deny` +and a specification denoting part of the configuration to which +the access right applies. The specification can be an XPath or a +combination of tag and id references. If an attribute is +appended, then the specification applies only to that attribute +of the matching element. + +There is a number of shortcuts for XPath specifications. The +`meta,` `params`, and `utilization` shortcuts reference resource +meta attributes, parameters, and utilization respectively. The +`location` may be used to specify location constraints most of +the time to allow resource `move` and `unmove` commands. The +`property` references cluster properties. The `node` allows +reading node attributes. `nodeattr` and `nodeutil` reference node +attributes and node capacity (utilization). The `status` shortcut +references the whole status section of the CIB. Read access to +status is necessary for various monitoring tools such as +`crm_mon(8)` (aka `crm status`). + +Usage: +............... + role <role-id> rule [rule ...] + + rule :: acl-right cib-spec [attribute:<attribute>] + + acl-right :: read | write | deny + + cib-spec :: xpath-spec | tag-ref-spec + xpath-spec :: xpath:<xpath> | shortcut + tag-ref-spec :: tag:<tag> | ref:<id> | tag:<tag> ref:<id> + + shortcut :: meta:<rsc>[:<attr>] + params:<rsc>[:<attr>] + utilization:<rsc> + location:<rsc> + property[:<attr>] + node[:<node>] + nodeattr[:<attr>] + nodeutil[:<node>] + status +............... +Example: +............... + role app1_admin \ + write meta:app1:target-role \ + write meta:app1:is-managed \ + write location:app1 \ + read ref:app1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_user,define user access rights]] +==== `user` + +Users which normally cannot view or manage cluster configuration +can be allowed access to parts of the CIB. The access is defined +by a set of `read`, `write`, and `deny` rules as in role +definitions or by referencing roles. The latter is considered +best practice. + +Usage: +............... + user <uid> {roles|rules} + + roles :: role:<role-ref> [role:<role-ref> ...] + rules :: rule [rule ...] +............... +Example: +............... + user joe \ + role:app1_admin \ + role:read_all +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_op_defaults,set resource operations defaults]] +==== `op_defaults` + +Set defaults for the operations meta attributes. + +Usage: +............... + op_defaults [$id=<set_id>] <option>=<value> [<option>=<value> ...] +............... +Example: +............... + op_defaults record-pending=true +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_schema,set or display current CIB RNG schema]] +==== `schema` + +CIB's content is validated by a RNG schema. Pacemaker supports +several, depending on version. Currently supported schemas are +`pacemaker-1.0`, `pacemaker-1.1`, and `pacemaker-1.2`. + +Use this command to display or switch to another RNG schema. + +Usage: +............... + schema [<schema>] +............... +Example: +............... + schema pacemaker-1.1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_show,display CIB objects]] +==== `show` + +The `show` command displays objects. It may display all objects +or a set of objects. The user may also choose to see only objects +which were changed. +Optionally, the XML code may be displayed instead of the CLI +representation. + +Usage: +............... + show [xml] [<id> ...] + show [xml] changed +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_edit,edit CIB objects]] +==== `edit` + +This command invokes the editor with the object description. As +with the `show` command, the user may choose to edit all objects +or a set of objects. + +If the user insists, he or she may edit the XML edition of the +object. If you do that, don't modify any id attributes. + +Usage: +............... + edit [xml] [<id> ...] + edit [xml] changed +............... + +.Note on renaming element ids +**************************** +The edit command sometimes cannot properly handle modifying +element ids. In particular for elements which belong to group or +ms resources. Group and ms resources themselves also cannot be +renamed. Please use the `rename` command instead. +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_configure_filter,filter CIB objects]] +==== `filter` + +This command filters the given CIB elements through an external +program. The program should accept input on `stdin` and send +output to `stdout` (the standard UNIX filter conventions). As +with the `show` command, the user may choose to filter all or +just a subset of elements. + +It is possible to filter the XML representation of objects, but +probably not as useful as the configuration language. The +presentation is somewhat different from what would be displayed +by the `show` command---each element is shown on a single line, +i.e. there are no backslashes and no other embelishments. + +Don't forget to put quotes around the filter if it contains +spaces. + +Usage: +............... + filter <prog> [xml] [<id> ...] + filter <prog> [xml] changed +............... +Examples: +............... + filter "sed '/^primitive/s/target-role=[^ ]*//'" + # crm configure filter "sed '/^primitive/s/target-role=[^ ]*//'" +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_delete,delete CIB objects]] +==== `delete` + +Delete one or more objects. If an object to be deleted belongs to +a container object, such as a group, and it is the only resource +in that container, then the container is deleted as well. Any +related constraints are removed as well. + +Usage: +............... + delete <id> [<id>...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_default-timeouts,set timeouts for operations to minimums from the meta-data]] +==== `default-timeouts` + +This command takes the timeouts from the actions section of the +resource agent meta-data and sets them for the operations of the +primitive. + +Usage: +............... + default-timeouts <id> [<id>...] +............... + +.Note on `default-timeouts` +**************************** +You may be happy using this, but your applications may not. And +it will tell you so at the worst possible moment. You have been +warned. +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rename,rename a CIB object]] +==== `rename` + +Rename an object. It is recommended to use this command to rename +a resource, because it will take care of updating all related +constraints and a parent resource. Changing ids with the edit +command won't have the same effect. + +If you want to rename a resource, it must be in the stopped state. + +Usage: +............... + rename <old_id> <new_id> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_modgroup,modify group]] +==== `modgroup` + +Add or remove primitives in a group. The `add` subcommand appends +the new group member by default. Should it go elsewhere, there +are `after` and `before` clauses. + +Usage: +............... + modgroup <id> add <id> [after <id>|before <id>] + modgroup <id> remove <id> +............... +Examples: +............... + modgroup share1 add storage2 before share1-fs +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_refresh,refresh from CIB]] +==== `refresh` + +Refresh the internal structures from the CIB. All changes made +during this session are lost. + +Usage: +............... + refresh +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_erase,erase the CIB]] +==== `erase` + +The `erase` clears all configuration. Apart from nodes. To remove +nodes, you have to specify an additional keyword `nodes`. + +Note that removing nodes from the live cluster may have some +strange/interesting/unwelcome effects. + +Usage: +............... + erase [nodes] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_ptest,show cluster actions if changes were committed]] +==== `ptest` (`simulate`) + +Show PE (Policy Engine) motions using `ptest(8)` or +`crm_simulate(8)`. + +A CIB is constructed using the current user edited configuration +and the status from the running CIB. The resulting CIB is run +through `ptest` (or `crm_simulate`) to show changes which would +happen if the configuration is committed. + +The status section may be loaded from another source and modified +using the <<cmdhelp_cibstatus,`cibstatus`>> level commands. In that case, the +`ptest` command will issue a message informing the user that the +Policy Engine graph is not calculated based on the current status +section and therefore won't show what would happen to the +running but some imaginary cluster. + +If you have graphviz installed and X11 session, `dotty(1)` is run +to display the changes graphically. + +Add a string of `v` characters to increase verbosity. `ptest` +can also show allocation scores. `utilization` turns on +information about the remaining capacity of nodes. With the +`actions` option, `ptest` will print all resource actions. + +The `ptest` program has been replaced by `crm_simulate` in newer +Pacemaker versions. In some installations both could be +installed. Use `simulate` to enfore using `crm_simulate`. + +Usage: +............... + ptest [nograph] [v...] [scores] [actions] [utilization] +............... +Examples: +............... + ptest scores + ptest vvvvv + simulate actions +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rsctest,test resources as currently configured]] +==== `rsctest` + +Test resources with current resource configuration. If no nodes +are specified, tests are run on all known nodes. + +The order of resources is significant: it is assumed that later +resources depend on earlier ones. + +If a resource is multi-state, it is assumed that the role on +which later resources depend is master. + +Tests are run sequentially to prevent running the same resource +on two or more nodes. Tests are carried out only if none of the +specified nodes currently run any of the specified resources. +However, it won't verify whether resources run on the other +nodes. + +Superuser privileges are obviously required: either run this as +root or setup the `sudoers` file appropriately. + +Note that resource testing may take some time. + +Usage: +............... + rsctest <rsc_id> [<rsc_id> ...] [<node_id> ...] +............... +Examples: +............... + rsctest my_ip websvc + rsctest websvc nodeB +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_cib,CIB shadow management]] +=== `cib` (shadow CIBs) + +This level is for management of shadow CIBs. It is available at +the `configure` level to enable saving intermediate changes to a +shadow CIB instead of to the live cluster. This short excerpt +shows how: +............... + crm(live)configure# cib new test-2 + INFO: test-2 shadow CIB created + crm(test-2)configure# commit +............... +Note how the current CIB in the prompt changed from `live` to +`test-2` after issuing the `cib new` command. See also the +<<cmdhelp_cib,CIB shadow management>> for more information. + +[[cmdhelp_configure_cibstatus,CIB status management and editing]] +==== `cibstatus` + +Enter edit and manage the CIB status section level. See the +<<cmdhelp_cibstatus,CIB status management section>>. + +[[cmdhelp_configure_template,edit and import a configuration from a template]] +==== `template` + +The specified template is loaded into the editor. It's up to the +user to make a good CRM configuration out of it. See also the +<<cmdhelp_template,template section>>. + +Usage: +............... + template [xml] url +............... +Example: +............... + template two-apaches.txt +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_commit,commit the changes to the CIB]] +==== `commit` + +Commit the current configuration to the CIB in use. As noted +elsewhere, commands in a configure session don't have immediate +effect on the CIB. All changes are applied at one point in time, +either using `commit` or when the user leaves the configure +level. In case the CIB in use changed in the meantime, presumably +by somebody else, the crm shell will refuse to apply the changes. +If you know that it's fine to still apply them add `force`. + +Usage: +............... + commit [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_verify,verify the CIB with crm_verify]] +==== `verify` + +Verify the contents of the CIB which would be committed. + +Usage: +............... + verify +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_upgrade,upgrade the CIB to version 1.0]] +==== `upgrade` + +If you get the `CIB not supported` error, which typically means +that the current CIB version is coming from the older release, +you may try to upgrade it to the latest revision. The command +to perform the upgrade is: +............... + # cibadmin --upgrade --force +............... + +If we don't recognize the current CIB as the old one, but you're +sure that it is, you may force the command. + +Usage: +............... + upgrade [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_save,save the CIB to a file]] +==== `save` + +Save the current configuration to a file. Optionally, as XML. Use +`-` instead of file name to write the output to `stdout`. + +Usage: +............... + save [xml] <file> +............... +Example: +............... + save myfirstcib.txt +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_load,import the CIB from a file]] +==== `load` + +Load a part of configuration (or all of it) from a local file or +a network URL. The `replace` method replaces the current +configuration with the one from the source. The `update` tries to +import the contents into the current configuration. +The file may be a CLI file or an XML file. + +Usage: +............... + load [xml] <method> URL + + method :: replace | update +............... +Example: +............... + load xml update myfirstcib.xml + load xml replace http://storage.big.com/cibs/bigcib.xml +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_graph,generate a directed graph]] +==== `graph` + +Create a graphviz graphical layout from the current cluster +configuration. + +Currently, only `dot` (directed graph) is supported. It is +essentially a visualization of resource ordering. + +The graph may be saved to a file which can be used as source for +various graphviz tools (by default it is displayed in the user's +X11 session). Optionally, by specifying the format, one can also +produce an image instead. + +For more or different graphviz attributes, it is possible to save +the default set of attributes to an ini file. If this file exists +it will always override the builtin settings. The `exportsettings` +subcommand also prints the location of the ini file. + +Usage: +............... + graph [<gtype> [<file> [<img_format>]]] + graph exportsettings + + gtype :: dot + img_format :: `dot` output format (see the `-T` option) +............... +Example: +............... + graph dot + graph dot clu1.conf.dot + graph dot clu1.conf.svg svg +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_xml,raw xml]] +==== `xml` + +Even though we promissed no xml, it may happen, but hopefully +very very seldom, that an element from the CIB cannot be rendered +in the configuration language. In that case, the element will be +shown as raw xml, prefixed by this command. That element can then +be edited like any other. If the shell finds out that after the +change it can digest it, then it is going to be converted into +the normal configuration language. Otherwise, there is no need to +use `xml` for configuration. + +Usage: +............... + xml <xml> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template,edit and import a configuration from a template]] +=== `template` + +User may be assisted in the cluster configuration by templates +prepared in advance. Templates consist of a typical ready +configuration which may be edited to suit particular user needs. + +This command enters a template level where additional commands +for configuration/template management are available. + +[[cmdhelp_template_new,create a new configuration from templates]] +==== `new` + +Create a new configuration from one or more templates. Note that +configurations and templates are kept in different places, so it +is possible to have a configuration name equal a template name. + +If you already know which parameters are required, you can set +them directly on the command line. + +The parameter name `id` is set by default to the name of the +configuration. + +Usage: +............... + new <config> <template> [<template> ...] [params name=value ...]" +............... +Examples: +............... + new vip virtual-ip + new bigfs ocfs2 params device=/dev/sdx8 directory=/bigfs +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_load,load a configuration]] +==== `load` + +Load an existing configuration. Further `edit`, `show`, and +`apply` commands will refer to this configuration. + +Usage: +............... + load <config> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_edit,edit a configuration]] +==== `edit` + +Edit current or given configuration using your favourite editor. + +Usage: +............... + edit [<config>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_delete,delete a configuration]] +==== `delete` + +Remove a configuration. The loaded (active) configuration may be +removed by force. + +Usage: +............... + delete <config> [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_list,list configurations/templates]] +==== `list` + +List existing configurations or templates. + +Usage: +............... + list [templates] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_apply,process and apply the current configuration to the current CIB]] +==== `apply` + +Copy the current or given configuration to the current CIB. By +default, the CIB is replaced, unless the method is set to +"update". + +Usage: +............... + apply [<method>] [<config>] + + method :: replace | update +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_show,show the processed configuration]] +==== `show` + +Process the current or given configuration and display the result. + +Usage: +............... + show [<config>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus,CIB status management and editing]] +=== `cibstatus` + +The `status` section of the CIB keeps the current status of nodes +and resources. It is modified _only_ on events, i.e. when some +resource operation is run or node status changes. For obvious +reasons, the CRM has no user interface with which it is possible +to affect the status section. From the user's point of view, the +status section is essentially a read-only part of the CIB. The +current status is never even written to disk, though it is +available in the PE (Policy Engine) input files which represent +the history of cluster motions. The current status may be read +using the `cibadmin -Q` command. + +It may sometimes be of interest to see how status changes would +affect the Policy Engine. The set of `cibstatus` level commands +allow the user to load status sections from various sources and +then insert or modify resource operations or change nodes' state. + +The effect of those changes may then be observed by running the +<<cmdhelp_configure_ptest,`ptest`>> command at the `configure` level +or `simulate` and `run` commands at this level. The `ptest` +runs with the user edited CIB whereas the latter two commands +run with the CIB which was loaded along with the status section. + +The `simulate` and `run` commands as well as all status +modification commands are implemented using `crm_simulate(8)`. + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_load,load the CIB status section]] +==== `load` + +Load a status section from a file, a shadow CIB, or the running +cluster. By default, the current (`live`) status section is +modified. Note that if the `live` status section is modified it +is not going to be updated if the cluster status changes, because +that would overwrite the user changes. To make `crm` drop changes +and resume use of the running cluster status, run `load live`. + +All CIB shadow configurations contain the status section which is +a snapshot of the status section taken at the time the shadow was +created. Obviously, this status section doesn't have much to do +with the running cluster status, unless the shadow CIB has just +been created. Therefore, the `ptest` command by default uses the +running cluster status section. + +Usage: +............... + load {<file>|shadow:<cib>|live} +............... +Example: +............... + load bug-12299.xml + load shadow:test1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_save,save the CIB status section]] +==== `save` + +The current internal status section with whatever modifications +were performed can be saved to a file or shadow CIB. + +If the file exists and contains a complete CIB, only the status +section is going to be replaced and the rest of the CIB will +remain intact. Otherwise, the current user edited configuration +is saved along with the status section. + +Note that all modifications are saved in the source file as soon +as they are run. + +Usage: +............... + save [<file>|shadow:<cib>] +............... +Example: +............... + save bug-12299.xml +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_origin,display origin of the CIB status section]] +==== `origin` + +Show the origin of the status section currently in use. This +essentially shows the latest `load` argument. + +Usage: +............... + origin +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_show,show CIB status section]] +==== `show` + +Show the current status section in the XML format. Brace yourself +for some unreadable output. Add `changed` option to get a human +readable output of all changes. + +Usage: +............... + show [changed] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_node,change node status]] +==== `node` + +Change the node status. It is possible to throw a node out of +the cluster, make it a member, or set its state to unclean. + +`online`:: Set the `node_state` `crmd` attribute to `online` +and the `expected` and `join` attributes to `member`. The effect +is that the node becomes a cluster member. + +`offline`:: Set the `node_state` `crmd` attribute to `offline` +and the `expected` attribute to empty. This makes the node +cleanly removed from the cluster. + +`unclean`:: Set the `node_state` `crmd` attribute to `offline` +and the `expected` attribute to `member`. In this case the node +has unexpectedly disappeared. + +Usage: +............... + node <node> {online|offline|unclean} +............... +Example: +............... + node xen-b unclean +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_op,edit outcome of a resource operation]] +==== `op` + +Edit the outcome of a resource operation. This way you can +tell CRM that it ran an operation and that the resource agent +returned certain exit code. It is also possible to change the +operation's status. In case the operation status is set to +something other than `done`, the exit code is effectively +ignored. + +Usage: +............... + op <operation> <resource> <exit_code> [<op_status>] [<node>] + + operation :: probe | monitor[:<n>] | start | stop | + promote | demote | notify | migrate_to | migrate_from + exit_code :: <rc> | success | generic | args | + unimplemented | perm | installed | configured | not_running | + master | failed_master + op_status :: pending | done | cancelled | timeout | notsupported | error + + n :: the monitor interval in seconds; if omitted, the first + recurring operation is referenced + rc :: numeric exit code in range 0..9 +............... +Example: +............... + op start d1 xen-b generic + op start d1 xen-b 1 + op monitor d1 xen-b not_running + op stop d1 xen-b 0 timeout +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_quorum,set the quorum]] +==== `quorum` + +Set the quorum value. + +Usage: +............... + quorum <bool> +............... +Example: +............... + quorum false +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_ticket,manage tickets]] +==== `ticket` + +Modify the ticket status. Tickets can be granted and revoked. +Granted tickets could be activated or put in standby. + +Usage: +............... + ticket <ticket> {grant|revoke|activate|standby} +............... +Example: +............... + ticket ticketA grant +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_run,run policy engine]] +==== `run` + +Run the policy engine with the edited status section. + +Add a string of `v` characters to increase verbosity. Specify +`scores` to see allocation scores also. `utilization` turns on +information about the remaining capacity of nodes. + +If you have graphviz installed and X11 session, `dotty(1)` is run +to display the changes graphically. + +Usage: +............... + run [nograph] [v...] [scores] [utilization] +............... +Example: +............... + run +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_simulate,simulate cluster transition]] +==== `simulate` + +Run the policy engine with the edited status section and simulate +the transition. + +Add a string of `v` characters to increase verbosity. Specify +`scores` to see allocation scores also. `utilization` turns on +information about the remaining capacity of nodes. + +If you have graphviz installed and X11 session, `dotty(1)` is run +to display the changes graphically. + +Usage: +............... + simulate [nograph] [v...] [scores] [utilization] +............... +Example: +............... + simulate +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history,cluster history]] +=== `history` + +Examining Pacemaker's history is a particularly involved task. +The number of subsystems to be considered, the complexity of the +configuration, and the set of various information sources, most +of which are not exactly human readable, keep analyzing resource +or node problems accessible to only the most knowledgeable. Or, +depending on the point of view, to the most persistent. The +following set of commands has been devised in hope to make +cluster history more accessible. + +Of course, looking at _all_ history could be time consuming +regardless of how good tools at hand are. Therefore, one should +first say which period he or she wants to analyze. If not +otherwise specified, the last hour is considered. Logs and other +relevant information is collected using `hb_report`. Since this +process takes some time and we always need fresh logs, +information is refreshed in a much faster way using `pssh(1)`. If +`python-pssh` is not found on the system, examining live cluster +is still possible though not as comfortable. + +Apart from examining live cluster, events may be retrieved from a +report generated by `hb_report` (see also the `-H` option). In +that case we assume that the period stretching the whole report +needs to be investigated. Of course, it is still possible to +further reduce the time range. + +If you think you may have found a bug or just need clarification +from developers or your support, the `session pack` command can +help create a report. This is an example: +............... + crm(live)history# limit "Jul 18 12:00" "Jul 18 12:30" + crm(live)history# session save strange_restart + crm(live)history# session pack + Report saved in .../strange_restart.tar.bz2 + crm(live)history# +............... +In order to reduce report size and allow developers to +concentrate on the issue, you should beforehand limit the time +frame. Giving a meaningful session name helps too. + +==== `info` + +The `info` command shows most important information about the +cluster. + +Usage: +............... + info +............... +Example: +............... + info +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_latest,show latest news from the cluster]] +==== `latest` + +The `latest` command shows a bit of recent history, more +precisely whatever happened since the last cluster change (the +latest transition). If the transition is running, the shell will +first wait until it finishes. + +Usage: +............... + latest +............... +Example: +............... + latest +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_limit,limit timeframe to be examined]] +==== `limit` (`timeframe`) + +All history commands look at events within certain period. It +defaults to the last hour for the live cluster source. There is +no limit for the `hb_report` source. Use this command to set the +timeframe. + +The time period is parsed by the dateutil python module. It +covers wide range of date formats. For instance: + +- 3:00 (today at 3am) +- 15:00 (today at 3pm) +- 2010/9/1 2pm (September 1st 2010 at 2pm) + +We won't bother to give definition of the time specification in +usage below. Either use common sense or read the +http://labix.org/python-dateutil[dateutil] documentation. + +If dateutil is not available, then the time is parsed using +strptime and only the kind as printed by `date(1)` is allowed: + +- Tue Sep 15 20:46:27 CEST 2010 + +Usage: +............... + limit [<from_time> [<to_time>]] +............... +Examples: +............... + limit 10:15 + limit 15h22m 16h + limit "Sun 5 20:46" "Sun 5 22:00" +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_source,set source to be examined]] +==== `source` + +Events to be examined can come from the current cluster or from a +`hb_report` report. This command sets the source. `source live` +sets source to the running cluster and system logs. If no source +is specified, the current source information is printed. + +In case a report source is specified as a file reference, the file +is going to be unpacked in place where it resides. This directory +is not removed on exit. + +Usage: +............... + source [<dir>|<file>|live] +............... +Examples: +............... + source live + source /tmp/customer_case_22.tar.bz2 + source /tmp/customer_case_22 + source +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_refresh,refresh live report]] +==== `refresh` + +This command makes sense only for the `live` source and makes +`crm` collect the latest logs and other relevant information from +the logs. If you want to make a completely new report, specify +`force`. + +Usage: +............... + refresh [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_detail,set the level of detail shown]] +==== `detail` + +How much detail to show from the logs. + +Usage: +............... + detail <detail_level> + + detail_level :: small integer (defaults to 0) +............... +Example: +............... + detail 1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_setnodes,set the list of cluster nodes]] +==== `setnodes` + +In case the host this program runs on is not part of the cluster, +it is necessary to set the list of nodes. + +Usage: +............... + setnodes node <node> [<node> ...] +............... +Example: +............... + setnodes node_a node_b +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_resource,resource events]] +==== `resource` + +Show actions and any failures that happened on all specified +resources on all nodes. Normally, one gives resource names as +arguments, but it is also possible to use extended regular +expressions. Note that neither groups nor clones or master/slave +names are ever logged. The resource command is going to expand +all of these appropriately, so that clone instances or resources +which are part of a group are shown. + +Usage: +............... + resource <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +............... +Example: +............... + resource bigdb public_ip + resource my_.*_db2 + resource ping_clone +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_node,node events]] +==== `node` + +Show important events that happened on a node. Important events +are node lost and join, standby and online, and fence. Use either +node names or extended regular expressions. + +Usage: +............... + node <node> [<node> ...] +............... +Example: +............... + node node1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_log,log content]] +==== `log` + +Show messages logged on one or more nodes. Leaving out a node +name produces combined logs of all nodes. Messages are sorted by +time and, if the terminal emulations supports it, displayed in +different colours depending on the node to allow for easier +reading. + +The sorting key is the timestamp as written by syslog which +normally has the maximum resolution of one second. Obviously, +messages generated by events which share the same timestamp may +not be sorted in the same way as they happened. Such close events +may actually happen fairly often. + +Usage: +............... + log [<node>] +............... +Example: +............... + log node-a +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_exclude,exclude log messages]] +==== `exclude` + +If a log is infested with irrelevant messages, those messages may +be excluded by specifying a regular expression. The regular +expressions used are Python extended. This command is additive. +To drop all regular expressions, use `exclude clear`. Run +`exclude` only to see the current list of regular expressions. +Excludes are saved along with the history sessions. + +Usage: +............... + exclude [<regex>|clear] +............... +Example: +............... + exclude kernel.*ocfs2 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_peinputs,list or get PE input files]] +==== `peinputs` + +Every event in the cluster results in generating one or more +Policy Engine (PE) files. These files describe future motions of +resources. The files are listed as full paths in the current +report directory. Add `v` to also see the creation time stamps. + +Usage: +............... + peinputs [{<range>|<number>} ...] [v] + + range :: <n1>:<n2> +............... +Example: +............... + peinputs + peinputs 440:444 446 + peinputs v +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_transition,show transition]] +==== `transition` + +This command will print actions planned by the PE and run +graphviz (`dotty`) to display a graphical representation of the +transition. Of course, for the latter an X11 session is required. +This command invokes `ptest(8)` in background. + +The `showdot` subcommand runs graphviz (`dotty`) to display a +graphical representation of the `.dot` file which has been +included in the report. Essentially, it shows the calculation +produced by `pengine` which is installed on the node where the +report was produced. In optimal case this output should not +differ from the one produced by the locally installed `pengine`. + +The `log` subcommand shows the full log for the duration of the +transition. + +A transition can also be saved to a CIB shadow for further +analysis or use with `cib` or `configure` commands (use the +`save` subcommand). The shadow file name defaults to the name of +the PE input file. + +If the PE input file number is not provided, it defaults to the +last one, i.e. the last transition. The last transition can also +be referenced with number 0. If the number is negative, then the +corresponding transition relative to the last one is chosen. + +If there are warning and error PE input files or different nodes +were the DC in the observed timeframe, it may happen that PE +input file numbers collide. In that case provide some unique part +of the path to the file. + +After the `ptest` output, logs about events that happened during +the transition are printed. + +Usage: +............... + transition [<number>|<index>|<file>] [nograph] [v...] [scores] [actions] [utilization] + transition showdot [<number>|<index>|<file>] + transition log [<number>|<index>|<file>] + transition save [<number>|<index>|<file> [name]] +............... +Examples: +............... + transition + transition 444 + transition -1 + transition pe-error-3.bz2 + transition node-a/pengine/pe-input-2.bz2 + transition showdot 444 + transition log + transition save 0 enigma-22 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_show,show status or configuration of the PE input file]] +==== `show` + +Every transition is saved as a PE file. Use this command to +render that PE file either as configuration or status. The +configuration output is the same as `crm configure show`. + +Usage: +............... + show <pe> [status] + + pe :: <number>|<index>|<file>|live +............... +Examples: +............... + show 2066 + show pe-input-2080.bz2 status +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_graph,generate a directed graph from the PE file]] +==== `graph` + +Create a graphviz graphical layout from the PE file (the +transition). Every transition contains the cluster configuration +which was active at the time. See also <<cmdhelp_configure_graph,generate a directed graph +from configuration>>. + +Usage: +............... + graph <pe> [<gtype> [<file> [<img_format>]]] + + gtype :: dot + img_format :: `dot` output format (see the `-T` option) +............... +Example: +............... + graph -1 + graph 322 dot clu1.conf.dot + graph 322 dot clu1.conf.svg svg +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_diff,cluster states/transitions difference]] +==== `diff` + +A transition represents a change in cluster configuration or +state. Use `diff` to see what has changed between two +transitions. + +If you want to specify the current cluster configuration and +status, use the string `live`. + +Normally, the first transition specified should be the one which +is older, but we are not going to enforce that. + +Note that a single configuration update may result in more than +one transition. + +Usage: +............... + diff <pe> <pe> [status] [html] + + pe :: <number>|<index>|<file>|live +............... +Examples: +............... + diff 2066 2067 + diff pe-input-2080.bz2 live status +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_session,manage history sessions]] +==== `session` + +Sometimes you may want to get back to examining a particular +history period or bug report. In order to make that easier, the +current settings can be saved and later retrieved. + +If the current history being examined is coming from a live +cluster the logs, PE inputs, and other files are saved too, +because they may disappear from nodes. For the existing reports +coming from `hb_report`, only the directory location is saved +(not to waste space). + +A history session may also be packed into a tarball which can +then be sent to support. + +Leave out subcommand to see the current session. + +Usage: +............... + session [{save|load|delete} <name> | pack [<name>] | update | list] +............... +Examples: +............... + session save bnc966622 + session load rsclost-2 + session list +............... + +=== `end` (`cd`, `up`) + +The `end` command ends the current level and the user moves to +the parent level. This command is available everywhere. + +Usage: +............... + end +............... + +=== `help` + +The `help` command prints help for the current level or for the +specified topic (command). This command is available everywhere. + +Usage: +............... + help [<topic>] +............... + +=== `quit` (`exit`, `bye`) + +Leave the program. + +BUGS +---- +Even though all sensible configurations (and most of those that +are not) are going to be supported by the crm shell, I suspect +that it may still happen that certain XML constructs may confuse +the tool. When that happens, please file a bug report. + +The crm shell will not try to update the objects it does not +understand. Of course, it is always possible to edit such objects +in the XML format. + +AUTHOR +------ +Dejan Muhamedagic, <dejan@suse.de> +and many OTHERS + +SEE ALSO +-------- +crm_resource(8), crm_attribute(8), crm_mon(8), cib_shadow(8), +ptest(8), dotty(1), crm_simulate(8), cibadmin(8) + + +COPYING +------- +Copyright \(C) 2008-2011 Dejan Muhamedagic. Free use of this +software is granted under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL). + +////////////////////// + vim:ts=4:sw=4:expandtab: +////////////////////// diff --git a/doc/website-v1/man-2.0.adoc b/doc/website-v1/man-2.0.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a2127d4 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/man-2.0.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,5048 @@ +:man source: crm +:man version: 2.3.2 +:man manual: crmsh documentation + +crm(8) +====== + +NAME +---- +crm - Pacemaker command line interface for configuration and management + + +SYNOPSIS +-------- +*crm* [OPTIONS] [SUBCOMMAND ARGS...] + + +[[topics_Description,Program description]] +DESCRIPTION +----------- +The `crm` shell is a command-line based cluster configuration and +management tool. Its goal is to assist as much as possible with the +configuration and maintenance of Pacemaker-based High Availability +clusters. + +For more information on Pacemaker itself, see http://clusterlabs.org/. + +`crm` works both as a command-line tool to be called directly from the +system shell, and as an interactive shell with extensive tab +completion and help. + +The primary focus of the `crm` shell is to provide a simplified and +consistent interface to Pacemaker, but it also provides tools for +managing the creation and configuration of High Availability clusters +from scratch. To learn more about this aspect of `crm`, see the +`cluster` section below. + +The `crm` shell can be used to manage every aspect of configuring and +maintaining a cluster. It provides a simplified line-based syntax on +top of the XML configuration format used by Pacemaker, commands for +starting and stopping resources, tools for exploring the history of a +cluster including log scraping and a set of cluster scripts useful for +automating the setup and installation of services on the cluster +nodes. + +The `crm` shell is line oriented: every command must start and finish +on the same line. It is possible to use a continuation character (+\+) +to write one command in two or more lines. The continuation character +is commonly used when displaying configurations. + +[[topics_CommandLine,Command line options]] +OPTIONS +------- +*-f, --file*='FILE':: + Load commands from the given file. If a dash +-+ is used in place + of a file name, `crm` will read commands from the shell standard + input (`stdin`). + +*-c, --cib*='CIB':: + Start the session using the given shadow CIB file. + Equivalent to +cib use <CIB>+. + +*-D, --display=*'OUTPUT_TYPE':: + Choose one of the output options: +plain+, +color-always+, +color+, + or +uppercase+. The default is +color+ if the terminal emulation + supports colors. Otherwise, +plain+ is used. + +*-F, --force*:: + Make `crm` proceed with applying changes where it would normally + ask the user to confirm before proceeding. This option is mainly + useful in scripts, and should be used with care. + +*-w, --wait*:: + Make `crm` wait for the cluster transition to finish (for the + changes to take effect) after each processed line. + +*-H, --history*='DIR|FILE|SESSION':: + A directory or file containing a cluster report to load + into the `history` commands, or the name of a previously + saved history session. + +*-h, --help*:: + Print help page. + +*--version*:: + Print crmsh version and build information (Mercurial Hg changeset + hash). + +*-d, --debug*:: + Print verbose debugging information. + +*-R, --regression-tests*:: + Enables extra verbose trace logging used by the regression + tests. Logs all external calls made by crmsh. + +*--scriptdir*='DIR':: + Extra directory where crm looks for cluster scripts, or a list of + directories separated by semi-colons (e.g. +/dir1;/dir2;etc.+). + +*-o, --opt*='OPTION=VALUE':: + Set crmsh option temporarily. If the options are saved using + +options save+ then the value passed here will also be saved. + Multiple options can be set by using +-o+ multiple times. + +[[topics_Introduction,Introduction]] +== Introduction + +This section of the user guide covers general topics about the user +interface and describes some of the features of `crmsh` in detail. + +[[topics_Introduction_Interface,User interface]] +=== User interface + +The main purpose of `crmsh` is to provide a simple yet powerful +interface to the cluster stack. There are two main modes of operation +with the user interface of `crmsh`: + +* Command line (single-shot) use - Use `crm` as a regular UNIX command + from your usual shell. `crm` has full bash completion built in, so + using it in this manner should be as comfortable and familiar as + using any other command-line tool. + +* Interactive mode - By calling `crm` without arguments, or by calling + it with only a sublevel as argument, `crm` enters the interactive + mode. In this mode, it acts as its own command shell, which + remembers which sublevel you are currently in and allows for rapid + and convenient execution of multiple commands within the same + sublevel. This mode also has full tab completion, as well as + built-in interactive help and syntax highlighting. + +Here are a few examples of using `crm` both as a command-line tool and +as an interactive shell: + +.Command line (one-shot) use: +........ +# crm resource stop www_app +........ + +.Interactive use: +........ +# crm +crm(live)# resource +crm(live)resource# unmanage tetris_1 +crm(live)resource# up +crm(live)# node standby node4 +........ + +.Cluster configuration: +........ +# crm configure<<EOF + # + # resources + # + primitive disk0 iscsi \ + params portal=192.168.2.108:3260 target=iqn.2008-07.com.suse:disk0 + primitive fs0 Filesystem \ + params device=/dev/disk/by-label/disk0 directory=/disk0 fstype=ext3 + primitive internal_ip IPaddr params ip=192.168.1.101 + primitive apache apache \ + params configfile=/disk0/etc/apache2/site0.conf + primitive apcfence stonith:apcsmart \ + params ttydev=/dev/ttyS0 hostlist="node1 node2" \ + op start timeout=60s + primitive pingd pingd \ + params name=pingd dampen=5s multiplier=100 host_list="r1 r2" + # + # monitor apache and the UPS + # + monitor apache 60s:30s + monitor apcfence 120m:60s + # + # cluster layout + # + group internal_www \ + disk0 fs0 internal_ip apache + clone fence apcfence \ + meta globally-unique=false clone-max=2 clone-node-max=1 + clone conn pingd \ + meta globally-unique=false clone-max=2 clone-node-max=1 + location node_pref internal_www \ + rule 50: #uname eq node1 \ + rule pingd: defined pingd + # + # cluster properties + # + property stonith-enabled=true + commit +EOF +........ + +The `crm` interface is hierarchical, with commands organized into +separate levels by functionality. To list the available levels and +commands, either execute +help <level>+, or, if at the top level of +the shell, simply typing `help` will provide an overview of all +available levels and commands. + +The +(live)+ string in the `crm` prompt signifies that the current CIB +in use is the cluster live configuration. It is also possible to +work with so-called <<topics_Features_Shadows,shadow CIBs>>. These are separate, inactive +configurations stored in files, that can be applied and thereby +replace the live configuration at any time. + +[[topics_Introduction_Completion,Tab completion]] +=== Tab completion + +The `crm` makes extensive use of tab completion. The completion +is both static (i.e. for `crm` commands) and dynamic. The latter +takes into account the current status of the cluster or +information from installed resource agents. Sometimes, completion +may also be used to get short help on resource parameters. Here +are a few examples: + +............... +crm(live)resource# <TAB><TAB> +bye failcount move restart unmigrate +cd help param show unmove +cleanup list promote start up +demote manage quit status utilization +end meta refresh stop +exit migrate reprobe unmanage + +crm(live)configure# primitive fence-1 <TAB><TAB> +heartbeat: lsb: ocf: stonith: + +crm(live)configure# primitive fence-1 stonith:<TAB><TAB> +apcmaster external/ippower9258 fence_legacy +apcmastersnmp external/kdumpcheck ibmhmc +apcsmart external/libvirt ipmilan + +crm(live)configure# primitive fence-1 stonith:ipmilan params <TAB><TAB> +auth= hostname= ipaddr= login= password= port= priv= + +crm(live)configure# primitive fence-1 stonith:ipmilan params auth=<TAB><TAB> +auth* (string) + The authorization type of the IPMI session ("none", "straight", "md2", or "md5") +............... + +`crmsh` also comes with bash completion usable directly from the +system shell. This should be installed automatically with the command +itself. + +[[topics_Introduction_Shorthand,Shorthand syntax]] +=== Shorthand syntax + +When using the `crm` shell to manage clusters, you will end up typing +a lot of commands many times over. Clear command names like ++configure+ help in understanding and learning to use the cluster +shell, but is easy to misspell and is tedious to type repeatedly. The +interactive mode and tab completion both help with this, but the `crm` +shell also has the ability to understand a variety of shorthand +aliases for all of the commands. + +For example, instead of typing `crm status`, you can type `crm st` or +`crm stat`. Instead of `crm configure` you can type `crm cfg` or even +`crm cf`. `crm resource` can be shorted as `crm rsc`, and so on. + +The exact list of accepted aliases is too long to print in full, but +experimentation and typos should help in discovering more of them. + +[[topics_Features,Features]] +== Features + +The feature set of crmsh covers a wide range of functionality, and +understanding how and when to use the various features of the shell +can be difficult. This section of the guide describes some of the +features and use cases of `crmsh` in more depth. The intention is to +provide a deeper understanding of these features, but also to serve as +a guide to using them. + +[[topics_Features_Shadows,Shadow CIB usage]] +=== Shadow CIB usage + +A Shadow CIB is a normal cluster configuration stored in a file. +They may be manipulated in much the same way as the _live_ CIB, with +the key difference that changes to a shadow CIB have no effect on the +actual cluster resources. An administrator may choose to apply any of +them to the cluster, thus replacing the running configuration with the +one found in the shadow CIB. + +The `crm` prompt always contains the name of the configuration which +is currently in use, or the string _live_ if using the live cluster +configuration. + +When editing the configuration in the `configure` level, no changes +are actually applied until the `commit` command is executed. It is +possible to start editing a configuration as usual, but instead of +committing the changes to the active CIB, save them to a shadow CIB. + +The following example `configure` session demonstrates how this can be +done: +............... +crm(live)configure# cib new test-2 +INFO: test-2 shadow CIB created +crm(test-2)configure# commit +............... + +[[topics_Features_Checks,Configuration semantic checks]] +=== Configuration semantic checks + +Resource definitions may be checked against the meta-data +provided with the resource agents. These checks are currently +carried out: + +- are required parameters set +- existence of defined parameters +- timeout values for operations + +The parameter checks are obvious and need no further explanation. +Failures in these checks are treated as configuration errors. + +The timeouts for operations should be at least as long as those +recommended in the meta-data. Too short timeout values are a +common mistake in cluster configurations and, even worse, they +often slip through if cluster testing was not thorough. Though +operation timeouts issues are treated as warnings, make sure that +the timeouts are usable in your environment. Note also that the +values given are just _advisory minimum_---your resources may +require longer timeouts. + +User may tune the frequency of checks and the treatment of errors +by the <<cmdhelp_options_check-frequency,`check-frequency`>> and +<<cmdhelp_options_check-mode,`check-mode`>> preferences. + +Note that if the +check-frequency+ is set to +always+ and the ++check-mode+ to +strict+, errors are not tolerated and such +configuration cannot be saved. + +[[topics_Features_Templates,Configuration templates]] +=== Configuration templates + +.Deprecation note +**************************** +Configuration templates have been deprecated in favor of the more +capable `cluster scripts`. To learn how to use cluster scripts, see +the dedicated documentation on the `crmsh` website at +http://crmsh.github.io/, or in the <<cmdhelp_script,Script section>>. +**************************** + +Configuration templates are ready made configurations created by +cluster experts. They are designed in such a way so that users +may generate valid cluster configurations with minimum effort. +If you are new to Pacemaker, templates may be the best way to +start. + +We will show here how to create a simple yet functional Apache +configuration: +............... +# crm configure +crm(live)configure# template +crm(live)configure template# list templates +apache filesystem virtual-ip +crm(live)configure template# new web <TAB><TAB> +apache filesystem virtual-ip +crm(live)configure template# new web apache +INFO: pulling in template apache +INFO: pulling in template virtual-ip +crm(live)configure template# list +web2-d web2 vip2 web3 vip web +............... + +We enter the `template` level from `configure`. Use the `list` +command to show templates available on the system. The `new` +command creates a configuration from the +apache+ template. You +can use tab completion to pick templates. Note that the apache +template depends on a virtual IP address which is automatically +pulled along. The `list` command shows the just created +web+ +configuration, among other configurations (I hope that you, +unlike me, will use more sensible and descriptive names). + +The `show` command, which displays the resulting configuration, +may be used to get an idea about the minimum required changes +which have to be done. All +ERROR+ messages show the line numbers +in which the respective parameters are to be defined: +............... +crm(live)configure template# show +ERROR: 23: required parameter ip not set +ERROR: 61: required parameter id not set +ERROR: 65: required parameter configfile not set +crm(live)configure template# edit +............... + +The `edit` command invokes the preferred text editor with the ++web+ configuration. At the top of the file, the user is advised +how to make changes. A good template should require from the user +to specify only parameters. For example, the +web+ configuration +we created above has the following required and optional +parameters (all parameter lines start with +%%+): +............... +$ grep -n ^%% ~/.crmconf/web +23:%% ip +31:%% netmask +35:%% lvs_support +61:%% id +65:%% configfile +71:%% options +76:%% envfiles +............... + +These lines are the only ones that should be modified. Simply +append the parameter value at the end of the line. For instance, +after editing this template, the result could look like this (we +used tabs instead of spaces to make the values stand out): +............... +$ grep -n ^%% ~/.crmconf/web +23:%% ip 192.168.1.101 +31:%% netmask +35:%% lvs_support +61:%% id websvc +65:%% configfile /etc/apache2/httpd.conf +71:%% options +76:%% envfiles +............... + +As you can see, the parameter line format is very simple: +............... +%% <name> <value> +............... + +After editing the file, use `show` again to display the +configuration: +............... +crm(live)configure template# show +primitive virtual-ip IPaddr \ + params ip=192.168.1.101 +primitive apache apache \ + params configfile="/etc/apache2/httpd.conf" +monitor apache 120s:60s +group websvc \ + apache virtual-ip +............... + +The target resource of the apache template is a group which we +named +websvc+ in this sample session. + +This configuration looks exactly as you could type it at the +`configure` level. The point of templates is to save you some +typing. It is important, however, to understand the configuration +produced. + +Finally, the configuration may be applied to the current +crm configuration (note how the configuration changed slightly, +though it is still equivalent, after being digested at the +`configure` level): +............... +crm(live)configure template# apply +crm(live)configure template# cd .. +crm(live)configure# show +node xen-b +node xen-c +primitive apache apache \ + params configfile="/etc/apache2/httpd.conf" \ + op monitor interval=120s timeout=60s +primitive virtual-ip IPaddr \ + params ip=192.168.1.101 +group websvc apache virtual-ip +............... + +Note that this still does not commit the configuration to the CIB +which is used in the shell, either the running one (+live+) or +some shadow CIB. For that you still need to execute the `commit` +command. + +To complete our example, we should also define the preferred node +to run the service: + +............... +crm(live)configure# location websvc-pref websvc 100: xen-b +............... + +If you are not happy with some resource names which are provided +by default, you can rename them now: + +............... +crm(live)configure# rename virtual-ip intranet-ip +crm(live)configure# show +node xen-b +node xen-c +primitive apache apache \ + params configfile="/etc/apache2/httpd.conf" \ + op monitor interval=120s timeout=60s +primitive intranet-ip IPaddr \ + params ip=192.168.1.101 +group websvc apache intranet-ip +location websvc-pref websvc 100: xen-b +............... + +To summarize, working with templates typically consists of the +following steps: + +- `new`: create a new configuration from templates +- `edit`: define parameters, at least the required ones +- `show`: see if the configuration is valid +- `apply`: apply the configuration to the `configure` level + +[[topics_Features_Testing,Resource testing]] +=== Resource testing + +The amount of detail in a cluster makes all configurations prone +to errors. By far the largest number of issues in a cluster is +due to bad resource configuration. The shell can help quickly +diagnose such problems. And considerably reduce your keyboard +wear. + +Let's say that we entered the following configuration: +............... +node xen-b +node xen-c +node xen-d +primitive fencer stonith:external/libvirt \ + params hypervisor_uri="qemu+tcp://10.2.13.1/system" \ + hostlist="xen-b xen-c xen-d" \ + op monitor interval=2h +primitive svc Xinetd \ + params service=systat \ + op monitor interval=30s +primitive intranet-ip IPaddr2 \ + params ip=10.2.13.100 \ + op monitor interval=30s +primitive apache apache \ + params configfile="/etc/apache2/httpd.conf" \ + op monitor interval=120s timeout=60s +group websvc apache intranet-ip +location websvc-pref websvc 100: xen-b +............... + +Before typing `commit` to submit the configuration to the cib we +can make sure that all resources are usable on all nodes: +............... +crm(live)configure# rsctest websvc svc fencer +............... + +It is important that resources being tested are not running on +any nodes. Otherwise, the `rsctest` command will refuse to do +anything. Of course, if the current configuration resides in a +CIB shadow, then a `commit` is irrelevant. The point being that +resources are not running on any node. + +.Note on stopping all resources +**************************** +Alternatively to not committing a configuration, it is also +possible to tell Pacemaker not to start any resources: + +............... +crm(live)configure# property stop-all-resources=yes +............... +Almost none---resources of class stonith are still started. But +shell is not as strict when it comes to stonith resources. +**************************** + +Order of resources is significant insofar that a resource depends +on all resources to its left. In most configurations, it's +probably practical to test resources in several runs, based on +their dependencies. + +Apart from groups, `crm` does not interpret constraints and +therefore knows nothing about resource dependencies. It also +doesn't know if a resource can run on a node at all in case of an +asymmetric cluster. It is up to the user to specify a list of +eligible nodes if a resource is not meant to run on every node. + +[[topics_Features_Security,Access Control Lists (ACL)]] +=== Access Control Lists (ACL) + +.Note on ACLs in Pacemaker 1.1.12 +**************************** +The support for ACLs has been revised in Pacemaker version 1.1.12 and +up. Depending on which version you are using, the information in this +section may no longer be accurate. Look for the `acl_target` +configuration element for more details on the new syntax. +**************************** + +By default, the users from the +haclient+ group have full access +to the cluster (or, more precisely, to the CIB). Access control +lists allow for finer access control to the cluster. + +Access control lists consist of an ordered set of access rules. +Each rule allows read or write access or denies access +completely. Rules are typically combined to produce a specific +role. Then, users may be assigned a role. + +For instance, this is a role which defines a set of rules +allowing management of a single resource: + +............... +role bigdb_admin \ + write meta:bigdb:target-role \ + write meta:bigdb:is-managed \ + write location:bigdb \ + read ref:bigdb +............... + +The first two rules allow modifying the +target-role+ and ++is-managed+ meta attributes which effectively enables users in +this role to stop/start and manage/unmanage the resource. The +constraints write access rule allows moving the resource around. +Finally, the user is granted read access to the resource +definition. + +For proper operation of all Pacemaker programs, it is advisable +to add the following role to all users: + +............... +role read_all \ + read cib +............... + +For finer grained read access try with the rules listed in the +following role: + +............... +role basic_read \ + read node attribute:uname \ + read node attribute:type \ + read property \ + read status +............... + +It is however possible that some Pacemaker programs (e.g. +`ptest`) may not function correctly if the whole CIB is not +readable. + +Some of the ACL rules in the examples above are expanded by the +shell to XPath specifications. For instance, ++meta:bigdb:target-role+ expands to: + +........ +//primitive[@id='bigdb']/meta_attributes/nvpair[@name='target-role'] +........ + +You can see the expansion by showing XML: + +............... +crm(live) configure# show xml bigdb_admin +... +<acls> + <acl_role id="bigdb_admin"> + <write id="bigdb_admin-write" + xpath="//primitive[@id='bigdb']/meta_attributes/nvpair[@name='target-role']"/> +............... + +Many different XPath expressions can have equal meaning. For +instance, the following two are equal, but only the first one is +going to be recognized as shortcut: + +............... +//primitive[@id='bigdb']/meta_attributes/nvpair[@name='target-role'] +//resources/primitive[@id='bigdb']/meta_attributes/nvpair[@name='target-role'] +............... + +XPath is a powerful language, but you should try to keep your ACL +xpaths simple and the builtin shortcuts should be used whenever +possible. + +[[topics_Features_Resourcesets,Syntax: Resource sets]] +=== Syntax: Resource sets + +Using resource sets can be a bit confusing unless one knows the +details of the implementation in Pacemaker as well as how to interpret +the syntax provided by `crmsh`. + +Three different types of resource sets are provided by `crmsh`, and +each one implies different values for the two resource set attributes, ++sequential+ and +require-all+. + ++sequential+:: + If false, the resources in the set do not depend on each other + internally. Setting +sequential+ to +true+ implies a strict order of + dependency within the set. + ++require-all+:: + If false, only one resource in the set is required to fulfil the + requirements of the set. The set of A, B and C with +require-all+ + set to +false+ is be read as "A OR B OR C" when its dependencies + are resolved. + +The three types of resource sets modify the attributes in the +following way: + +1. Implicit sets (no brackets). +sequential=true+, +require-all=true+ +2. Parenthesis set (+(+ ... +)+). +sequential=false+, +require-all=true+ +3. Bracket set (+[+ ... +]+). +sequential=false+, +require-all=false+ + +To create a set with the properties +sequential=true+ and ++require-all=false+, explicitly set +sequential+ in a bracketed set, ++[ A B C sequential=true ]+. + +To create multiple sets with both +sequential+ and +require-all+ set to +true, explicitly set +sequential+ in a parenthesis set: ++A B ( C D sequential=true )+. + +[[topics_Features_AttributeListReferences,Syntax: Attribute list references]] +=== Syntax: Attribute list references + +Attribute lists are used to set attributes and parameters for +resources, constraints and property definitions. For example, to set +the virtual IP used by an +IPAddr2+ resource the attribute +ip+ can be +set in an attribute list for that resource. + +Attribute lists can have identifiers that name them, and other +resources can reuse the same attribute list by referring to that name +using an +$id-ref+. For example, the following statement defines a +simple dummy resource with an attribute list which sets the parameter ++state+ to the value 1 and sets the identifier for the attribute list +to +on-state+: + +.............. +primitive dummy-1 Dummy params $id=on-state state=1 +.............. + +To refer to this attribute list from a different resource, refer to +the +on-state+ name using an id-ref: + +.............. +primitive dummy-2 Dummy params $id-ref=on-state +.............. + +The resource +dummy-2+ will now also have the parameter +state+ set to the value 1. + +[[topics_Features_AttributeReferences,Syntax: Attribute references]] +=== Syntax: Attribute references + +In some cases, referencing complete attribute lists is too +coarse-grained, for example if two different parameters with different +names should have the same value set. Instead of having to copy the +value in multiple places, it is possible to create references to +individual attributes in attribute lists. + +To name an attribute in order to be able to refer to it later, prefix +the attribute name with a +$+ character (as seen above with the +special names +$id+ and +$id-ref+: + +............ +primitive dummy-1 Dummy params $state=1 +............ + +The identifier +state+ can now be used to refer to this attribute from other +primitives, using the +@<id>+ syntax: + +............ +primitive dummy-2 Dummy params @state +............ + +In some cases, using the attribute name as the identifier doesn't work +due to name clashes. In this case, the syntax +$<id>:<name>=<value>+ +can be used to give the attribute a different identifier: + +............ +primitive dummy-1 params $dummy-state-on:state=1 +primitive dummy-2 params @dummy-state-on +............ + +There is also the possibility that two resources both use the same +attribute value but with different names. For example, a web server +may have a parameter +server_ip+ for setting the IP address where it +listens for incoming requests, and a virtual IP resource may have a +parameter called +ip+ which sets the IP address it creates. To +configure these two resources with an IP without repeating the value, +the reference can be given a name using the syntax +@<id>:<name>+. + +Example: +............ +primitive virtual-ip IPaddr2 params $vip:ip=192.168.1.100 +primitive webserver apache params @vip:server_ip +............ + +[[topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions]] +=== Syntax: Rule expressions + +Many of the configuration commands in `crmsh` now support the use of +_rule expressions_, which can influence what attributes apply to a +resource or under which conditions a constraint is applied, depending +on changing conditions like date, time, the value of attributes and +more. + +Here is an example of a simple rule expression used to apply a +a different resource parameter on the node named `node1`: + +.............. +primitive my_resource Special \ + params 2: rule #uname eq node1 interface=eth1 \ + params 1: interface=eth0 +.............. + +This primitive resource has two lists of parameters with descending +priority. The parameter list with the highest priority is applied +first, but only if the rule expressions for that parameter list all +apply. In this case, the rule `#uname eq node1` limits the parameter +list so that it is only applied on `node1`. + +Note that rule expressions are not terminated and are immediately +followed by the data to which the rule is applied. In this case, the +name-value pair `interface=eth1`. + +Rule expressions can contain multiple expressions connected using the +boolean operator `or` and `and`. The full syntax for rule expressions +is listed below. + +.............. +rules :: + rule [id_spec] [$role=<role>] <score>: <expression> + [rule [id_spec] [$role=<role>] <score>: <expression> ...] + +id_spec :: $id=<id> | $id-ref=<id> +score :: <number> | <attribute> | [-]inf +expression :: <simple_exp> [<bool_op> <simple_exp> ...] +bool_op :: or | and +simple_exp :: <attribute> [type:]<binary_op> <value> + | <unary_op> <attribute> + | date <date_expr> +type :: <string> | <version> | <number> +binary_op :: lt | gt | lte | gte | eq | ne +unary_op :: defined | not_defined + +date_expr :: lt <end> + | gt <start> + | in start=<start> end=<end> + | in start=<start> <duration> + | spec <date_spec> +duration|date_spec :: + hours=<value> + | monthdays=<value> + | weekdays=<value> + | yearsdays=<value> + | months=<value> + | weeks=<value> + | years=<value> + | weekyears=<value> + | moon=<value> +.............. + +[[topics_Reference,Command reference]] +== Command reference + +The commands are structured to be compatible with the shell command +line. Sometimes, the underlying Pacemaker grammar uses characters that +have special meaning in bash, that will need to be quoted. This +includes the hash or pound sign (`#`), single and double quotes, and +any significant whitespace. + +Whitespace is also significant when assigning values, meaning that ++key=value+ is different from +key = value+. + +Commands can be referenced using short-hand as long as the short-hand +is unique. This can be either a prefix of the command name or a prefix +string of characters found in the name. + +For example, +status+ can be abbreviated as +st+ or +su+, and ++configure+ as +conf+ or +cfg+. + +The syntax for the commands is given below in an informal, BNF-like +grammar. + +* `<value>` denotes a string. +* `[value]` means that the construct is optional. +* The ellipsis (`...`) signifies that the previous construct may be + repeated. +* `first|second` means either first or second. +* The rest are literals (strings, `:`, `=`). + +[[cmdhelp_root_status,Cluster status]] +=== `status` + +Show cluster status. The status is displayed by `crm_mon`. Supply +additional arguments for more information or different format. +See `crm_mon(8)` for more details. + +Example: +............... +status +status simple +status full +............... + +Usage: +............... +status [<option> ...] + +option :: full + | bynode + | inactive + | ops + | timing + | failcounts + | verbose + | quiet + | html + | xml + | simple + | tickets + | noheaders + | detail + | brief +............... + +[[cmdhelp_root_verify,Verify cluster status]] +=== `verify` + +Performs basic checks for the cluster configuration and +current status, reporting potential issues. + +See `crm_verify(8)` and `crm_simulate(8)` for more details. + +Example: +............... +verify +verify scores +............... + +Usage: +............... +verify [scores] +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_cluster,Cluster setup and management]] +=== `cluster` - Cluster setup and management + +Whole-cluster configuration management with High Availability +awareness. + +The commands on the cluster level allows configuration and +modification of the underlying cluster infrastructure, and also +supplies tools to do whole-cluster systems management. + +These commands enable easy installation and maintenance of a HA +cluster, by providing support for package installation, configuration +of the cluster messaging layer, file system setup and more. + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_add,Add a new node to the cluster]] +==== `add` + +This command simplifies the process of adding a new node to a running +cluster. The new node will be installed and configured with the +packages and configuration files needed to run the cluster +resources. If a cluster file system is used, the new node will be set +up to host the file system. + +This command should be executed from a node already in the cluster. + +Usage: +............... +add <node> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_copy,Copy file to other cluster nodes]] +==== `copy` + +Copy file to other cluster nodes. + +Copies the given file to all other nodes unless given a +list of nodes to copy to as argument. + +Usage: +............... +copy <filename> [nodes ...] +............... + +Example: +............... +copy /etc/motd +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_diff,Diff file across cluster]] +==== `diff` + +Displays the difference, if any, between a given file +on different nodes. If the second argument is `--checksum`, +a checksum of the file will be calculated and displayed for +each node. + +Usage: +............... +diff <file> [--checksum] [nodes...] +............... + +Example: +............... +diff /etc/crm/crm.conf node2 +diff /etc/resolv.conf --checksum +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_health,Cluster health check]] +==== `health` + +Runs a larger set of tests and queries on all nodes in the cluster to +verify the general system health and detect potential problems. + +Usage: +............... +health +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_init,Initializes a new HA cluster]] +==== `init` + +Installs and configures a basic HA cluster on a set of nodes. + +Usage: +........ +init node1 node2 node3 +init --dry-run node1 node2 node3 +........ + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_remove,Remove a node from the cluster]] +==== `remove` + +This command simplifies the process of removing a node from the +cluster, moving any resources hosted by that node to other nodes. + +Usage: +............... +remove <node> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_run,Execute an arbitrary command on all nodes]] +==== `run` + +This command takes a shell statement as argument, executes that +statement on all nodes in the cluster, and reports the result. + +Usage: +............... +run <command> +............... + +Example: +............... +run "cat /proc/uptime" +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_start,Start cluster services]] +==== `start` + +Starts the cluster-related system services on this node. + +Usage: +......... +start +......... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_status,Cluster status check]] +==== `status` + +Reports the status for the cluster messaging layer on the local +node. + +Usage: +............... +status +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_stop,Stop cluster services]] +==== `stop` + +Stops the cluster-related system services on this node. + +Usage: +......... +stop +......... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_wait_for_startup,Wait for cluster to start]] +==== `wait_for_startup` + +Mostly useful in scripts or automated workflows, this command will +attempt to connect to the local cluster node repeatedly. The command +will keep trying until the cluster node responds, or the `timeout` +elapses. The timeout can be changed by supplying a value in seconds as +an argument. + +Usage: +........ +wait_for_startup +........ + +[[cmdhelp_script,Cluster script management]] +=== `script` - Cluster script management + +A big part of the configuration and management of a cluster is +collecting information about all cluster nodes and deploying changes +to those nodes. Often, just performing the same procedure on all nodes +will encounter problems, due to subtle differences in the +configuration. + +For example, when configuring a cluster for the first time, the +software needs to be installed and configured on all nodes before the +cluster software can be launched and configured using `crmsh`. This +process is cumbersome and error-prone, and the goal is for scripts to +make this process easier. + +Scripts are implemented using the python `parallax` package which +provides a thin wrapper on top of SSH. This allows the scripts to +function through the usual SSH channels used for system maintenance, +requiring no additional software to be installed or maintained. + +[[cmdhelp_script_json,JSON API for cluster scripts]] +==== `json` + +This command provides a JSON API for the cluster scripts, intended for +use in user interface tools that want to interact with the cluster via +scripts. + +The command takes a single argument, which should be a JSON array with +the first member identifying the command to perform. + +The output is line-based: Commands that return multiple results will +return them line-by-line, ending with a terminator value: "end". + +When providing parameter values to this command, they should be +provided as nested objects, so +virtual-ip:ip=192.168.0.5+ on the +command line becomes the JSON object ++{"virtual-ip":{"ip":"192.168.0.5"}}+. + +API: +........ +["list"] +=> [{name, shortdesc, category}] + +["show", <name>] +=> [{name, shortdesc, longdesc, category, <<steps>>}] + +<<steps>> := [{name, shortdesc], longdesc, required, parameters, steps}] + +<<params>> := [{name, shortdesc, longdesc, required, unique, advanced, + type, value, example}] + +["verify", <name>, <<values>>] +=> [{shortdesc, longdesc, text, nodes}] + +["run", <name>, <<values>>] +=> [{shortdesc, rc, output|error}] +........ + + +[[cmdhelp_script_list,List available scripts]] +==== `list` + +Lists the available scripts, sorted by category. Scripts that have the +special `Script` category are hidden by default, since they are mainly +used by other scripts or commands. To also show these, pass `all` as +argument. + +To get a flat list of script names, not sorted by category, pass +`names` as an extra argument. + +Usage: +............ +list [all] [names] +............ + +Example: +............ +list +list all names +............ + +[[cmdhelp_script_run,Run the script]] +==== `run` + +Given a list of parameter values, this command will execute the +actions specified by the cluster script. The format for the parameter +values is the same as for the `verify` command. + +Can optionally take at least two parameters: +* `nodes=<nodes>`: List of nodes that the script runs over +* `dry_run=yes|no`: If set, the script will not perform any modifications. + +Additional parameters may be available depending on the script. + +Use the `show` command to see what parameters are available. + +Usage: +............. +run <script> [args...] +............. + +Example: +............. +run apache install=true +run sbd id=sbd-1 node=node1 sbd_device=/dev/disk/by-uuid/F00D-CAFE +............. + +[[cmdhelp_script_show,Describe the script]] +==== `show` + +Prints a description and short summary of the script, with +descriptions of the accepted parameters. + +Advanced parameters are hidden by default. To show the complete list +of parameters accepted by the script, pass `all` as argument. + +Usage: +............ +show <script> [all] +............ + +Example: +............ +show virtual-ip +............ + +[[cmdhelp_script_verify,Verify the script]] +==== `verify` + +Checks the given parameter values, and returns a list +of actions that will be executed when running the script +if provided the same list of parameter values. + +Usage: +............ +verify <script> [args...] +............ + +Example: +............ +verify sbd id=sbd-1 node=node1 sbd_device=/dev/disk/by-uuid/F00D-CAFE +............ + +[[cmdhelp_corosync,Corosync management]] +=== `corosync` - Corosync management + +Corosync is the underlying messaging layer for most HA clusters. +This level provides commands for editing and managing the corosync +configuration. + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_add-node,Add a corosync node]] +==== `add-node` + +Adds a node to the corosync configuration. This is used with the `udpu` +type configuration in corosync. + +A nodeid for the added node is generated automatically. + +Note that this command assumes that only a single ring is used, and +sets only the address for ring0. + +Usage: +......... +add-node <addr> [name] +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_del-node,Remove a corosync node]] +==== `del-node` + +Removes a node from the corosync configuration. The argument given is +the `ring0_addr` address set in the configuration file. + +Usage: +......... +del-node <addr> +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_diff,Diffs the corosync configuration]] +==== `diff` + +Diffs the corosync configurations on different nodes. If no nodes are +given as arguments, the corosync configurations on all nodes in the +cluster are compared. + +`diff` takes an option argument `--checksum`, to display a checksum +for each file instead of calculating a diff. + +Usage: +......... +diff [--checksum] [node...] +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_edit,Edit the corosync configuration]] +==== `edit` + +Opens the Corosync configuration file in an editor. + +Usage: +......... +edit +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_get,Get a corosync configuration value]] +==== `get` + +Returns the value configured in `corosync.conf`, which is not +necessarily the value used in the running configuration. See `reload` +for telling corosync about configuration changes. + +The argument is the complete dot-separated path to the value. + +If there are multiple values configured with the same path, the +command returns all values for that path. For example, to get all +configured `ring0_addr` values, use this command: + +Example: +........ +get nodelist.node.ring0_addr +........ + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_log,Show the corosync log file]] +==== `log` + +Opens the log file specified in the corosync configuration file. If no +log file is configured, this command returns an error. + +The pager used can be configured either using the PAGER +environment variable or in `crm.conf`. + +Usage: +......... +log +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_pull,Pulls the corosync configuration]] +==== `pull` + +Gets the corosync configuration from another node and copies +it to this node. + +Usage: +......... +pull <node> +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_push,Push the corosync configuration]] +==== `push` + +Pushes the corosync configuration file on this node to +the list of nodes provided. If no target nodes are given, +the configuration is pushed to all other nodes in the cluster. + +It is recommended to use `csync2` to distribute the cluster +configuration files rather than relying on this command. + +Usage: +......... +push [node] ... +......... + +Example: +......... +push node-2 node-3 +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_reload,Reload the corosync configuration]] +==== `reload` + +Tells all instances of corosync in this cluster to reload +`corosync.conf`. + +After pushing a new configuration to all cluster nodes, call this +command to make corosync use the new configuration. + +Usage: +......... +reload +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_set,Set a corosync configuration value]] +==== `set` + +Sets the value identified by the given path. If the value does not +exist in the configuration file, it will be added. However, if the +section containing the value does not exist, the command will fail. + +Usage: +......... +set quorum.expected_votes 2 +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_show,Display the corosync configuration]] +==== `show` + +Displays the corosync configuration on the current node. + +......... +show +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_status,Display the corosync status]] +==== `status` + +Displays the status of Corosync, including the votequorum state. + +Usage: +......... +status +......... + +[[cmdhelp_cib,CIB shadow management]] +=== `cib` - CIB shadow management + +This level is for management of shadow CIBs. It is available both +at the top level and the `configure` level. + +All the commands are implemented using `cib_shadow(8)` and the +`CIB_shadow` environment variable. The user prompt always +includes the name of the currently active shadow or the live CIB. + +[[cmdhelp_cib_cibstatus,CIB status management and editing]] +==== `cibstatus` + +Enter edit and manage the CIB status section level. See the +<<cmdhelp_cibstatus,CIB status management section>>. + +[[cmdhelp_cib_commit,copy a shadow CIB to the cluster]] +==== `commit` + +Apply a shadow CIB to the cluster. If the shadow name is omitted +then the current shadow CIB is applied. + +Temporary shadow CIBs are removed automatically on commit. + +Usage: +............... +commit [<cib>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_delete,delete a shadow CIB]] +==== `delete` + +Delete an existing shadow CIB. + +Usage: +............... +delete <cib> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_diff,diff between the shadow CIB and the live CIB]] +==== `diff` + +Print differences between the current cluster configuration and +the active shadow CIB. + +Usage: +............... +diff +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_import,import a CIB or PE input file to a shadow]] +==== `import` + +At times it may be useful to create a shadow file from the +existing CIB. The CIB may be specified as file or as a PE input +file number. The shell will look up files in the local directory +first and then in the PE directory (typically `/var/lib/pengine`). +Once the CIB file is found, it is copied to a shadow and this +shadow is immediately available for use at both `configure` and +`cibstatus` levels. + +If the shadow name is omitted then the target shadow is named +after the input CIB file. + +Note that there are often more than one PE input file, so you may +need to specify the full name. + +Usage: +............... +import {<file>|<number>} [<shadow>] +............... +Examples: +............... +import pe-warn-2222 +import 2289 issue2 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_list,list all shadow CIBs]] +==== `list` + +List existing shadow CIBs. + +Usage: +............... +list +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_new,create a new shadow CIB]] +==== `new` + +Create a new shadow CIB. The live cluster configuration and +status is copied to the shadow CIB. + +If the name of the shadow is omitted, we create a temporary CIB +shadow. It is useful if multiple level sessions are desired +without affecting the cluster. A temporary CIB shadow is short +lived and will be removed either on `commit` or on program exit. +Note that if the temporary shadow is not committed all changes in +the temporary shadow are lost. + +Specify `withstatus` if you want to edit the status section of +the shadow CIB (see the <<cmdhelp_cibstatus,cibstatus section>>). +Add `force` to force overwriting the existing shadow CIB. + +To start with an empty configuration that is not copied from the live +CIB, specify the `empty` keyword. (This also allows a shadow CIB to be +created in case no cluster is running.) + +Usage: +............... +new [<cib>] [withstatus] [force] [empty] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_reset,copy live cib to a shadow CIB]] +==== `reset` + +Copy the current cluster configuration into the shadow CIB. + +Usage: +............... +reset <cib> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_use,change working CIB]] +==== `use` + +Choose a CIB source. If you want to edit the status from the +shadow CIB specify `withstatus` (see <<cmdhelp_cibstatus,`cibstatus`>>). +Leave out the CIB name to switch to the running CIB. + +Usage: +............... +use [<cib>] [withstatus] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_ra,Resource Agents (RA) lists and documentation]] +=== `ra` - Resource Agents (RA) lists and documentation + +This level contains commands which show various information about +the installed resource agents. It is available both at the top +level and at the `configure` level. + +[[cmdhelp_ra_classes,list classes and providers]] +==== `classes` + +Print all resource agents' classes and, where appropriate, a list +of available providers. + +Usage: +............... +classes +............... + +[[cmdhelp_ra_info,show meta data for a RA]] +==== `info` (`meta`) + +Show the meta-data of a resource agent type. This is where users +can find information on how to use a resource agent. It is also +possible to get information from some programs: `pengine`, +`crmd`, `cib`, and `stonithd`. Just specify the program name +instead of an RA. + +Usage: +............... +info [<class>:[<provider>:]]<type> +info <type> <class> [<provider>] (obsolete) +............... +Example: +............... +info apache +info ocf:pacemaker:Dummy +info stonith:ipmilan +info pengine +............... + +[[cmdhelp_ra_list,list RA for a class (and provider)]] +==== `list` + +List available resource agents for the given class. If the class +is `ocf`, supply a provider to get agents which are available +only from that provider. + +Usage: +............... +list <class> [<provider>] +............... +Example: +............... +list ocf pacemaker +............... + +[[cmdhelp_ra_providers,show providers for a RA and a class]] +==== `providers` + +List providers for a resource agent type. The class parameter +defaults to `ocf`. + +Usage: +............... +providers <type> [<class>] +............... +Example: +............... +providers apache +............... + +[[cmdhelp_ra_validate,validate parameters for RA]] +==== `validate` + +If the resource agent supports the `validate-all` action, this calls +the action with the given parameters, printing any warnings or errors +reported by the agent. + +Usage: +................ +validate <agent> [<key>=<value> ...] +................ + +[[cmdhelp_resource,Resource management]] +=== `resource` - Resource management + +At this level resources may be managed. + +All (or almost all) commands are implemented with the CRM tools +such as `crm_resource(8)`. + +[[cmdhelp_resource_ban,ban a resource from a node]] +==== `ban` + +Ban a resource from running on a certain node. If no node is given +as argument, the resource is banned from the current location. + +See `move` for details on other arguments. + +Usage: +............... +ban <rsc> [<node>] [<lifetime>] [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_cleanup,cleanup resource status]] +==== `cleanup` + +Cleanup resource status. Typically done after the resource has +temporarily failed. If a node is omitted, cleanup on all nodes. +If there are many nodes, the command may take a while. + ++(Pacemaker 1.1.14)+ Pass force to cleanup the resource itself, +otherwise the cleanup command will apply to the parent resource (if +any). + +Usage: +............... +cleanup <rsc> [<node>] [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_clear,Clear any relocation constraint]] +==== `clear` (`unmove`, `unmigrate`, `unban`) + +Remove any relocation constraint created by +the `move`, `migrate` or `ban` command. + +Usage: +............... +clear <rsc> +unmigrate <rsc> +unban <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_constraints,Show constraints affecting a resource]] +==== `constraints` + +Display the location and colocation constraints affecting the +resource. + +Usage: +................ +constraints <rsc> +................ + +[[cmdhelp_resource_demote,demote a master-slave resource]] +==== `demote` + +Demote a master-slave resource using the `target-role` +attribute. + +Usage: +............... +demote <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_failcount,manage failcounts]] +==== `failcount` + +Show/edit/delete the failcount of a resource. + +Usage: +............... +failcount <rsc> set <node> <value> +failcount <rsc> delete <node> +failcount <rsc> show <node> +............... +Example: +............... +failcount fs_0 delete node2 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_locate,show the location of resources]] +==== `locate` + +Show the current location of one or more resources. + +Usage: +............... +locate [<rsc> ...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_maintenance,Enable/disable per-resource maintenance mode]] +==== `maintenance` + +Enables or disables the per-resource maintenance mode. When this mode +is enabled, no monitor operations will be triggered for the resource. +`maintenance` attribute conflicts with the `is-managed`. When setting +the `maintenance` attribute, the user is proposed to remove the +`is-managed` attribute if it exists. + +Usage: +.................. +maintenance <resource> [on|off|true|false] +.................. + +Example: +.................. +maintenance rsc1 +maintenance rsc2 off +.................. + +[[cmdhelp_resource_manage,put a resource into managed mode]] +==== `manage` + +Manage a resource using the `is-managed` attribute. If there +are multiple meta attributes sets, the attribute is set in all of +them. If the resource is a clone, all `is-managed` attributes are +removed from the children resources. +`is-managed` attribute conflicts with the `maintenance`. When setting +the `is-managed` attribute, the user is proposed to remove the +`maintenance` attribute if it exists. + +For details on group management see <<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... +manage <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_meta,manage a meta attribute]] +==== `meta` + +Show/edit/delete a meta attribute of a resource. Currently, all +meta attributes of a resource may be managed with other commands +such as `resource stop`. + +Usage: +............... +meta <rsc> set <attr> <value> +meta <rsc> delete <attr> +meta <rsc> show <attr> +............... +Example: +............... +meta ip_0 set target-role stopped +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_move,Move a resource to another node]] +==== `move` (`migrate`) + +Move a resource away from its current location. + +If the destination node is left out, the resource is migrated by +creating a constraint which prevents it from running on the current +node. For this type of constraint to be created, the +force+ argument +is required. + +A lifetime may be given for the constraint. Once it expires, the +location constraint will no longer be active. + +Usage: +............... +move <rsc> [<node>] [<lifetime>] [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_operations,Show active resource operations]] +==== `operations` + +Show active operations, optionally filtered by resource and node. + +Usage: +................ +operations [<rsc>] [<node>] +................ + +[[cmdhelp_resource_param,manage a parameter of a resource]] +==== `param` + +Show/edit/delete a parameter of a resource. + +Usage: +............... +param <rsc> set <param> <value> +param <rsc> delete <param> +param <rsc> show <param> +............... +Example: +............... +param ip_0 show ip +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_promote,promote a master-slave resource]] +==== `promote` + +Promote a master-slave resource using the `target-role` +attribute. + +Usage: +............... +promote <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_refresh,refresh CIB from the LRM status]] +==== `refresh` + +Refresh CIB from the LRM status. + +.Note +**************************** +`refresh` has been deprecated and is now +an alias for `cleanup`. +**************************** + +Usage: +............... +refresh [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_reprobe,probe for resources not started by the CRM]] +==== `reprobe` + +Probe for resources not started by the CRM. + +.Note +**************************** +`reprobe` has been deprecated and is now +an alias for `cleanup`. +**************************** + +Usage: +............... +reprobe [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_restart,restart resources]] +==== `restart` + +Restart one or more resources. This is essentially a shortcut for +resource stop followed by a start. The shell is first going to wait +for the stop to finish, that is for all resources to really stop, and +only then to order the start action. Due to this command +entailing a whole set of operations, informational messages are +printed to let the user see some progress. + +For details on group management see +<<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... +restart <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +# crm resource restart g_webserver +INFO: ordering g_webserver to stop +waiting for stop to finish .... done +INFO: ordering g_webserver to start +# +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_scores,Display resource scores]] +==== `scores` + +Display the allocation scores for all resources. + +Usage: +................ +scores +................ + +[[cmdhelp_resource_secret,manage sensitive parameters]] +==== `secret` + +Sensitive parameters can be kept in local files rather than CIB +in order to prevent accidental data exposure. Use the `secret` +command to manage such parameters. `stash` and `unstash` move the +value from the CIB and back to the CIB respectively. The `set` +subcommand sets the parameter to the provided value. `delete` +removes the parameter completely. `show` displays the value of +the parameter from the local file. Use `check` to verify if the +local file content is valid. + +Usage: +............... +secret <rsc> set <param> <value> +secret <rsc> stash <param> +secret <rsc> unstash <param> +secret <rsc> delete <param> +secret <rsc> show <param> +secret <rsc> check <param> +............... +Example: +............... +secret fence_1 show password +secret fence_1 stash password +secret fence_1 set password secret_value +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_start,start resources]] +==== `start` + +Start one or more resources by setting the `target-role` attribute. If +there are multiple meta attributes sets, the attribute is set in all +of them. If the resource is a clone, all `target-role` attributes are +removed from the children resources. + +For details on group management see +<<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... +start <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_status,show status of resources]] +==== `status` (`show`, `list`) + +Print resource status. More than one resource can be shown at once. If +the resource parameter is left out, the status of all resources is +printed. + +Usage: +............... +status [<rsc> ...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_stop,stop resources]] +==== `stop` + +Stop one or more resources using the `target-role` attribute. If there +are multiple meta attributes sets, the attribute is set in all of +them. If the resource is a clone, all `target-role` attributes are +removed from the children resources. + +For details on group management see +<<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... +stop <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_trace,start RA tracing]] +==== `trace` + +Start tracing RA for the given operation. The trace files are +stored in `$HA_VARLIB/trace_ra`. If the operation to be traced is +monitor, note that the number of trace files can grow very +quickly. + +If no operation name is given, crmsh will attempt to trace all +operations for the RA. This includes any configured operations, start +and stop as well as promote/demote for multistate resources. + +To trace the probe operation which exists for all resources, either +set a trace for `monitor` with interval `0`, or use `probe` as the +operation name. + +Usage: +............... +trace <rsc> [<op> [<interval>] ] +............... +Example: +............... +trace fs start +trace webserver +trace webserver probe +trace fs monitor 0 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_unmanage,put a resource into unmanaged mode]] +==== `unmanage` + +Unmanage a resource using the `is-managed` attribute. If there +are multiple meta attributes sets, the attribute is set in all of +them. If the resource is a clone, all `is-managed` attributes are +removed from the children resources. + +For details on group management see <<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... +unmanage <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_untrace,stop RA tracing]] +==== `untrace` + +Stop tracing RA for the given operation. If no operation name is +given, crmsh will attempt to stop tracing all operations in resource. + +Usage: +............... +untrace <rsc> [<op> [<interval>] ] +............... +Example: +............... +untrace fs start +untrace webserver +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_utilization,manage a utilization attribute]] +==== `utilization` + +Show/edit/delete a utilization attribute of a resource. These +attributes describe hardware requirements. By setting the +`placement-strategy` cluster property appropriately, it is +possible then to distribute resources based on resource +requirements and node size. See also <<cmdhelp_node_utilization,node utilization attributes>>. + +Usage: +............... +utilization <rsc> set <attr> <value> +utilization <rsc> delete <attr> +utilization <rsc> show <attr> +............... +Example: +............... +utilization xen1 set memory 4096 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node,Node management]] +=== `node` - Node management + +Node management and status commands. + +[[cmdhelp_node_attribute,manage attributes]] +==== `attribute` + +Edit node attributes. This kind of attribute should refer to +relatively static properties, such as memory size. + +Usage: +............... +attribute <node> set <attr> <value> +attribute <node> delete <attr> +attribute <node> show <attr> +............... +Example: +............... +attribute node_1 set memory_size 4096 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_clearstate,Clear node state]] +==== `clearstate` + +Resets and clears the state of the specified node. This node is +afterwards assumed clean and offline. This command can be used to +manually confirm that a node has been fenced (e.g., powered off). + +Be careful! This can cause data corruption if you confirm that a node is +down that is, in fact, not cleanly down - the cluster will proceed as if +the fence had succeeded, possibly starting resources multiple times. + +Usage: +............... +clearstate <node> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_delete,delete node]] +==== `delete` + +Delete a node. This command will remove the node from the CIB +and, in case the cluster stack is running, use the appropriate +program (`crm_node` or `hb_delnode`) to remove the node from the +membership. + +If the node is still listed as active and a member of our +partition we refuse to remove it. With the global force option +(`-F`) we will try to delete the node anyway. + +Usage: +............... +delete <node> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_fence,fence node]] +==== `fence` + +Make CRM fence a node. This functionality depends on stonith +resources capable of fencing the specified node. No such stonith +resources, no fencing will happen. + +Usage: +............... +fence <node> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_maintenance,put node into maintenance mode]] +==== `maintenance` + +Set the node status to maintenance. This is equivalent to the +cluster-wide `maintenance-mode` property but puts just one node +into the maintenance mode. If there are maintenaned resources on +the node, the user will be proposed to remove the maintenance +property from them. + +The node parameter defaults to the node where the command is run. + +Usage: +............... +maintenance [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_online,set node online]] +==== `online` + +Set a node to online status. + +The node parameter defaults to the node where the command is run. + +Usage: +............... +online [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_ready,put node into ready mode]] +==== `ready` + +Set the node's maintenance status to `off`. The node should be +now again fully operational and capable of running resource +operations. + +The node parameter defaults to the node where the command is run. + +Usage: +............... +ready [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_server,show node hostname or server address]] +==== `server` + +Remote nodes may have a configured server address which should +be used when contacting the node. This command prints the +server address if configured, else the node name. + +If no parameter is given, the adresses or names for all nodes +are printed. + +Usage: +............... +server [<node> ...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_show,show node]] +==== `show` + +Show a node definition. If the node parameter is omitted then all +nodes are shown. + +Usage: +............... +show [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_standby,put node into standby]] +==== `standby` + +Set a node to standby status. The node parameter defaults to the +node where the command is run. + +Additionally, you may specify a lifetime for the standby---if set to +`reboot`, the node will be back online once it reboots. `forever` will +keep the node in standby after reboot. The life time defaults to +`forever`. + +Usage: +............... +standby [<node>] [<lifetime>] + +lifetime :: reboot | forever +............... + +Example: +............... +standby bob reboot +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_node_status,show nodes' status as XML]] +==== `status` + +Show nodes' status as XML. If the node parameter is omitted then +all nodes are shown. + +Usage: +............... +status [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_status-attr,manage status attributes]] +==== `status-attr` + +Edit node attributes which are in the CIB status section, i.e. +attributes which hold properties of a more volatile nature. One +typical example is attribute generated by the `pingd` utility. + +Usage: +............... +status-attr <node> set <attr> <value> +status-attr <node> delete <attr> +status-attr <node> show <attr> +............... +Example: +............... +status-attr node_1 show pingd +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_utilization,manage utilization attributes]] +==== `utilization` + +Edit node utilization attributes. These attributes describe +hardware characteristics as integer numbers such as memory size +or the number of CPUs. By setting the `placement-strategy` +cluster property appropriately, it is possible then to distribute +resources based on resource requirements and node size. See also +<<cmdhelp_resource_utilization,resource utilization attributes>>. + +Usage: +............... +utilization <node> set <attr> <value> +utilization <node> delete <attr> +utilization <node> show <attr> +............... +Examples: +............... +utilization node_1 set memory 16384 +utilization node_1 show cpu +............... + +[[cmdhelp_site,GEO clustering site support]] +=== `site` - GEO clustering site support + +A cluster may consist of two or more subclusters in different and +distant locations. This set of commands supports such setups. + +[[cmdhelp_site_ticket,manage site tickets]] +==== `ticket` + +Tickets are cluster-wide attributes. They can be managed at the +site where this command is executed. + +It is then possible to constrain resources depending on the +ticket availability (see the <<cmdhelp_configure_rsc_ticket,`rsc_ticket`>> command +for more details). + +Usage: +............... +ticket {grant|revoke|standby|activate|show|time|delete} <ticket> +............... +Example: +............... +ticket grant ticket1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options,User preferences]] +=== `options` - User preferences + +The user may set various options for the crm shell itself. + +[[cmdhelp_options_add-quotes,add quotes around parameters containing spaces]] +==== `add-quotes` + +The shell (as in `/bin/sh`) parser strips quotes from the command +line. This may sometimes make it really difficult to type values +which contain white space. One typical example is the configure +filter command. The crm shell will supply extra quotes around +arguments which contain white space. The default is `yes`. + +.Note on quotes use +**************************** +Adding quotes around arguments automatically has been introduced +with version 1.2.2 and it is technically a regression. Being a +regression is the only reason the `add-quotes` option exists. If +you have custom shell scripts which would break, just set the +`add-quotes` option to `no`. + +For instance, with adding quotes enabled, it is possible to do +the following: +............... +# crm configure primitive d1 Dummy \ + meta description="some description here" +# crm configure filter 'sed "s/hostlist=./&node-c /"' fencing +............... +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_options_check-frequency,when to perform semantic check]] +==== `check-frequency` + +Semantic check of the CIB or elements modified or created may be +done on every configuration change (`always`), when verifying +(`on-verify`) or `never`. It is by default set to `always`. +Experts may want to change the setting to `on-verify`. + +The checks require that resource agents are present. If they are +not installed at the configuration time set this preference to +`never`. + +See <<topics_Features_Checks,Configuration semantic checks>> for more details. + +[[cmdhelp_options_check-mode,how to treat semantic errors]] +==== `check-mode` + +Semantic check of the CIB or elements modified or created may be +done in the `strict` mode or in the `relaxed` mode. In the former +certain problems are treated as configuration errors. In the +`relaxed` mode all are treated as warnings. The default is `strict`. + +See <<topics_Features_Checks,Configuration semantic checks>> for more details. + +[[cmdhelp_options_colorscheme,set colors for output]] +==== `colorscheme` + +With `output` set to `color`, a comma separated list of colors +from this option are used to emphasize: + +- keywords +- object ids +- attribute names +- attribute values +- scores +- resource references + +`crm` can show colors only if there is curses support for python +installed (usually provided by the `python-curses` package). The +colors are whatever is available in your terminal. Use `normal` +if you want to keep the default foreground color. + +This user preference defaults to +`yellow,normal,cyan,red,green,magenta` which is good for +terminals with dark background. You may want to change the color +scheme and save it in the preferences file for other color +setups. + +Example: +............... +colorscheme yellow,normal,blue,red,green,magenta +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options_editor,set preferred editor program]] +==== `editor` + +The `edit` command invokes an editor. Use this to specify your +preferred editor program. If not set, it will default to either +the value of the `EDITOR` environment variable or to one of the +standard UNIX editors (`vi`,`emacs`,`nano`). + +Usage: +............... +editor program +............... +Example: +............... +editor vim +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options_manage-children,how to handle children resource attributes]] +==== `manage-children` + +Some resource management commands, such as `resource stop`, when +the target resource is a group, may not always produce desired +result. Each element, group and the primitive members, can have a +meta attribute and those attributes may end up with conflicting +values. Consider the following construct: +............... +crm(live)# configure show svc fs virtual-ip +primitive fs Filesystem \ + params device="/dev/drbd0" directory="/srv/nfs" fstype=ext3 \ + op monitor interval=10s \ + meta target-role=Started +primitive virtual-ip IPaddr2 \ + params ip=10.2.13.110 iflabel=1 \ + op monitor interval=10s \ + op start interval=0 \ + meta target-role=Started +group svc fs virtual-ip \ + meta target-role=Stopped +............... + +Even though the element +svc+ should be stopped, the group is +actually running because all its members have the +target-role+ +set to +Started+: +............... +crm(live)# resource show svc +resource svc is running on: xen-f +............... + +Hence, if the user invokes +resource stop svc+ the intention is +not clear. This preference gives the user an opportunity to +better control what happens if attributes of group members have +values which are in conflict with the same attribute of the group +itself. + +Possible values are +ask+ (the default), +always+, and +never+. +If set to +always+, the crm shell removes all children attributes +which have values different from the parent. If set to +never+, +all children attributes are left intact. Finally, if set to ++ask+, the user will be asked for each member what is to be done. + +[[cmdhelp_options_output,set output type]] +==== `output` + +`crm` can adorn configurations in two ways: in color (similar to +for instance the `ls --color` command) and by showing keywords in +upper case. Possible values are `plain`, `color-always`, `color`, +and 'uppercase'. It is possible to combine `uppercase` with one +of the color values in order to get an upper case xmass tree. Just +set this option to `color,uppercase` or `color-always,uppercase`. +In case you need color codes in pipes, `color-always` forces color +codes even in case the terminal is not a tty (just like `ls +--color=always`). + +[[cmdhelp_options_pager,set preferred pager program]] +==== `pager` + +The `view` command displays text through a pager. Use this to +specify your preferred pager program. If not set, it will default +to either the value of the `PAGER` environment variable or to one +of the standard UNIX system pagers (`less`,`more`,`pg`). + +[[cmdhelp_options_reset,reset user preferences to factory defaults]] +==== `reset` + +This command resets all user options to the defaults. If used as +a single-shot command, the rc file (+$HOME/.config/crm/rc+) is +reset to the defaults too. + +[[cmdhelp_options_save,save the user preferences to the rc file]] +==== `save` + +Save current settings to the rc file (+$HOME/.config/crm/rc+). On +further `crm` runs, the rc file is automatically read and parsed. + +[[cmdhelp_options_set,Set the value of a given option]] +==== `set` + +Sets the value of an option. Takes the fully qualified +name of the option as argument, as displayed by +show all+. + +The modified option value is stored in the user-local +configuration file, usually found in +~/.config/crm/crm.conf+. + +Usage: +........ +set <option> <value> +........ + +Example: +........ +set color.warn "magenta bold" +set editor nano +........ + +[[cmdhelp_options_show,show current user preference]] +==== `show` + +Display all current settings. + +Given an option name as argument, `show` will display only the value +of that argument. + +Given +all+ as argument, `show` displays all available user options. + +Usage: +........ +show [all|<option>] +........ + +Example: +........ +show +show skill-level +show all +........ + +[[cmdhelp_options_skill-level,set skill level]] +==== `skill-level` + +Based on the skill-level setting, the user is allowed to use only +a subset of commands. There are three levels: operator, +administrator, and expert. The operator level allows only +commands at the `resource` and `node` levels, but not editing +or deleting resources. The administrator may do that and may also +configure the cluster at the `configure` level and manage the +shadow CIBs. The expert may do all. + +Usage: +............... +skill-level <level> + +level :: operator | administrator | expert +............... + +.Note on security +**************************** +The `skill-level` option is advisory only. There is nothing +stopping any users change their skill level (see +<<topics_Features_Security,Access Control Lists (ACL)>> on how to enforce +access control). +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_options_sort-elements,sort CIB elements]] +==== `sort-elements` + +`crm` by default sorts CIB elements. If you want them appear in +the order they were created, set this option to `no`. + +Usage: +............... +sort-elements {yes|no} +............... +Example: +............... +sort-elements no +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options_user,set the cluster user]] +==== `user` + +Sufficient privileges are necessary in order to manage a +cluster: programs such as `crm_verify` or `crm_resource` and, +ultimately, `cibadmin` have to be run either as `root` or as the +CRM owner user (typically `hacluster`). You don't have to worry +about that if you run `crm` as `root`. A more secure way is to +run the program with your usual privileges, set this option to +the appropriate user (such as `hacluster`), and setup the +`sudoers` file. + +Usage: +............... +user system-user +............... +Example: +............... +user hacluster +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options_wait,synchronous operation]] +==== `wait` + +In normal operation, `crm` runs a command and gets back +immediately to process other commands or get input from the user. +With this option set to `yes` it will wait for the started +transition to finish. In interactive mode dots are printed to +indicate progress. + +Usage: +............... +wait {yes|no} +............... +Example: +............... +wait yes +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure,CIB configuration]] +=== `configure` - CIB configuration + +This level enables all CIB object definition commands. + +The configuration may be logically divided into four parts: +nodes, resources, constraints, and (cluster) properties and +attributes. Each of these commands support one or more basic CIB +objects. + +Nodes and attributes describing nodes are managed using the +`node` command. + +Commands for resources are: + +- `primitive` +- `monitor` +- `group` +- `clone` +- `ms`/`master` (master-slave) + +In order to streamline large configurations, it is possible to +define a template which can later be referenced in primitives: + +- `rsc_template` + +In that case the primitive inherits all attributes defined in the +template. + +There are three types of constraints: + +- `location` +- `colocation` +- `order` + +It is possible to define fencing order (stonith resource +priorities): + +- `fencing_topology` + +Finally, there are the cluster properties, resource meta +attributes defaults, and operations defaults. All are just a set +of attributes. These attributes are managed by the following +commands: + +- `property` +- `rsc_defaults` +- `op_defaults` + +In addition to the cluster configuration, the Access Control +Lists (ACL) can be setup to allow access to parts of the CIB for +users other than +root+ and +hacluster+. The following commands +manage ACL: + +- `user` +- `role` + +In Pacemaker 1.1.12 and up, this command replaces the `user` command +for handling ACLs: + +- `acl_target` + +The changes are applied to the current CIB only on ending the +configuration session or using the `commit` command. + +Comments start with +#+ in the first line. The comments are tied +to the element which follows. If the element moves, its comments +will follow. + +[[cmdhelp_configure_acl_target,Define target access rights]] +==== `acl_target` + +Defines an ACL target. + +Usage: +................ +acl_target <tid> [<role> ...] +................ +Example: +................ +acl_target joe resource_admin constraint_editor +................ + +[[cmdhelp_configure_alert,Event-driven alerts]] +==== `alert` + +.Version note +**************************** +This feature is only available +in Pacemaker 1.1.15+. +**************************** + +Event-driven alerts enables calling scripts whenever interesting +events occur in the cluster (nodes joining or leaving, resources +starting or stopping, etc.). + +The +path+ is an arbitrary file path to an alert script. Existing +external scripts used with ClusterMon resources can be used as alert +scripts, since the interface is compatible. + +Each alert may have a number of receipients configured. These will be +passed to the script as arguments. The first recipient will also be +passed as the +CRM_alert_recipient+ environment variable, for +compatibility with existing scripts that only support one recipient. + +The available meta attributes are +timeout+ (default 30s) and ++timestamp-format+ (default `"%H:%M:%S.%06N"`). + +Some configurations may require each recipient to be delimited by +brackets, to avoid ambiguity. In the example +alert-2+ below, the meta +attribute for `timeout` is defined after the recipient, so the +brackets are used to ensure that the meta attribute is set for the +alert and not just the recipient. This can be avoided by setting any +alert attributes before defining the recipients. + +Usage: +............... +alert <id> <path> \ + [attributes <nvpair> ...] \ + [meta <nvpair> ...] \ + [to [{] <recipient> + [attributes <nvpair> ...] \ + [meta <nvpair> ...] [}] \ + ...] +............... + +Example: +............... +alert alert-1 /srv/pacemaker/pcmk_alert_sample.sh \ + to /var/log/cluster-alerts.log + +alert alert-2 /srv/pacemaker/example_alert.sh \ + meta timeout=60s \ + to { /var/log/cluster-alerts.log } +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_cib,CIB shadow management]] +==== `cib` + +This level is for management of shadow CIBs. It is available at +the `configure` level to enable saving intermediate changes to a +shadow CIB instead of to the live cluster. This short excerpt +shows how: +............... +crm(live)configure# cib new test-2 +INFO: test-2 shadow CIB created +crm(test-2)configure# commit +............... +Note how the current CIB in the prompt changed from +live+ to ++test-2+ after issuing the `cib new` command. See also the +<<cmdhelp_cib,CIB shadow management>> for more information. + +[[cmdhelp_configure_cibstatus,CIB status management and editing]] +==== `cibstatus` + +Enter edit and manage the CIB status section level. See the +<<cmdhelp_cibstatus,CIB status management section>>. + +[[cmdhelp_configure_clone,define a clone]] +==== `clone` + +The `clone` command creates a resource clone. It may contain a +single primitive resource or one group of resources. + +Usage: +............... +clone <name> <rsc> + [description=<description>] + [meta <attr_list>] + [params <attr_list>] + +attr_list :: [$id=<id>] <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...] | $id-ref=<id> +............... +Example: +............... +clone cl_fence apc_1 \ + meta clone-node-max=1 globally-unique=false +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_colocation,colocate resources]] +==== `colocation` (`collocation`) + +This constraint expresses the placement relation between two +or more resources. If there are more than two resources, then the +constraint is called a resource set. + +The score is used to indicate the priority of the constraint. A +positive score indicates that the resources should run on the same +node. A negative score that they should not run on the same +node. Values of positive or negative +infinity+ indicate a mandatory +constraint. + +In the two resource form, the cluster will place +<with-rsc>+ first, +and then decide where to put the +<rsc>+ resource. + +Collocation resource sets have an extra attribute (+sequential+) +to allow for sets of resources which don't depend on each other +in terms of state. The shell syntax for such sets is to put +resources in parentheses. + +Sets cannot be nested. + +The optional +node-attribute+ can be used to colocate resources on a +set of nodes and not necessarily on the same node. For example, by +setting a node attribute +color+ on all nodes and setting the ++node-attribute+ value to +color+ as well, the colocated resources +will be placed on any node that has the same color. + +For more details on how to configure resource sets, see +<<topics_Features_Resourcesets,`Syntax: Resource sets`>>. + +Usage: +............... +colocation <id> <score>: <rsc>[:<role>] <with-rsc>[:<role>] + [node-attribute=<node_attr>] + +colocation <id> <score>: <resource_sets> + [node-attribute=<node_attr>] + +resource_sets :: <resource_set> [<resource_set> ...] + +resource_set :: ["("|"["] <rsc>[:<role>] [<rsc>[:<role>] ...] \ + [<attributes>] [")"|"]"] + +attributes :: [require-all=(true|false)] [sequential=(true|false)] + +............... +Example: +............... +colocation never_put_apache_with_dummy -inf: apache dummy +colocation c1 inf: A ( B C ) +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_commit,commit the changes to the CIB]] +==== `commit` + +Commit the current configuration to the CIB in use. As noted +elsewhere, commands in a configure session don't have immediate +effect on the CIB. All changes are applied at one point in time, +either using `commit` or when the user leaves the configure +level. In case the CIB in use changed in the meantime, presumably +by somebody else, the crm shell will refuse to apply the changes. + +If you know that it's fine to still apply them, add +force+ to the +command line. + +To disable CIB patching and apply the changes by replacing the CIB +completely, add +replace+ to the command line. Note that this can lead +to previous changes being overwritten if some other process +concurrently modifies the CIB. + +Usage: +............... +commit [force] [replace] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_default-timeouts,set timeouts for operations to minimums from the meta-data]] +==== `default-timeouts` + +This command takes the timeouts from the actions section of the +resource agent meta-data and sets them for the operations of the +primitive. + +Usage: +............... +default-timeouts <id> [<id>...] +............... + +.Note on `default-timeouts` +**************************** +The use of this command is discouraged in favor of manually +determining the best timeouts required for the particular +configuration. Relying on the resource agent to supply appropriate +timeouts can cause the resource to fail at the worst possible moment. + +Appropriate timeouts for resource actions are context-sensitive, and +should be carefully considered with the whole configuration in mind. +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_configure_delete,delete CIB objects]] +==== `delete` + +Delete one or more objects. If an object to be deleted belongs to +a container object, such as a group, and it is the only resource +in that container, then the container is deleted as well. Any +related constraints are removed as well. + +If the object is a started resource, it will not be deleted unless the ++--force+ flag is passed to the command, or the +force+ option is set. + +Usage: +............... +delete [--force] <id> [<id>...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_edit,edit CIB objects]] +==== `edit` + +This command invokes the editor with the object description. As +with the `show` command, the user may choose to edit all objects +or a set of objects. + +If the user insists, he or she may edit the XML edition of the +object. If you do that, don't modify any id attributes. + +Usage: +............... +edit [xml] [<id> ...] +edit [xml] changed +............... + +.Note on renaming element ids +**************************** +The edit command sometimes cannot properly handle modifying +element ids. In particular for elements which belong to group or +ms resources. Group and ms resources themselves also cannot be +renamed. Please use the `rename` command instead. +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_configure_erase,erase the CIB]] +==== `erase` + +The `erase` clears all configuration. Apart from nodes. To remove +nodes, you have to specify an additional keyword `nodes`. + +Note that removing nodes from the live cluster may have some +strange/interesting/unwelcome effects. + +Usage: +............... +erase [nodes] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_fencing_topology,node fencing order]] +==== `fencing_topology` + +If multiple fencing (stonith) devices are available capable of +fencing a node, their order may be specified by +fencing_topology+. +The order is specified per node. + +Stonith resources can be separated by +,+ in which case all of +them need to succeed. If they fail, the next stonith resource (or +set of resources) is used. In other words, use comma to separate +resources which all need to succeed and whitespace for serial +order. It is not allowed to use whitespace around comma. + +If the node is left out, the order is used for all nodes. +That should reduce the configuration size in some stonith setups. + +From Pacemaker version 1.1.14, it is possible to use a node attribute +as the +target+ in a fencing topology. The syntax for this usage is +described below. + +From Pacemaker version 1.1.14, it is also possible to use regular +expression patterns as the +target+ in a fencing topology. The configured +fencing sequence then applies to all devices matching the pattern. + +Usage: +............... +fencing_topology <stonith_resources> [<stonith_resources> ...] +fencing_topology <fencing_order> [<fencing_order> ...] + +fencing_order :: <target> <stonith_resources> [<stonith_resources> ...] + +stonith_resources :: <rsc>[,<rsc>...] +target :: <node>: | attr:<node-attribute>=<value> | pattern:<pattern> +............... +Example: +............... +# Only kill the power if poison-pill fails +fencing_topology poison-pill power + +# As above for node-a, but a different strategy for node-b +fencing_topology \ + node-a: poison-pill power \ + node-b: ipmi serial + +# Fencing anything on rack 1 requires fencing via both APC 1 and 2, +# to defeat the redundancy provided by two separate UPS units. +fencing_topology attr:rack=1 apc01,apc02 + +# Fencing for all machines named green.* is done using the pear +# fencing device first, while all machines named red.* are fenced +# using the apple fencing device first. +fencing_topology \ + pattern:green.* pear apple \ + pattern:red.* apple pear +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_filter,filter CIB objects]] +==== `filter` + +This command filters the given CIB elements through an external +program. The program should accept input on `stdin` and send +output to `stdout` (the standard UNIX filter conventions). As +with the `show` command, the user may choose to filter all or +just a subset of elements. + +It is possible to filter the XML representation of objects, but +probably not as useful as the configuration language. The +presentation is somewhat different from what would be displayed +by the `show` command---each element is shown on a single line, +i.e. there are no backslashes and no other embelishments. + +Don't forget to put quotes around the filter if it contains +spaces. + +Usage: +............... +filter <prog> [xml] [<id> ...] +filter <prog> [xml] changed +............... +Examples: +............... +filter "sed '/^primitive/s/target-role=[^ ]*//'" +# crm configure filter "sed '/^primitive/s/target-role=[^ ]*//'" +crm configure <<END + filter "sed '/threshold=\"1\"/s/=\"1\"/=\"0\"/g'" +END +............... + +.Note on quotation marks +************************** +Filter commands which feature a blend of quotation marks can be +difficult to get right, especially when used directly from bash, since +bash does its own quotation parsing. In these cases, it can be easier +to supply the filter command as standard input. See the last example +above. +************************** + +[[cmdhelp_configure_get_property,Get property value]] +==== `get-property` + +Show the value of the given property. If the value is not set, the +command will print the default value for the property, if known. + +If no property name is passed to the command, the list of known +cluster properties is printed. + +If the property is set multiple times, for example using multiple +property sets with different rule expressions, the output of this +command is undefined. + +Pass the argument +-t+ or +--true+ to `get-property` to translate +the argument value into +true+ or +false+. If the value is not +set, the command will print +false+. + +Usage: +............... +get-property [-t|--true] [<name>] +............... + +Example: +............... +get-property stonith-enabled +get-property -t maintenance-mode +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_graph,generate a directed graph]] +==== `graph` + +Create a graphviz graphical layout from the current cluster +configuration. + +Currently, only `dot` (directed graph) is supported. It is +essentially a visualization of resource ordering. + +The graph may be saved to a file which can be used as source for +various graphviz tools (by default it is displayed in the user's +X11 session). Optionally, by specifying the format, one can also +produce an image instead. + +For more or different graphviz attributes, it is possible to save +the default set of attributes to an ini file. If this file exists +it will always override the builtin settings. The +exportsettings+ +subcommand also prints the location of the ini file. + +Usage: +............... +graph [<gtype> [<file> [<img_format>]]] +graph exportsettings + +gtype :: dot +img_format :: `dot` output format (see the +-T+ option) +............... +Example: +............... +graph dot +graph dot clu1.conf.dot +graph dot clu1.conf.svg svg +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_group,define a group]] +==== `group` + +The `group` command creates a group of resources. This can be useful +when resources depend on other resources and require that those +resources start in order on the same node. A common use of resource +groups is to ensure that a server and a virtual IP are located +together, and that the virtual IP is started before the server. + +Grouped resources are started in the order they appear in the group, +and stopped in the reverse order. If a resource in the group cannot +run anywhere, resources following it in the group will not start. + +`group` can be passed the "container" meta attribute, to indicate that +it is to be used to group VM resources monitored using Nagios. The +resource referred to by the container attribute must be of type +`ocf:heartbeat:Xen`, `ocf:heartbeat:VirtualDomain` or `ocf:heartbeat:lxc`. + +Usage: +............... +group <name> <rsc> [<rsc>...] + [description=<description>] + [meta attr_list] + [params attr_list] + +attr_list :: [$id=<id>] <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...] | $id-ref=<id> +............... +Example: +............... +group internal_www disk0 fs0 internal_ip apache \ + meta target_role=stopped + +group vm-and-services vm vm-sshd meta container="vm" +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_load,import the CIB from a file]] +==== `load` + +Load a part of configuration (or all of it) from a local file or +a network URL. The +replace+ method replaces the current +configuration with the one from the source. The +update+ method +tries to import the contents into the current configuration. The ++push+ method imports the contents into the current configuration +and removes any lines that are not present in the given +configuration. +The file may be a CLI file or an XML file. + +If the URL is `-`, the configuration is read from standard input. + +Usage: +............... +load [xml] <method> URL + +method :: replace | update | push +............... +Example: +............... +load xml update myfirstcib.xml +load xml replace http://storage.big.com/cibs/bigcib.xml +load xml push smallcib.xml +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_location,a location preference]] +==== `location` + +`location` defines the preference of nodes for the given +resource. The location constraints consist of one or more rules +which specify a score to be awarded if the rule matches. + +The resource referenced by the location constraint can be one of the +following: + +* Plain resource reference: +location loc1 webserver 100: node1+ +* Resource set in curly brackets: +location loc1 { virtual-ip webserver } 100: node1+ +* Tag containing resource ids: +location loc1 tag1 100: node1+ +* Resource pattern: +location loc1 /web.*/ 100: node1+ + +The +resource-discovery+ attribute allows probes to be selectively +enabled or disabled per resource and node. + +The syntax for resource sets is described in detail for +<<cmdhelp_configure_colocation,`colocation`>>. + +For more details on how to configure resource sets, see +<<topics_Features_Resourcesets,`Syntax: Resource sets`>>. + +For more information on rule expressions, see +<<topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions>>. + +Usage: +............... +location <id> <rsc> [<attributes>] {<node_pref>|<rules>} + +rsc :: /<rsc-pattern>/ + | { resource_sets } + | <rsc> + +attributes :: role=<role> | resource-discovery=always|never|exclusive + +node_pref :: <score>: <node> + +rules :: + rule [id_spec] [$role=<role>] <score>: <expression> + [rule [id_spec] [$role=<role>] <score>: <expression> ...] + +id_spec :: $id=<id> | $id-ref=<id> +score :: <number> | <attribute> | [-]inf +expression :: <simple_exp> [<bool_op> <simple_exp> ...] +bool_op :: or | and +simple_exp :: <attribute> [type:]<binary_op> <value> + | <unary_op> <attribute> + | date <date_expr> +type :: string | version | number +binary_op :: lt | gt | lte | gte | eq | ne +unary_op :: defined | not_defined + +date_expr :: lt <end> + | gt <start> + | in start=<start> end=<end> + | in start=<start> <duration> + | spec <date_spec> +duration|date_spec :: + hours=<value> + | monthdays=<value> + | weekdays=<value> + | yearsdays=<value> + | months=<value> + | weeks=<value> + | years=<value> + | weekyears=<value> + | moon=<value> +............... +Examples: +............... +location conn_1 internal_www 100: node1 + +location conn_1 internal_www \ + rule 50: #uname eq node1 \ + rule pingd: defined pingd + +location conn_2 dummy_float \ + rule -inf: not_defined pingd or pingd number:lte 0 + +# never probe for rsc1 on node1 +location no-probe rsc1 resource-discovery=never -inf: node1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_modgroup,modify group]] +==== `modgroup` + +Add or remove primitives in a group. The `add` subcommand appends +the new group member by default. Should it go elsewhere, there +are `after` and `before` clauses. + +Usage: +............... +modgroup <id> add <id> [after <id>|before <id>] +modgroup <id> remove <id> +............... +Examples: +............... +modgroup share1 add storage2 before share1-fs +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_monitor,add monitor operation to a primitive]] +==== `monitor` + +Monitor is by far the most common operation. It is possible to +add it without editing the whole resource. Also, long primitive +definitions may be a bit uncluttered. In order to make this +command as concise as possible, less common operation attributes +are not available. If you need them, then use the `op` part of +the `primitive` command. + +Usage: +............... +monitor <rsc>[:<role>] <interval>[:<timeout>] +............... +Example: +............... +monitor apcfence 60m:60s +............... + +Note that after executing the command, the monitor operation may +be shown as part of the primitive definition. + +[[cmdhelp_configure_ms,define a master-slave resource]] +==== `ms` (`master`) + +The `ms` command creates a master/slave resource type. It may contain a +single primitive resource or one group of resources. + +Usage: +............... +ms <name> <rsc> + [description=<description>] + [meta attr_list] + [params attr_list] + +attr_list :: [$id=<id>] <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...] | $id-ref=<id> +............... +Example: +............... +ms disk1 drbd1 \ + meta notify=true globally-unique=false +............... + +.Note on `id-ref` usage +**************************** +Instance or meta attributes (`params` and `meta`) may contain +a reference to another set of attributes. In that case, no other +attributes are allowed. Since attribute sets' ids, though they do +exist, are not shown in the `crm`, it is also possible to +reference an object instead of an attribute set. `crm` will +automatically replace such a reference with the right id: + +............... +crm(live)configure# primitive a2 www-2 meta $id-ref=a1 +crm(live)configure# show a2 +primitive a2 apache \ + meta $id-ref=a1-meta_attributes + [...] +............... +It is advisable to give meaningful names to attribute sets which +are going to be referenced. +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_configure_node,define a cluster node]] +==== `node` + +The node command describes a cluster node. Nodes in the CIB are +commonly created automatically by the CRM. Hence, you should not +need to deal with nodes unless you also want to define node +attributes. Note that it is also possible to manage node +attributes at the `node` level. + +Usage: +............... +node [$id=<id>] <uname>[:<type>] + [description=<description>] + [attributes [$id=<id>] [<score>:] [rule...] + <param>=<value> [<param>=<value>...]] | $id-ref=<ref> + [utilization [$id=<id>] [<score>:] [rule...] + <param>=<value> [<param>=<value>...]] | $id-ref=<ref> + +type :: normal | member | ping | remote +............... +Example: +............... +node node1 +node big_node attributes memory=64 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_op_defaults,set resource operations defaults]] +==== `op_defaults` + +Set defaults for the operations meta attributes. + +For more information on rule expressions, see +<<topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions>>. + +Usage: +............... +op_defaults [$id=<set_id>] [rule ...] <option>=<value> [<option>=<value> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +op_defaults record-pending=true +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_order,order resources]] +==== `order` + +This constraint expresses the order of actions on two resources +or more resources. If there are more than two resources, then the +constraint is called a resource set. + +Ordered resource sets have an extra attribute to allow for sets +of resources whose actions may run in parallel. The shell syntax +for such sets is to put resources in parentheses. + +If the subsequent resource can start or promote after any one of the +resources in a set has done, enclose the set in brackets (+[+ and +]+). + +Sets cannot be nested. + +Three strings are reserved to specify a kind of order constraint: ++Mandatory+, +Optional+, and +Serialize+. It is preferred to use +one of these settings instead of score. Previous versions mapped +scores +0+ and +inf+ to keywords +advisory+ and +mandatory+. +That is still valid but deprecated. + +For more details on how to configure resource sets, see +<<topics_Features_Resourcesets,`Syntax: Resource sets`>>. + +Usage: +............... +order <id> [{kind|<score>}:] first then [symmetrical=<bool>] + +order <id> [{kind|<score>}:] resource_sets [symmetrical=<bool>] + +kind :: Mandatory | Optional | Serialize + +first :: <rsc>[:<action>] + +then :: <rsc>[:<action>] + +resource_sets :: resource_set [resource_set ...] + +resource_set :: ["["|"("] <rsc>[:<action>] [<rsc>[:<action>] ...] \ + [attributes] ["]"|")"] + +attributes :: [require-all=(true|false)] [sequential=(true|false)] + +............... +Example: +............... +order o-1 Mandatory: apache:start ip_1 +order o-2 Serialize: A ( B C ) +order o-3 inf: [ A B ] C +order o-4 first-resource then-resource +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_primitive,define a resource]] +==== `primitive` + +The primitive command describes a resource. It may be referenced +only once in group, clone, or master-slave objects. If it's not +referenced, then it is placed as a single resource in the CIB. + +Operations may be specified anonymously, as a group or by reference: + +* "Anonymous", as a list of +op+ specifications. Use this + method if you don't need to reference the set of operations + elsewhere. This is the most common way to define operations. + +* If reusing operation sets is desired, use the +operations+ keyword + along with an id to give the operations set a name. Use the + +operations+ keyword and an id-ref value set to the id of another + operations set, to apply the same set of operations to this + primitive. + +Operation attributes which are not recognized are saved as +instance attributes of that operation. A typical example is ++OCF_CHECK_LEVEL+. + +For multistate resources, roles are specified as +role=<role>+. + +A template may be defined for resources which are of the same +type and which share most of the configuration. See +<<cmdhelp_configure_rsc_template,`rsc_template`>> for more information. + +Attributes containing time values, such as the +interval+ attribute on +operations, are configured either as a plain number, which is +interpreted as a time in seconds, or using one of the following +suffixes: + +* +s+, +sec+ - time in seconds (same as no suffix) +* +ms+, +msec+ - time in milliseconds +* +us+, +usec+ - time in microseconds +* +m+, +min+ - time in minutes +* +h+, +hr+ - time in hours + +Usage: +............... +primitive <rsc> {[<class>:[<provider>:]]<type>|@<template>} + [description=<description>] + [[params] attr_list] + [meta attr_list] + [utilization attr_list] + [operations id_spec] + [op op_type [<attribute>=<value>...] ...] + +attr_list :: [$id=<id>] [<score>:] [rule...] + <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...]] | $id-ref=<id> +id_spec :: $id=<id> | $id-ref=<id> +op_type :: start | stop | monitor +............... +Example: +............... +primitive apcfence stonith:apcsmart \ + params ttydev=/dev/ttyS0 hostlist="node1 node2" \ + op start timeout=60s \ + op monitor interval=30m timeout=60s + +primitive www8 apache \ + configfile=/etc/apache/www8.conf \ + operations $id-ref=apache_ops + +primitive db0 mysql \ + params config=/etc/mysql/db0.conf \ + op monitor interval=60s \ + op monitor interval=300s OCF_CHECK_LEVEL=10 + +primitive r0 ocf:linbit:drbd \ + params drbd_resource=r0 \ + op monitor role=Master interval=60s \ + op monitor role=Slave interval=300s + +primitive xen0 @vm_scheme1 xmfile=/etc/xen/vm/xen0 + +primitive mySpecialRsc Special \ + params 3: rule #uname eq node1 interface=eth1 \ + params 2: rule #uname eq node2 interface=eth2 port=8888 \ + params 1: interface=eth0 port=9999 + +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_property,set a cluster property]] +==== `property` + +Set cluster configuration properties. To list the +available cluster configuration properties, use the +<<cmdhelp_ra_info,`ra info`>> command with +pengine+, +crmd+, ++cib+ and +stonithd+ as arguments. +When setting the +maintenance-mode+ property, it will +inform the user if there are nodes or resources that +have the +maintenance+ property. + +For more information on rule expressions, see +<<topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions>>. + +Usage: +............... +property [<set_id>:] [rule ...] <option>=<value> [<option>=<value> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +property stonith-enabled=true +property rule date spec years=2014 stonith-enabled=false +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_ptest,show cluster actions if changes were committed]] +==== `ptest` (`simulate`) + +Show PE (Policy Engine) motions using `ptest(8)` or +`crm_simulate(8)`. + +A CIB is constructed using the current user edited configuration +and the status from the running CIB. The resulting CIB is run +through `ptest` (or `crm_simulate`) to show changes which would +happen if the configuration is committed. + +The status section may be loaded from another source and modified +using the <<cmdhelp_cibstatus,`cibstatus`>> level commands. In that case, the +`ptest` command will issue a message informing the user that the +Policy Engine graph is not calculated based on the current status +section and therefore won't show what would happen to the +running but some imaginary cluster. + +If you have graphviz installed and X11 session, `dotty(1)` is run +to display the changes graphically. + +Add a string of +v+ characters to increase verbosity. `ptest` +can also show allocation scores. +utilization+ turns on +information about the remaining capacity of nodes. With the ++actions+ option, `ptest` will print all resource actions. + +The `ptest` program has been replaced by `crm_simulate` in newer +Pacemaker versions. In some installations both could be +installed. Use `simulate` to enfore using `crm_simulate`. + +Usage: +............... +ptest [nograph] [v...] [scores] [actions] [utilization] +............... +Examples: +............... +ptest scores +ptest vvvvv +simulate actions +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_refresh,refresh from CIB]] +==== `refresh` + +Refresh the internal structures from the CIB. All changes made +during this session are lost. + +Usage: +............... +refresh +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rename,rename a CIB object]] +==== `rename` + +Rename an object. It is recommended to use this command to rename +a resource, because it will take care of updating all related +constraints and a parent resource. Changing ids with the edit +command won't have the same effect. + +If you want to rename a resource, it must be in the stopped state. + +Usage: +............... +rename <old_id> <new_id> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_role,define role access rights]] +==== `role` + +An ACL role is a set of rules which describe access rights to +CIB. Rules consist of an access right +read+, +write+, or +deny+ +and a specification denoting part of the configuration to which +the access right applies. The specification can be an XPath or a +combination of tag and id references. If an attribute is +appended, then the specification applies only to that attribute +of the matching element. + +There is a number of shortcuts for XPath specifications. The ++meta+, +params+, and +utilization+ shortcuts reference resource +meta attributes, parameters, and utilization respectively. The +`location` may be used to specify location constraints most of +the time to allow resource `move` and `unmove` commands. The +`property` references cluster properties. The `node` allows +reading node attributes. +nodeattr+ and +nodeutil+ reference node +attributes and node capacity (utilization). The `status` shortcut +references the whole status section of the CIB. Read access to +status is necessary for various monitoring tools such as +`crm_mon(8)` (aka `crm status`). + +For more information on rule expressions, see +<<topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions>>. + +Usage: +............... +role <role-id> rule [rule ...] + +rule :: acl-right cib-spec [attribute:<attribute>] + +acl-right :: read | write | deny + +cib-spec :: xpath-spec | tag-ref-spec +xpath-spec :: xpath:<xpath> | shortcut +tag-ref-spec :: tag:<tag> | ref:<id> | tag:<tag> ref:<id> + +shortcut :: meta:<rsc>[:<attr>] + params:<rsc>[:<attr>] + utilization:<rsc> + location:<rsc> + property[:<attr>] + node[:<node>] + nodeattr[:<attr>] + nodeutil[:<node>] + status +............... +Example: +............... +role app1_admin \ + write meta:app1:target-role \ + write meta:app1:is-managed \ + write location:app1 \ + read ref:app1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rsc_defaults,set resource defaults]] +==== `rsc_defaults` + +Set defaults for the resource meta attributes. + +For more information on rule expressions, see +<<topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions>>. + +Usage: +............... +rsc_defaults [<set_id>:] [rule ...] <option>=<value> [<option>=<value> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +rsc_defaults failure-timeout=3m +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rsc_template,define a resource template]] +==== `rsc_template` + +The `rsc_template` command creates a resource template. It may be +referenced in primitives. It is used to reduce large +configurations with many similar resources. + +Usage: +............... +rsc_template <name> [<class>:[<provider>:]]<type> + [description=<description>] + [params attr_list] + [meta attr_list] + [utilization attr_list] + [operations id_spec] + [op op_type [<attribute>=<value>...] ...] + +attr_list :: [$id=<id>] <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...] | $id-ref=<id> +id_spec :: $id=<id> | $id-ref=<id> +op_type :: start | stop | monitor +............... +Example: +............... +rsc_template public_vm Xen \ + op start timeout=300s \ + op stop timeout=300s \ + op monitor interval=30s timeout=60s \ + op migrate_from timeout=600s \ + op migrate_to timeout=600s +primitive xen0 @public_vm \ + params xmfile=/etc/xen/xen0 +primitive xen1 @public_vm \ + params xmfile=/etc/xen/xen1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rsc_ticket,resources ticket dependency]] +==== `rsc_ticket` + +This constraint expresses dependency of resources on cluster-wide +attributes, also known as tickets. Tickets are mainly used in +geo-clusters, which consist of multiple sites. A ticket may be +granted to a site, thus allowing resources to run there. + +The +loss-policy+ attribute specifies what happens to the +resource (or resources) if the ticket is revoked. The default is +either +stop+ or +demote+ depending on whether a resource is +multi-state. + +See also the <<cmdhelp_site_ticket,`site`>> set of commands. + +Usage: +............... +rsc_ticket <id> <ticket_id>: <rsc>[:<role>] [<rsc>[:<role>] ...] + [loss-policy=<loss_policy_action>] + +loss_policy_action :: stop | demote | fence | freeze +............... +Example: +............... +rsc_ticket ticket-A_public-ip ticket-A: public-ip +rsc_ticket ticket-A_bigdb ticket-A: bigdb loss-policy=fence +rsc_ticket ticket-B_storage ticket-B: drbd-a:Master drbd-b:Master +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rsctest,test resources as currently configured]] +==== `rsctest` + +Test resources with current resource configuration. If no nodes +are specified, tests are run on all known nodes. + +The order of resources is significant: it is assumed that later +resources depend on earlier ones. + +If a resource is multi-state, it is assumed that the role on +which later resources depend is master. + +Tests are run sequentially to prevent running the same resource +on two or more nodes. Tests are carried out only if none of the +specified nodes currently run any of the specified resources. +However, it won't verify whether resources run on the other +nodes. + +Superuser privileges are obviously required: either run this as +root or setup the `sudoers` file appropriately. + +Note that resource testing may take some time. + +Usage: +............... +rsctest <rsc_id> [<rsc_id> ...] [<node_id> ...] +............... +Examples: +............... +rsctest my_ip websvc +rsctest websvc nodeB +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_save,save the CIB to a file]] +==== `save` + +Save the current configuration to a file. Optionally, as XML. Use ++-+ instead of file name to write the output to `stdout`. + +The `save` command accepts the same selection arguments as the `show` +command. See the <<cmdhelp_configure_show,help section>> for `show` +for more details. + +Usage: +............... +save [xml] [<id> | type:<type | tag:<tag> | + related:<obj> | changed ...] <file> +............... +Example: +............... +save myfirstcib.txt +save web-server server-config.txt +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_schema,set or display current CIB RNG schema]] +==== `schema` + +CIB's content is validated by a RNG schema. Pacemaker supports +several, depending on version. At least the following schemas are +accepted by `crmsh`: + +* +pacemaker-1.0+ +* +pacemaker-1.1+ +* +pacemaker-1.2+ +* +pacemaker-1.3+ +* +pacemaker-2.0+ + +Use this command to display or switch to another RNG schema. + +Usage: +............... +schema [<schema>] +............... +Example: +............... +schema pacemaker-1.1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_set,set an attribute value]] +==== `set` + +Set the value of a configured attribute. The attribute must +have a value configured previously, and can be an agent +parameter, meta attribute or utilization value. + +The first argument to the command is a path to an attribute. +This is a dot-separated sequence beginning with the name of +the resource, and ending with the name of the attribute to +set. + +Usage: +............... +set <path> <value> +............... +Examples: +............... +set vip1.ip 192.168.20.5 +set vm-a.force_stop 1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_show,display CIB objects]] +==== `show` + +The `show` command displays CIB objects. Without any argument, it +displays all objects in the CIB, but the set of objects displayed by +`show` can be limited to only objects with the given IDs or by using +one or more of the special prefixes described below. + +The XML representation for the objects can be displayed by passing ++xml+ as the first argument. + +To show one or more specific objects, pass the object IDs as +arguments. + +To show all objects of a certain type, use the +type:+ prefix. + +To show all objects in a tag, use the +tag:+ prefix. + +To show all constraints related to a primitive, use the +related:+ prefix. + +To show all modified objects, pass the argument +changed+. + +The prefixes can be used together on a single command line. For +example, to show both the tag itself and the objects tagged by it the +following combination can be used: +show tag:my-tag my-tag+. + +To refine a selection of objects using multiple modifiers, the keywords ++and+ and +or+ can be used. For example, to select all primitives tagged ++foo+, the following combination can be used: ++show type:primitive and tag:foo+. + +To hide values when displaying the configuration, use the ++obscure:<glob>+ argument. This can be useful when sending the +configuration over a public channel, to avoid exposing potentially +sensitive information. The +<glob>+ argument is a bash-style pattern +matching attribute keys. + +Usage: +............... +show [xml] [<id> + | changed + | type:<type> + | tag:<id> + | related:<obj> + | obscure:<glob> + ...] + +type :: node | primitive | group | clone | ms | rsc_template + | location | colocation | order + | rsc_ticket + | property | rsc_defaults | op_defaults + | fencing_topology + | role | user | acl_target + | tag +............... + +Example: +............... +show webapp +show type:primitive +show xml tag:db tag:fs +show related:webapp +show type:primitive obscure:passwd +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_tag,Define resource tags]] +==== `tag` + +Define a resource tag. A tag is an id referring to one or more +resources, without implying any constraints between the tagged +resources. This can be useful for grouping conceptually related +resources. + +Usage: +............... +tag <tag-name>: <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +tag <tag-name> <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +tag web: p-webserver p-vip +tag ips server-vip admin-vip +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_template,edit and import a configuration from a template]] +==== `template` + +The specified template is loaded into the editor. It's up to the +user to make a good CRM configuration out of it. See also the +<<cmdhelp_template,template section>>. + +Usage: +............... +template [xml] url +............... +Example: +............... +template two-apaches.txt +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_upgrade,upgrade the CIB]] +==== `upgrade` + +Attempts to upgrade the CIB to validate with the current +version. Commonly, this is required if the error +`CIB not supported` occurs. It typically means that the +active CIB version is coming from an older release. + +As a safety precaution, the force argument is required if the ++validation-with+ attribute is set to anything other than ++0.6+. Thus in most cases, it is required. + +Usage: +............... +upgrade [force] +............... + +Example: +............... +upgrade force +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_user,define user access rights]] +==== `user` + +Users which normally cannot view or manage cluster configuration +can be allowed access to parts of the CIB. The access is defined +by a set of +read+, +write+, and +deny+ rules as in role +definitions or by referencing roles. The latter is considered +best practice. + +For more information on rule expressions, see +<<topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions>>. + +Usage: +............... +user <uid> {roles|rules} + +roles :: role:<role-ref> [role:<role-ref> ...] +rules :: rule [rule ...] +............... +Example: +............... +user joe \ + role:app1_admin \ + role:read_all +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_validate_all,call agent validate-all for resource]] +==== `validate-all` + +Call the `validate-all` action for the resource, if possible. + +Limitations: + +* The resource agent must implement the `validate-all` action. +* The current user must be root. +* The primitive resource must not use nvpair references. + +Usage: +............... +validate-all <rsc> +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_configure_verify,verify the CIB with crm_verify]] +==== `verify` + +Verify the contents of the CIB which would be committed. + +Usage: +............... +verify +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_xml,raw xml]] +==== `xml` + +Even though we promissed no xml, it may happen, but hopefully +very very seldom, that an element from the CIB cannot be rendered +in the configuration language. In that case, the element will be +shown as raw xml, prefixed by this command. That element can then +be edited like any other. If the shell finds out that after the +change it can digest it, then it is going to be converted into +the normal configuration language. Otherwise, there is no need to +use `xml` for configuration. + +Usage: +............... +xml <xml> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template,edit and import a configuration from a template]] +=== `template` - Import configuration from templates + +User may be assisted in the cluster configuration by templates +prepared in advance. Templates consist of a typical ready +configuration which may be edited to suit particular user needs. + +This command enters a template level where additional commands +for configuration/template management are available. + +[[cmdhelp_template_apply,process and apply the current configuration to the current CIB]] +==== `apply` + +Copy the current or given configuration to the current CIB. By +default, the CIB is replaced, unless the method is set to +"update". + +Usage: +............... +apply [<method>] [<config>] + +method :: replace | update +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_delete,delete a configuration]] +==== `delete` + +Remove a configuration. The loaded (active) configuration may be +removed by force. + +Usage: +............... +delete <config> [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_edit,edit a configuration]] +==== `edit` + +Edit current or given configuration using your favourite editor. + +Usage: +............... +edit [<config>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_list,list configurations/templates]] +==== `list` + +When called with no argument, lists existing templates and +configurations. + +Given the argument +templates+, lists the available templates. + +Given the argument +configs+, lists the available configurations. + +Usage: +............... +list [templates|configs] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_load,load a configuration]] +==== `load` + +Load an existing configuration. Further `edit`, `show`, and +`apply` commands will refer to this configuration. + +Usage: +............... +load <config> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_new,create a new configuration from templates]] +==== `new` + +Create a new configuration from one or more templates. Note that +configurations and templates are kept in different places, so it +is possible to have a configuration name equal a template name. + +If you already know which parameters are required, you can set +them directly on the command line. + +The parameter name +id+ is set by default to the name of the +configuration. + +If no parameters are being set and you don't want a particular name +for your configuration, you can call this command with a template name +as the only parameter. A unique configuration name based on the +template name will be generated. + +Usage: +............... +new [<config>] <template> [<template> ...] [params name=value ...] +............... + +Example: +............... +new vip virtual-ip +new bigfs ocfs2 params device=/dev/sdx8 directory=/bigfs +new apache +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_show,show the processed configuration]] +==== `show` + +Process the current or given configuration and display the result. + +Usage: +............... +show [<config>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus,CIB status management and editing]] +=== `cibstatus` - CIB status management and editing + +The `status` section of the CIB keeps the current status of nodes +and resources. It is modified _only_ on events, i.e. when some +resource operation is run or node status changes. For obvious +reasons, the CRM has no user interface with which it is possible +to affect the status section. From the user's point of view, the +status section is essentially a read-only part of the CIB. The +current status is never even written to disk, though it is +available in the PE (Policy Engine) input files which represent +the history of cluster motions. The current status may be read +using the +cibadmin -Q+ command. + +It may sometimes be of interest to see how status changes would +affect the Policy Engine. The set of `cibstatus` level commands +allow the user to load status sections from various sources and +then insert or modify resource operations or change nodes' state. + +The effect of those changes may then be observed by running the +<<cmdhelp_configure_ptest,`ptest`>> command at the `configure` level +or `simulate` and `run` commands at this level. The `ptest` +runs with the user edited CIB whereas the latter two commands +run with the CIB which was loaded along with the status section. + +The `simulate` and `run` commands as well as all status +modification commands are implemented using `crm_simulate(8)`. + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_load,load the CIB status section]] +==== `load` + +Load a status section from a file, a shadow CIB, or the running +cluster. By default, the current (+live+) status section is +modified. Note that if the +live+ status section is modified it +is not going to be updated if the cluster status changes, because +that would overwrite the user changes. To make `crm` drop changes +and resume use of the running cluster status, run +load live+. + +All CIB shadow configurations contain the status section which is +a snapshot of the status section taken at the time the shadow was +created. Obviously, this status section doesn't have much to do +with the running cluster status, unless the shadow CIB has just +been created. Therefore, the `ptest` command by default uses the +running cluster status section. + +Usage: +............... +load {<file>|shadow:<cib>|live} +............... +Example: +............... +load bug-12299.xml +load shadow:test1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_node,change node status]] +==== `node` + +Change the node status. It is possible to throw a node out of +the cluster, make it a member, or set its state to unclean. + ++online+:: Set the +node_state+ `crmd` attribute to +online+ +and the +expected+ and +join+ attributes to +member+. The effect +is that the node becomes a cluster member. + ++offline+:: Set the +node_state+ `crmd` attribute to +offline+ +and the +expected+ attribute to empty. This makes the node +cleanly removed from the cluster. + ++unclean+:: Set the +node_state+ `crmd` attribute to +offline+ +and the +expected+ attribute to +member+. In this case the node +has unexpectedly disappeared. + +Usage: +............... +node <node> {online|offline|unclean} +............... +Example: +............... +node xen-b unclean +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_op,edit outcome of a resource operation]] +==== `op` + +Edit the outcome of a resource operation. This way you can +tell CRM that it ran an operation and that the resource agent +returned certain exit code. It is also possible to change the +operation's status. In case the operation status is set to +something other than +done+, the exit code is effectively +ignored. + +Usage: +............... +op <operation> <resource> <exit_code> [<op_status>] [<node>] + +operation :: probe | monitor[:<n>] | start | stop | + promote | demote | notify | migrate_to | migrate_from +exit_code :: <rc> | success | generic | args | + unimplemented | perm | installed | configured | not_running | + master | failed_master +op_status :: pending | done | cancelled | timeout | notsupported | error + +n :: the monitor interval in seconds; if omitted, the first + recurring operation is referenced +rc :: numeric exit code in range 0..9 +............... +Example: +............... +op start d1 xen-b generic +op start d1 xen-b 1 +op monitor d1 xen-b not_running +op stop d1 xen-b 0 timeout +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_origin,display origin of the CIB status section]] +==== `origin` + +Show the origin of the status section currently in use. This +essentially shows the latest `load` argument. + +Usage: +............... +origin +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_quorum,set the quorum]] +==== `quorum` + +Set the quorum value. + +Usage: +............... +quorum <bool> +............... +Example: +............... +quorum false +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_run,run policy engine]] +==== `run` + +Run the policy engine with the edited status section. + +Add a string of +v+ characters to increase verbosity. Specify ++scores+ to see allocation scores also. +utilization+ turns on +information about the remaining capacity of nodes. + +If you have graphviz installed and X11 session, `dotty(1)` is run +to display the changes graphically. + +Usage: +............... +run [nograph] [v...] [scores] [utilization] +............... +Example: +............... +run +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_save,save the CIB status section]] +==== `save` + +The current internal status section with whatever modifications +were performed can be saved to a file or shadow CIB. + +If the file exists and contains a complete CIB, only the status +section is going to be replaced and the rest of the CIB will +remain intact. Otherwise, the current user edited configuration +is saved along with the status section. + +Note that all modifications are saved in the source file as soon +as they are run. + +Usage: +............... +save [<file>|shadow:<cib>] +............... +Example: +............... +save bug-12299.xml +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_show,show CIB status section]] +==== `show` + +Show the current status section in the XML format. Brace yourself +for some unreadable output. Add +changed+ option to get a human +readable output of all changes. + +Usage: +............... +show [changed] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_simulate,simulate cluster transition]] +==== `simulate` + +Run the policy engine with the edited status section and simulate +the transition. + +Add a string of +v+ characters to increase verbosity. Specify ++scores+ to see allocation scores also. +utilization+ turns on +information about the remaining capacity of nodes. + +If you have graphviz installed and X11 session, `dotty(1)` is run +to display the changes graphically. + +Usage: +............... +simulate [nograph] [v...] [scores] [utilization] +............... +Example: +............... +simulate +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_ticket,manage tickets]] +==== `ticket` + +Modify the ticket status. Tickets can be granted and revoked. +Granted tickets could be activated or put in standby. + +Usage: +............... +ticket <ticket> {grant|revoke|activate|standby} +............... +Example: +............... +ticket ticketA grant +............... + +[[cmdhelp_assist,Configuration assistant]] +=== `assist` - Configuration assistant + +The `assist` sublevel is a collection of helper +commands that create or modify resources and +constraints, to simplify the creation of certain +configurations. + +For more information on individual commands, see +the help text for those commands. + +[[cmdhelp_assist_template,Create template for primitives]] +==== `template` + +This command takes a list of primitives as argument, and creates a new +`rsc_template` for these primitives. It can only do this if the +primitives do not already share a template and are of the same type. + +Usage: +........ +template primitive-1 primitive-2 primitive-3 +........ + +[[cmdhelp_assist_weak-bond,Create a weak bond between resources]] +==== `weak-bond` + +A colocation between a group of resources says that the resources +should be located together, but it also means that those resources are +dependent on each other. If one of the resources fails, the others +will be restarted. + +If this is not desired, it is possible to circumvent: By placing the +resources in a non-sequential set and colocating the set with a dummy +resource which is not monitored, the resources will be placed together +but will have no further dependency on each other. + +This command creates both the constraint and the dummy resource needed +for such a colocation. + +Usage: +........ +weak-bond resource-1 resource-2 +........ + +[[cmdhelp_maintenance,Maintenance mode commands]] +=== `maintenance` - Maintenance mode commands + +Maintenance mode commands are commands that manipulate resources +directly without going through the cluster infrastructure. Therefore, +it is essential to ensure that the cluster does not attempt to monitor +or manipulate the resources while these commands are being executed. + +To ensure this, these commands require that maintenance mode is set +either for the particular resource, or for the whole cluster. + +[[cmdhelp_maintenance_action,Invoke a resource action]] +==== `action` + +Invokes the given action for the resource. This is +done directly via the resource agent, so the command must +be issued while the cluster or the resource is in +maintenance mode. + +Unless the action is `start` or `monitor`, the action must be invoked +on the same node as where the resource is running. If the resource is +running on multiple nodes, the command will fail. + +To use SSH for executing resource actions on multiple nodes, append +`ssh` after the action name. This requires SSH access to be configured +between the nodes and the parallax python package to be installed. + +Usage: +............... +action <rsc> <action> +action <rsc> <action> ssh +............... +Example: +............... +action webserver reload +action webserver monitor ssh +............... + +[[cmdhelp_maintenance_off,Disable maintenance mode]] +==== `off` + +Disables maintenances mode, either for the whole cluster +or for the given resource. + +Usage: +............... +off +off <rsc> +............... +Example: +............... +off rsc1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_maintenance_on,Enable maintenance mode]] +==== `on` + +Enables maintenances mode, either for the whole cluster +or for the given resource. + +Usage: +............... +on +on <rsc> +............... +Example: +............... +on rsc1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history,Cluster history]] +=== `history` - Cluster history + +Examining Pacemaker's history is a particularly involved task. The +number of subsystems to be considered, the complexity of the +configuration, and the set of various information sources, most of +which are not exactly human readable, keep analyzing resource or node +problems accessible to only the most knowledgeable. Or, depending on +the point of view, to the most persistent. The following set of +commands has been devised in hope to make cluster history more +accessible. + +Of course, looking at _all_ history could be time consuming regardless +of how good the tools at hand are. Therefore, one should first say +which period he or she wants to analyze. If not otherwise specified, +the last hour is considered. Logs and other relevant information is +collected using `crm report`. Since this process takes some time and +we always need fresh logs, information is refreshed in a much faster +way using the python parallax module. If +python-parallax+ is not +found on the system, examining a live cluster is still possible -- +though not as comfortable. + +Apart from examining a live cluster, events may be retrieved from a +report generated by `crm report` (see also the +-H+ option). In that +case we assume that the period stretching the whole report needs to be +investigated. Of course, it is still possible to further reduce the +time range. + +If you have discovered an issue that you want to show someone else, +you can use the `session pack` command to save the current session as +a tarball, similar to those generated by `crm report`. + +In order to minimize the size of the tarball, and to make it easier +for others to find the interesting events, it is recommended to limit +the time frame which the saved session covers. This can be done using +the `timeframe` command (example below). + +It is also possible to name the saved session using the `session save` +command. + +Example: +............... +crm(live)history# limit "Jul 18 12:00" "Jul 18 12:30" +crm(live)history# session save strange_restart +crm(live)history# session pack +Report saved in .../strange_restart.tar.bz2 +crm(live)history# +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_detail,set the level of detail shown]] +==== `detail` + +How much detail to show from the logs. Valid detail levels are either +`0` or `1`, where `1` is the highest detail level. The default detail +level is `0`. + +Usage: +............... +detail <detail_level> + +detail_level :: small integer (defaults to 0) +............... +Example: +............... +detail 1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_diff,cluster states/transitions difference]] +==== `diff` + +A transition represents a change in cluster configuration or +state. Use `diff` to see what has changed between two +transitions. + +If you want to specify the current cluster configuration and +status, use the string +live+. + +Normally, the first transition specified should be the one which +is older, but we are not going to enforce that. + +Note that a single configuration update may result in more than +one transition. + +Usage: +............... +diff <pe> <pe> [status] [html] + +pe :: <number>|<index>|<file>|live +............... +Examples: +............... +diff 2066 2067 +diff pe-input-2080.bz2 live status +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_events,Show events in log]] +==== `events` + +By analysing the log output and looking for particular +patterns, the `events` command helps sifting through +the logs to find when particular events like resources +changing state or node failure may have occurred. + +This can be used to generate a combined list of events +from all nodes. + +Usage: +............... +events +............... + +Example: +............... +events +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_exclude,exclude log messages]] +==== `exclude` + +If a log is infested with irrelevant messages, those messages may +be excluded by specifying a regular expression. The regular +expressions used are Python extended. This command is additive. +To drop all regular expressions, use +exclude clear+. Run +`exclude` only to see the current list of regular expressions. +Excludes are saved along with the history sessions. + +Usage: +............... +exclude [<regex>|clear] +............... +Example: +............... +exclude kernel.*ocfs2 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_graph,generate a directed graph from the PE file]] +==== `graph` + +Create a graphviz graphical layout from the PE file (the +transition). Every transition contains the cluster configuration +which was active at the time. See also <<cmdhelp_configure_graph,generate a directed graph +from configuration>>. + +Usage: +............... +graph <pe> [<gtype> [<file> [<img_format>]]] + +gtype :: dot +img_format :: `dot` output format (see the +-T+ option) +............... +Example: +............... +graph -1 +graph 322 dot clu1.conf.dot +graph 322 dot clu1.conf.svg svg +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_info,Cluster information summary]] +==== `info` + +The `info` command provides a summary of the information source, which +can be either a live cluster snapshot or a previously generated +report. + +Usage: +............... +info +............... +Example: +............... +info +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_latest,show latest news from the cluster]] +==== `latest` + +The `latest` command shows a bit of recent history, more +precisely whatever happened since the last cluster change (the +latest transition). If the transition is running, the shell will +first wait until it finishes. + +Usage: +............... +latest +............... +Example: +............... +latest +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_limit,limit timeframe to be examined]] +==== `limit` (`timeframe`) + +This command can be used to modify the time span to examine. All +history commands look at events within a certain time span. + +For the `live` source, the default time span is the _last hour_. + +There is no time span limit for the `hb_report` source. + +The time period is parsed by the `dateutil` python module. It +covers a wide range of date formats. For instance: + +- 3:00 (today at 3am) +- 15:00 (today at 3pm) +- 2010/9/1 2pm (September 1st 2010 at 2pm) + +For more examples of valid time/date statements, please refer to the +`python-dateutil` documentation: + +- https://dateutil.readthedocs.org/[dateutil.readthedocs.org] + +If the dateutil module is not available, then the time is parsed using +strptime and only the kind as printed by `date(1)` is allowed: + +- Tue Sep 15 20:46:27 CEST 2010 + +Usage: +............... +limit [<from_time>] [<to_time>] +............... +Examples: +............... +limit 10:15 +limit 15h22m 16h +limit "Sun 5 20:46" "Sun 5 22:00" +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_log,log content]] +==== `log` + +Show messages logged on one or more nodes. Leaving out a node +name produces combined logs of all nodes. Messages are sorted by +time and, if the terminal emulations supports it, displayed in +different colours depending on the node to allow for easier +reading. + +The sorting key is the timestamp as written by syslog which +normally has the maximum resolution of one second. Obviously, +messages generated by events which share the same timestamp may +not be sorted in the same way as they happened. Such close events +may actually happen fairly often. + +Usage: +............... +log [<node> [<node> ...] ] +............... +Example: +............... +log node-a +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_node,node events]] +==== `node` + +Show important events that happened on a node. Important events +are node lost and join, standby and online, and fence. Use either +node names or extended regular expressions. + +Usage: +............... +node <node> [<node> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +node node1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_peinputs,list or get PE input files]] +==== `peinputs` + +Every event in the cluster results in generating one or more +Policy Engine (PE) files. These files describe future motions of +resources. The files are listed as full paths in the current +report directory. Add +v+ to also see the creation time stamps. + +Usage: +............... +peinputs [{<range>|<number>} ...] [v] + +range :: <n1>:<n2> +............... +Example: +............... +peinputs +peinputs 440:444 446 +peinputs v +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_refresh,refresh live report]] +==== `refresh` + +This command makes sense only for the +live+ source and makes +`crm` collect the latest logs and other relevant information from +the logs. If you want to make a completely new report, specify ++force+. + +Usage: +............... +refresh [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_resource,resource events]] +==== `resource` + +Show actions and any failures that happened on all specified +resources on all nodes. Normally, one gives resource names as +arguments, but it is also possible to use extended regular +expressions. Note that neither groups nor clones or master/slave +names are ever logged. The resource command is going to expand +all of these appropriately, so that clone instances or resources +which are part of a group are shown. + +Usage: +............... +resource <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +resource bigdb public_ip +resource my_.*_db2 +resource ping_clone +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_session,manage history sessions]] +==== `session` + +Sometimes you may want to get back to examining a particular +history period or bug report. In order to make that easier, the +current settings can be saved and later retrieved. + +If the current history being examined is coming from a live +cluster the logs, PE inputs, and other files are saved too, +because they may disappear from nodes. For the existing reports +coming from `hb_report`, only the directory location is saved +(not to waste space). + +A history session may also be packed into a tarball which can +then be sent to support. + +Leave out subcommand to see the current session. + +Usage: +............... +session [{save|load|delete} <name> | pack [<name>] | update | list] +............... +Examples: +............... +session save bnc966622 +session load rsclost-2 +session list +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_setnodes,set the list of cluster nodes]] +==== `setnodes` + +In case the host this program runs on is not part of the cluster, +it is necessary to set the list of nodes. + +Usage: +............... +setnodes node <node> [<node> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +setnodes node_a node_b +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_show,show status or configuration of the PE input file]] +==== `show` + +Every transition is saved as a PE file. Use this command to +render that PE file either as configuration or status. The +configuration output is the same as `crm configure show`. + +Usage: +............... +show <pe> [status] + +pe :: <number>|<index>|<file>|live +............... +Examples: +............... +show 2066 +show pe-input-2080.bz2 status +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_source,set source to be examined]] +==== `source` + +Events to be examined can come from the current cluster or from a +`hb_report` report. This command sets the source. `source live` +sets source to the running cluster and system logs. If no source +is specified, the current source information is printed. + +In case a report source is specified as a file reference, the file +is going to be unpacked in place where it resides. This directory +is not removed on exit. + +Usage: +............... +source [<dir>|<file>|live] +............... +Examples: +............... +source live +source /tmp/customer_case_22.tar.bz2 +source /tmp/customer_case_22 +source +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_transition,show transition]] +==== `transition` + +This command will print actions planned by the PE and run +graphviz (`dotty`) to display a graphical representation of the +transition. Of course, for the latter an X11 session is required. +This command invokes `ptest(8)` in background. + +The +showdot+ subcommand runs graphviz (`dotty`) to display a +graphical representation of the +.dot+ file which has been +included in the report. Essentially, it shows the calculation +produced by `pengine` which is installed on the node where the +report was produced. In optimal case this output should not +differ from the one produced by the locally installed `pengine`. + +The `log` subcommand shows the full log for the duration of the +transition. + +A transition can also be saved to a CIB shadow for further +analysis or use with `cib` or `configure` commands (use the +`save` subcommand). The shadow file name defaults to the name of +the PE input file. + +If the PE input file number is not provided, it defaults to the +last one, i.e. the last transition. The last transition can also +be referenced with number 0. If the number is negative, then the +corresponding transition relative to the last one is chosen. + +If there are warning and error PE input files or different nodes +were the DC in the observed timeframe, it may happen that PE +input file numbers collide. In that case provide some unique part +of the path to the file. + +After the `ptest` output, logs about events that happened during +the transition are printed. + +The `tags` subcommand scans the logs for the transition and return a +list of key events during that transition. For example, the tag ++error+ will be returned if there are any errors logged during the +transition. + +Usage: +............... +transition [<number>|<index>|<file>] [nograph] [v...] [scores] [actions] [utilization] +transition showdot [<number>|<index>|<file>] +transition log [<number>|<index>|<file>] +transition save [<number>|<index>|<file> [name]] +transition tags [<number>|<index>|<file>] +............... +Examples: +............... +transition +transition 444 +transition -1 +transition pe-error-3.bz2 +transition node-a/pengine/pe-input-2.bz2 +transition showdot 444 +transition log +transition save 0 enigma-22 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_transitions,List transitions]] +==== `transitions` + +A transition represents a change in cluster configuration or +state. This command lists the transitions in the current timeframe. + +Usage: +............... +transitions +............... +Example: +............... +transitions +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_history_wdiff,cluster states/transitions difference]] +==== `wdiff` + +A transition represents a change in cluster configuration or +state. Use `wdiff` to see what has changed between two +transitions as word differences on a line-by-line basis. + +If you want to specify the current cluster configuration and +status, use the string +live+. + +Normally, the first transition specified should be the one which +is older, but we are not going to enforce that. + +Note that a single configuration update may result in more than +one transition. + +Usage: +............... +wdiff <pe> <pe> [status] + +pe :: <number>|<index>|<file>|live +............... +Examples: +............... +wdiff 2066 2067 +wdiff pe-input-2080.bz2 live status +............... + +[[cmdhelp_root_report,Create cluster status report]] +=== `report` + +Interface to a tool for creating a cluster report. A report is an +archive containing log files, configuration files, system information +and other relevant data for a given time period. This is a useful tool +for collecting data to attach to bug reports, or for detecting the +root cause of errors resulting in resource failover, for example. + +See `crmsh_hb_report(8)` for more details on arguments, +or call `crm report -h` + +Usage: +............... +report -f {time|"cts:"testnum} [-t time] [-u user] [-l file] + [-n nodes] [-E files] [-p patt] [-L patt] [-e prog] + [-MSDZAVsvhd] [dest] +............... + +Examples: +............... +report -f 2pm report_1 +report -f "2007/9/5 12:30" -t "2007/9/5 14:00" report_2 +report -f 1:00 -t 3:00 -l /var/log/cluster/ha-debug report_3 +report -f "09sep07 2:00" -u hbadmin report_4 +report -f 18:00 -p "usern.*" -p "admin.*" report_5 +report -f cts:133 ctstest_133 +............... + +=== `end` (`cd`, `up`) + +The `end` command ends the current level and the user moves to +the parent level. This command is available everywhere. + +Usage: +............... +end +............... + +=== `help` + +The `help` command prints help for the current level or for the +specified topic (command). This command is available everywhere. + +Usage: +............... +help [<topic>] +............... + +=== `quit` (`exit`, `bye`) + +Leave the program. + +BUGS +---- +Even though all sensible configurations (and most of those that +are not) are going to be supported by the crm shell, I suspect +that it may still happen that certain XML constructs may confuse +the tool. When that happens, please file a bug report. + +The crm shell will not try to update the objects it does not +understand. Of course, it is always possible to edit such objects +in the XML format. + +AUTHORS +------- +Dejan Muhamedagic, <dejan@suse.de> +Kristoffer Gronlund <kgronlund@suse.com> +and many OTHERS + +SEE ALSO +-------- +crm_resource(8), crm_attribute(8), crm_mon(8), cib_shadow(8), +ptest(8), dotty(1), crm_simulate(8), cibadmin(8) + + +COPYING +------- +Copyright \(C) 2008-2013 Dejan Muhamedagic. +Copyright \(C) 2013 Kristoffer Gronlund. + +Free use of this software is granted under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL). + +////////////////////// + vim:ts=4:sw=4:expandtab: +////////////////////// diff --git a/doc/website-v1/man-3.adoc b/doc/website-v1/man-3.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e4411cc --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/man-3.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,5309 @@ +:man source: crm +:man version: 2.3.0 +:man manual: crmsh documentation + +crm(8) +====== + +NAME +---- +crm - Pacemaker command line interface for configuration and management + + +SYNOPSIS +-------- +*crm* [OPTIONS] [SUBCOMMAND ARGS...] + + +[[topics_Description,Program description]] +DESCRIPTION +----------- +The `crm` shell is a command-line based cluster configuration and +management tool. Its goal is to assist as much as possible with the +configuration and maintenance of Pacemaker-based High Availability +clusters. + +For more information on Pacemaker itself, see http://clusterlabs.org/. + +`crm` works both as a command-line tool to be called directly from the +system shell, and as an interactive shell with extensive tab +completion and help. + +The primary focus of the `crm` shell is to provide a simplified and +consistent interface to Pacemaker, but it also provides tools for +managing the creation and configuration of High Availability clusters +from scratch. To learn more about this aspect of `crm`, see the +`cluster` section below. + +The `crm` shell can be used to manage every aspect of configuring and +maintaining a cluster. It provides a simplified line-based syntax on +top of the XML configuration format used by Pacemaker, commands for +starting and stopping resources, tools for exploring the history of a +cluster including log scraping and a set of cluster scripts useful for +automating the setup and installation of services on the cluster +nodes. + +The `crm` shell is line oriented: every command must start and finish +on the same line. It is possible to use a continuation character (+\+) +to write one command in two or more lines. The continuation character +is commonly used when displaying configurations. + +[[topics_CommandLine,Command line options]] +OPTIONS +------- +*-f, --file*='FILE':: + Load commands from the given file. If a dash +-+ is used in place + of a file name, `crm` will read commands from the shell standard + input (`stdin`). + +*-c, --cib*='CIB':: + Start the session using the given shadow CIB file. + Equivalent to +cib use <CIB>+. + +*-D, --display=*'OUTPUT_TYPE':: + Choose one of the output options: +plain+, +color-always+, +color+, + or +uppercase+. The default is +color+ if the terminal emulation + supports colors. Otherwise, +plain+ is used. + +*-F, --force*:: + Make `crm` proceed with applying changes where it would normally + ask the user to confirm before proceeding. This option is mainly + useful in scripts, and should be used with care. + +*-w, --wait*:: + Make `crm` wait for the cluster transition to finish (for the + changes to take effect) after each processed line. + +*-H, --history*='DIR|FILE|SESSION':: + A directory or file containing a cluster report to load + into the `history` commands, or the name of a previously + saved history session. + +*-h, --help*:: + Print help page. + +*--version*:: + Print crmsh version and build information (Mercurial Hg changeset + hash). + +*-d, --debug*:: + Print verbose debugging information. + +*-R, --regression-tests*:: + Enables extra verbose trace logging used by the regression + tests. Logs all external calls made by crmsh. + +*--scriptdir*='DIR':: + Extra directory where crm looks for cluster scripts, or a list of + directories separated by semi-colons (e.g. +/dir1;/dir2;etc.+). + +*-o, --opt*='OPTION=VALUE':: + Set crmsh option temporarily. If the options are saved using + +options save+ then the value passed here will also be saved. + Multiple options can be set by using +-o+ multiple times. + +[[topics_Introduction,Introduction]] +== Introduction + +This section of the user guide covers general topics about the user +interface and describes some of the features of `crmsh` in detail. + +[[topics_Introduction_Interface,User interface]] +=== User interface + +The main purpose of `crmsh` is to provide a simple yet powerful +interface to the cluster stack. There are two main modes of operation +with the user interface of `crmsh`: + +* Command line (single-shot) use - Use `crm` as a regular UNIX command + from your usual shell. `crm` has full bash completion built in, so + using it in this manner should be as comfortable and familiar as + using any other command-line tool. + +* Interactive mode - By calling `crm` without arguments, or by calling + it with only a sublevel as argument, `crm` enters the interactive + mode. In this mode, it acts as its own command shell, which + remembers which sublevel you are currently in and allows for rapid + and convenient execution of multiple commands within the same + sublevel. This mode also has full tab completion, as well as + built-in interactive help and syntax highlighting. + +Here are a few examples of using `crm` both as a command-line tool and +as an interactive shell: + +.Command line (one-shot) use: +........ +# crm resource stop www_app +........ + +.Interactive use: +........ +# crm +crm(live)# resource +crm(live)resource# unmanage tetris_1 +crm(live)resource# up +crm(live)# node standby node4 +........ + +.Cluster configuration: +........ +# crm configure<<EOF + # + # resources + # + primitive disk0 iscsi \ + params portal=192.168.2.108:3260 target=iqn.2008-07.com.suse:disk0 + primitive fs0 Filesystem \ + params device=/dev/disk/by-label/disk0 directory=/disk0 fstype=ext3 + primitive internal_ip IPaddr params ip=192.168.1.101 + primitive apache apache \ + params configfile=/disk0/etc/apache2/site0.conf + primitive apcfence stonith:apcsmart \ + params ttydev=/dev/ttyS0 hostlist="node1 node2" \ + op start timeout=60s + primitive pingd pingd \ + params name=pingd dampen=5s multiplier=100 host_list="r1 r2" + # + # monitor apache and the UPS + # + monitor apache 60s:30s + monitor apcfence 120m:60s + # + # cluster layout + # + group internal_www \ + disk0 fs0 internal_ip apache + clone fence apcfence \ + meta globally-unique=false clone-max=2 clone-node-max=1 + clone conn pingd \ + meta globally-unique=false clone-max=2 clone-node-max=1 + location node_pref internal_www \ + rule 50: #uname eq node1 \ + rule pingd: defined pingd + # + # cluster properties + # + property stonith-enabled=true + commit +EOF +........ + +The `crm` interface is hierarchical, with commands organized into +separate levels by functionality. To list the available levels and +commands, either execute +help <level>+, or, if at the top level of +the shell, simply typing `help` will provide an overview of all +available levels and commands. + +The +(live)+ string in the `crm` prompt signifies that the current CIB +in use is the cluster live configuration. It is also possible to +work with so-called <<topics_Features_Shadows,shadow CIBs>>. These are separate, inactive +configurations stored in files, that can be applied and thereby +replace the live configuration at any time. + +[[topics_Introduction_Completion,Tab completion]] +=== Tab completion + +The `crm` makes extensive use of tab completion. The completion +is both static (i.e. for `crm` commands) and dynamic. The latter +takes into account the current status of the cluster or +information from installed resource agents. Sometimes, completion +may also be used to get short help on resource parameters. Here +are a few examples: + +............... +crm(live)resource# <TAB><TAB> +bye failcount move restart unmigrate +cd help param show unmove +cleanup list promote start up +demote manage quit status utilization +end meta refresh stop +exit migrate reprobe unmanage + +crm(live)configure# primitive fence-1 <TAB><TAB> +heartbeat: lsb: ocf: stonith: + +crm(live)configure# primitive fence-1 stonith:<TAB><TAB> +apcmaster external/ippower9258 fence_legacy +apcmastersnmp external/kdumpcheck ibmhmc +apcsmart external/libvirt ipmilan + +crm(live)configure# primitive fence-1 stonith:ipmilan params <TAB><TAB> +auth= hostname= ipaddr= login= password= port= priv= + +crm(live)configure# primitive fence-1 stonith:ipmilan params auth=<TAB><TAB> +auth* (string) + The authorization type of the IPMI session ("none", "straight", "md2", or "md5") +............... + +`crmsh` also comes with bash completion usable directly from the +system shell. This should be installed automatically with the command +itself. + +[[topics_Introduction_Shorthand,Shorthand syntax]] +=== Shorthand syntax + +When using the `crm` shell to manage clusters, you will end up typing +a lot of commands many times over. Clear command names like ++configure+ help in understanding and learning to use the cluster +shell, but is easy to misspell and is tedious to type repeatedly. The +interactive mode and tab completion both help with this, but the `crm` +shell also has the ability to understand a variety of shorthand +aliases for all of the commands. + +For example, instead of typing `crm status`, you can type `crm st` or +`crm stat`. Instead of `crm configure` you can type `crm cfg` or even +`crm cf`. `crm resource` can be shorted as `crm rsc`, and so on. + +The exact list of accepted aliases is too long to print in full, but +experimentation and typos should help in discovering more of them. + +[[topics_Features,Features]] +== Features + +The feature set of crmsh covers a wide range of functionality, and +understanding how and when to use the various features of the shell +can be difficult. This section of the guide describes some of the +features and use cases of `crmsh` in more depth. The intention is to +provide a deeper understanding of these features, but also to serve as +a guide to using them. + +[[topics_Features_Shadows,Shadow CIB usage]] +=== Shadow CIB usage + +A Shadow CIB is a normal cluster configuration stored in a file. +They may be manipulated in much the same way as the _live_ CIB, with +the key difference that changes to a shadow CIB have no effect on the +actual cluster resources. An administrator may choose to apply any of +them to the cluster, thus replacing the running configuration with the +one found in the shadow CIB. + +The `crm` prompt always contains the name of the configuration which +is currently in use, or the string _live_ if using the live cluster +configuration. + +When editing the configuration in the `configure` level, no changes +are actually applied until the `commit` command is executed. It is +possible to start editing a configuration as usual, but instead of +committing the changes to the active CIB, save them to a shadow CIB. + +The following example `configure` session demonstrates how this can be +done: +............... +crm(live)configure# cib new test-2 +INFO: test-2 shadow CIB created +crm(test-2)configure# commit +............... + +[[topics_Features_Checks,Configuration semantic checks]] +=== Configuration semantic checks + +Resource definitions may be checked against the meta-data +provided with the resource agents. These checks are currently +carried out: + +- are required parameters set +- existence of defined parameters +- timeout values for operations + +The parameter checks are obvious and need no further explanation. +Failures in these checks are treated as configuration errors. + +The timeouts for operations should be at least as long as those +recommended in the meta-data. Too short timeout values are a +common mistake in cluster configurations and, even worse, they +often slip through if cluster testing was not thorough. Though +operation timeouts issues are treated as warnings, make sure that +the timeouts are usable in your environment. Note also that the +values given are just _advisory minimum_---your resources may +require longer timeouts. + +User may tune the frequency of checks and the treatment of errors +by the <<cmdhelp_options_check-frequency,`check-frequency`>> and +<<cmdhelp_options_check-mode,`check-mode`>> preferences. + +Note that if the +check-frequency+ is set to +always+ and the ++check-mode+ to +strict+, errors are not tolerated and such +configuration cannot be saved. + +[[topics_Features_Templates,Configuration templates]] +=== Configuration templates + +.Deprecation note +**************************** +Configuration templates have been deprecated in favor of the more +capable `cluster scripts`. To learn how to use cluster scripts, see +the dedicated documentation on the `crmsh` website at +http://crmsh.github.io/, or in the <<cmdhelp_script,Script section>>. +**************************** + +Configuration templates are ready made configurations created by +cluster experts. They are designed in such a way so that users +may generate valid cluster configurations with minimum effort. +If you are new to Pacemaker, templates may be the best way to +start. + +We will show here how to create a simple yet functional Apache +configuration: +............... +# crm configure +crm(live)configure# template +crm(live)configure template# list templates +apache filesystem virtual-ip +crm(live)configure template# new web <TAB><TAB> +apache filesystem virtual-ip +crm(live)configure template# new web apache +INFO: pulling in template apache +INFO: pulling in template virtual-ip +crm(live)configure template# list +web2-d web2 vip2 web3 vip web +............... + +We enter the `template` level from `configure`. Use the `list` +command to show templates available on the system. The `new` +command creates a configuration from the +apache+ template. You +can use tab completion to pick templates. Note that the apache +template depends on a virtual IP address which is automatically +pulled along. The `list` command shows the just created +web+ +configuration, among other configurations (I hope that you, +unlike me, will use more sensible and descriptive names). + +The `show` command, which displays the resulting configuration, +may be used to get an idea about the minimum required changes +which have to be done. All +ERROR+ messages show the line numbers +in which the respective parameters are to be defined: +............... +crm(live)configure template# show +ERROR: 23: required parameter ip not set +ERROR: 61: required parameter id not set +ERROR: 65: required parameter configfile not set +crm(live)configure template# edit +............... + +The `edit` command invokes the preferred text editor with the ++web+ configuration. At the top of the file, the user is advised +how to make changes. A good template should require from the user +to specify only parameters. For example, the +web+ configuration +we created above has the following required and optional +parameters (all parameter lines start with +%%+): +............... +$ grep -n ^%% ~/.crmconf/web +23:%% ip +31:%% netmask +35:%% lvs_support +61:%% id +65:%% configfile +71:%% options +76:%% envfiles +............... + +These lines are the only ones that should be modified. Simply +append the parameter value at the end of the line. For instance, +after editing this template, the result could look like this (we +used tabs instead of spaces to make the values stand out): +............... +$ grep -n ^%% ~/.crmconf/web +23:%% ip 192.168.1.101 +31:%% netmask +35:%% lvs_support +61:%% id websvc +65:%% configfile /etc/apache2/httpd.conf +71:%% options +76:%% envfiles +............... + +As you can see, the parameter line format is very simple: +............... +%% <name> <value> +............... + +After editing the file, use `show` again to display the +configuration: +............... +crm(live)configure template# show +primitive virtual-ip IPaddr \ + params ip=192.168.1.101 +primitive apache apache \ + params configfile="/etc/apache2/httpd.conf" +monitor apache 120s:60s +group websvc \ + apache virtual-ip +............... + +The target resource of the apache template is a group which we +named +websvc+ in this sample session. + +This configuration looks exactly as you could type it at the +`configure` level. The point of templates is to save you some +typing. It is important, however, to understand the configuration +produced. + +Finally, the configuration may be applied to the current +crm configuration (note how the configuration changed slightly, +though it is still equivalent, after being digested at the +`configure` level): +............... +crm(live)configure template# apply +crm(live)configure template# cd .. +crm(live)configure# show +node xen-b +node xen-c +primitive apache apache \ + params configfile="/etc/apache2/httpd.conf" \ + op monitor interval=120s timeout=60s +primitive virtual-ip IPaddr \ + params ip=192.168.1.101 +group websvc apache virtual-ip +............... + +Note that this still does not commit the configuration to the CIB +which is used in the shell, either the running one (+live+) or +some shadow CIB. For that you still need to execute the `commit` +command. + +To complete our example, we should also define the preferred node +to run the service: + +............... +crm(live)configure# location websvc-pref websvc 100: xen-b +............... + +If you are not happy with some resource names which are provided +by default, you can rename them now: + +............... +crm(live)configure# rename virtual-ip intranet-ip +crm(live)configure# show +node xen-b +node xen-c +primitive apache apache \ + params configfile="/etc/apache2/httpd.conf" \ + op monitor interval=120s timeout=60s +primitive intranet-ip IPaddr \ + params ip=192.168.1.101 +group websvc apache intranet-ip +location websvc-pref websvc 100: xen-b +............... + +To summarize, working with templates typically consists of the +following steps: + +- `new`: create a new configuration from templates +- `edit`: define parameters, at least the required ones +- `show`: see if the configuration is valid +- `apply`: apply the configuration to the `configure` level + +[[topics_Features_Testing,Resource testing]] +=== Resource testing + +The amount of detail in a cluster makes all configurations prone +to errors. By far the largest number of issues in a cluster is +due to bad resource configuration. The shell can help quickly +diagnose such problems. And considerably reduce your keyboard +wear. + +Let's say that we entered the following configuration: +............... +node xen-b +node xen-c +node xen-d +primitive fencer stonith:external/libvirt \ + params hypervisor_uri="qemu+tcp://10.2.13.1/system" \ + hostlist="xen-b xen-c xen-d" \ + op monitor interval=2h +primitive svc Xinetd \ + params service=systat \ + op monitor interval=30s +primitive intranet-ip IPaddr2 \ + params ip=10.2.13.100 \ + op monitor interval=30s +primitive apache apache \ + params configfile="/etc/apache2/httpd.conf" \ + op monitor interval=120s timeout=60s +group websvc apache intranet-ip +location websvc-pref websvc 100: xen-b +............... + +Before typing `commit` to submit the configuration to the cib we +can make sure that all resources are usable on all nodes: +............... +crm(live)configure# rsctest websvc svc fencer +............... + +It is important that resources being tested are not running on +any nodes. Otherwise, the `rsctest` command will refuse to do +anything. Of course, if the current configuration resides in a +CIB shadow, then a `commit` is irrelevant. The point being that +resources are not running on any node. + +.Note on stopping all resources +**************************** +Alternatively to not committing a configuration, it is also +possible to tell Pacemaker not to start any resources: + +............... +crm(live)configure# property stop-all-resources=yes +............... +Almost none---resources of class stonith are still started. But +shell is not as strict when it comes to stonith resources. +**************************** + +Order of resources is significant insofar that a resource depends +on all resources to its left. In most configurations, it's +probably practical to test resources in several runs, based on +their dependencies. + +Apart from groups, `crm` does not interpret constraints and +therefore knows nothing about resource dependencies. It also +doesn't know if a resource can run on a node at all in case of an +asymmetric cluster. It is up to the user to specify a list of +eligible nodes if a resource is not meant to run on every node. + +[[topics_Features_Security,Access Control Lists (ACL)]] +=== Access Control Lists (ACL) + +.Note on ACLs in Pacemaker 1.1.12 +**************************** +The support for ACLs has been revised in Pacemaker version 1.1.12 and +up. Depending on which version you are using, the information in this +section may no longer be accurate. Look for the `acl_target` +configuration element for more details on the new syntax. +**************************** + +By default, the users from the +haclient+ group have full access +to the cluster (or, more precisely, to the CIB). Access control +lists allow for finer access control to the cluster. + +Access control lists consist of an ordered set of access rules. +Each rule allows read or write access or denies access +completely. Rules are typically combined to produce a specific +role. Then, users may be assigned a role. + +For instance, this is a role which defines a set of rules +allowing management of a single resource: + +............... +role bigdb_admin \ + write meta:bigdb:target-role \ + write meta:bigdb:is-managed \ + write location:bigdb \ + read ref:bigdb +............... + +The first two rules allow modifying the +target-role+ and ++is-managed+ meta attributes which effectively enables users in +this role to stop/start and manage/unmanage the resource. The +constraints write access rule allows moving the resource around. +Finally, the user is granted read access to the resource +definition. + +For proper operation of all Pacemaker programs, it is advisable +to add the following role to all users: + +............... +role read_all \ + read cib +............... + +For finer grained read access try with the rules listed in the +following role: + +............... +role basic_read \ + read node attribute:uname \ + read node attribute:type \ + read property \ + read status +............... + +It is however possible that some Pacemaker programs (e.g. +`ptest`) may not function correctly if the whole CIB is not +readable. + +Some of the ACL rules in the examples above are expanded by the +shell to XPath specifications. For instance, ++meta:bigdb:target-role+ expands to: + +........ +//primitive[@id='bigdb']/meta_attributes/nvpair[@name='target-role'] +........ + +You can see the expansion by showing XML: + +............... +crm(live) configure# show xml bigdb_admin +... +<acls> + <acl_role id="bigdb_admin"> + <write id="bigdb_admin-write" + xpath="//primitive[@id='bigdb']/meta_attributes/nvpair[@name='target-role']"/> +............... + +Many different XPath expressions can have equal meaning. For +instance, the following two are equal, but only the first one is +going to be recognized as shortcut: + +............... +//primitive[@id='bigdb']/meta_attributes/nvpair[@name='target-role'] +//resources/primitive[@id='bigdb']/meta_attributes/nvpair[@name='target-role'] +............... + +XPath is a powerful language, but you should try to keep your ACL +xpaths simple and the builtin shortcuts should be used whenever +possible. + +[[topics_Features_Resourcesets,Syntax: Resource sets]] +=== Syntax: Resource sets + +Using resource sets can be a bit confusing unless one knows the +details of the implementation in Pacemaker as well as how to interpret +the syntax provided by `crmsh`. + +Three different types of resource sets are provided by `crmsh`, and +each one implies different values for the two resource set attributes, ++sequential+ and +require-all+. + ++sequential+:: + If false, the resources in the set do not depend on each other + internally. Setting +sequential+ to +true+ implies a strict order of + dependency within the set. + ++require-all+:: + If false, only one resource in the set is required to fulfil the + requirements of the set. The set of A, B and C with +require-all+ + set to +false+ is be read as "A OR B OR C" when its dependencies + are resolved. + +The three types of resource sets modify the attributes in the +following way: + +1. Implicit sets (no brackets). +sequential=true+, +require-all=true+ +2. Parenthesis set (+(+ ... +)+). +sequential=false+, +require-all=true+ +3. Bracket set (+[+ ... +]+). +sequential=false+, +require-all=false+ + +To create a set with the properties +sequential=true+ and ++require-all=false+, explicitly set +sequential+ in a bracketed set, ++[ A B C sequential=true ]+. + +To create multiple sets with both +sequential+ and +require-all+ set to +true, explicitly set +sequential+ in a parenthesis set: ++A B ( C D sequential=true )+. + +[[topics_Features_AttributeListReferences,Syntax: Attribute list references]] +=== Syntax: Attribute list references + +Attribute lists are used to set attributes and parameters for +resources, constraints and property definitions. For example, to set +the virtual IP used by an +IPAddr2+ resource the attribute +ip+ can be +set in an attribute list for that resource. + +Attribute lists can have identifiers that name them, and other +resources can reuse the same attribute list by referring to that name +using an +$id-ref+. For example, the following statement defines a +simple dummy resource with an attribute list which sets the parameter ++state+ to the value 1 and sets the identifier for the attribute list +to +on-state+: + +.............. +primitive dummy-1 Dummy params $id=on-state state=1 +.............. + +To refer to this attribute list from a different resource, refer to +the +on-state+ name using an id-ref: + +.............. +primitive dummy-2 Dummy params $id-ref=on-state +.............. + +The resource +dummy-2+ will now also have the parameter +state+ set to the value 1. + +[[topics_Features_AttributeReferences,Syntax: Attribute references]] +=== Syntax: Attribute references + +In some cases, referencing complete attribute lists is too +coarse-grained, for example if two different parameters with different +names should have the same value set. Instead of having to copy the +value in multiple places, it is possible to create references to +individual attributes in attribute lists. + +To name an attribute in order to be able to refer to it later, prefix +the attribute name with a +$+ character (as seen above with the +special names +$id+ and +$id-ref+: + +............ +primitive dummy-1 Dummy params $state=1 +............ + +The identifier +state+ can now be used to refer to this attribute from other +primitives, using the +@<id>+ syntax: + +............ +primitive dummy-2 Dummy params @state +............ + +In some cases, using the attribute name as the identifier doesn't work +due to name clashes. In this case, the syntax +$<id>:<name>=<value>+ +can be used to give the attribute a different identifier: + +............ +primitive dummy-1 params $dummy-state-on:state=1 +primitive dummy-2 params @dummy-state-on +............ + +There is also the possibility that two resources both use the same +attribute value but with different names. For example, a web server +may have a parameter +server_ip+ for setting the IP address where it +listens for incoming requests, and a virtual IP resource may have a +parameter called +ip+ which sets the IP address it creates. To +configure these two resources with an IP without repeating the value, +the reference can be given a name using the syntax +@<id>:<name>+. + +Example: +............ +primitive virtual-ip IPaddr2 params $vip:ip=192.168.1.100 +primitive webserver apache params @vip:server_ip +............ + +[[topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions]] +=== Syntax: Rule expressions + +Many of the configuration commands in `crmsh` now support the use of +_rule expressions_, which can influence what attributes apply to a +resource or under which conditions a constraint is applied, depending +on changing conditions like date, time, the value of attributes and +more. + +Here is an example of a simple rule expression used to apply a +a different resource parameter on the node named `node1`: + +.............. +primitive my_resource Special \ + params 2: rule #uname eq node1 interface=eth1 \ + params 1: interface=eth0 +.............. + +This primitive resource has two lists of parameters with descending +priority. The parameter list with the highest priority is applied +first, but only if the rule expressions for that parameter list all +apply. In this case, the rule `#uname eq node1` limits the parameter +list so that it is only applied on `node1`. + +Note that rule expressions are not terminated and are immediately +followed by the data to which the rule is applied. In this case, the +name-value pair `interface=eth1`. + +Rule expressions can contain multiple expressions connected using the +boolean operator `or` and `and`. The full syntax for rule expressions +is listed below. + +.............. +rules :: + rule [id_spec] [$role=<role>] <score>: <expression> + [rule [id_spec] [$role=<role>] <score>: <expression> ...] + +id_spec :: $id=<id> | $id-ref=<id> +score :: <number> | <attribute> | [-]inf +expression :: <simple_exp> [<bool_op> <simple_exp> ...] +bool_op :: or | and +simple_exp :: <attribute> [type:]<binary_op> <value> + | <unary_op> <attribute> + | date <date_expr> +type :: <string> | <version> | <number> +binary_op :: lt | gt | lte | gte | eq | ne +unary_op :: defined | not_defined + +date_expr :: lt <end> + | gt <start> + | in start=<start> end=<end> + | in start=<start> <duration> + | spec <date_spec> +duration|date_spec :: + hours=<value> + | monthdays=<value> + | weekdays=<value> + | yearsdays=<value> + | months=<value> + | weeks=<value> + | years=<value> + | weekyears=<value> + | moon=<value> +.............. + +[[topics_Reference,Command reference]] +== Command reference + +The commands are structured to be compatible with the shell command +line. Sometimes, the underlying Pacemaker grammar uses characters that +have special meaning in bash, that will need to be quoted. This +includes the hash or pound sign (`#`), single and double quotes, and +any significant whitespace. + +Whitespace is also significant when assigning values, meaning that ++key=value+ is different from +key = value+. + +Commands can be referenced using short-hand as long as the short-hand +is unique. This can be either a prefix of the command name or a prefix +string of characters found in the name. + +For example, +status+ can be abbreviated as +st+ or +su+, and ++configure+ as +conf+ or +cfg+. + +The syntax for the commands is given below in an informal, BNF-like +grammar. + +* `<value>` denotes a string. +* `[value]` means that the construct is optional. +* The ellipsis (`...`) signifies that the previous construct may be + repeated. +* `first|second` means either first or second. +* The rest are literals (strings, `:`, `=`). + +[[cmdhelp_root_status,Cluster status]] +=== `status` + +Show cluster status. The status is displayed by `crm_mon`. Supply +additional arguments for more information or different format. +See `crm_mon(8)` for more details. + +Example: +............... +status +status simple +status full +............... + +Usage: +............... +status [<option> ...] + +option :: full + | bynode + | inactive + | ops + | timing + | failcounts + | verbose + | quiet + | html + | xml + | simple + | tickets + | noheaders + | detail + | brief +............... + +[[cmdhelp_root_verify,Verify cluster status]] +=== `verify` + +Performs basic checks for the cluster configuration and +current status, reporting potential issues. + +See `crm_verify(8)` and `crm_simulate(8)` for more details. + +Example: +............... +verify +verify scores +............... + +Usage: +............... +verify [scores] +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_cluster,Cluster setup and management]] +=== `cluster` - Cluster setup and management + +Whole-cluster configuration management with High Availability +awareness. + +The commands on the cluster level allows configuration and +modification of the underlying cluster infrastructure, and also +supplies tools to do whole-cluster systems management. + +These commands enable easy installation and maintenance of a HA +cluster, by providing support for package installation, configuration +of the cluster messaging layer, file system setup and more. + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_add,Add a new node to the cluster]] +==== `add` + +Add a new node to the cluster. The new node will be +configured as a cluster member. + +Options: + +*-y, --yes*:: + Answer "yes" to all prompts (use with caution) + +Usage: +............... +add [options] [<node> ...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_copy,Copy file to other cluster nodes]] +==== `copy` + +Copy file to other cluster nodes. + +Copies the given file to all other nodes unless given a +list of nodes to copy to as argument. + +Usage: +............... +copy <filename> [nodes ...] +............... + +Example: +............... +copy /etc/motd +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_diff,Diff file across cluster]] +==== `diff` + +Displays the difference, if any, between a given file +on different nodes. If the second argument is `--checksum`, +a checksum of the file will be calculated and displayed for +each node. + +Usage: +............... +diff <file> [--checksum] [nodes...] +............... + +Example: +............... +diff /etc/crm/crm.conf node2 +diff /etc/resolv.conf --checksum +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_geo_init,Configure cluster as geo cluster]] +==== `geo-init` + +Create a new geo cluster with the current cluster as the +first member. Pass the complete geo cluster topology as +arguments to this command, and then use `geo-join` and +`geo-init-arbitrator` to add the remaining members to +the geo cluster. + +Options: + +*-q, --quiet*:: + Be quiet (don't describe what's happening, just do it) + +*-y, --yes*:: + Answer "yes" to all prompts (use with caution) + +*--arbitrator=IP*:: + IP address of geo cluster arbitrator + +*--clusters=DESC*:: + Cluster description (see details below) + +*--tickets=LIST*:: + Tickets to create (space-separated) + + +Cluster Description: + +This is a map of cluster names to IP addresses. +Each IP address will be configured as a virtual IP +representing that cluster in the geo cluster +configuration. + +Example with two clusters named paris and amsterdam: + +............ + --clusters "paris=192.168.10.10 amsterdam=192.168.10.11" +............ + +Name clusters using the +--name+ parameter to `init`. + +Usage: +............... +geo-init [options] +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_geo_init_arbitrator,Initialize node as geo cluster arbitrator]] +==== `geo-init-arbitrator` + +Configure the current node as a geo arbitrator. The command +requires an existing geo cluster or geo arbitrator from which +to get the geo cluster configuration. + +Options: + +*--clusters=DESC*:: + Cluster description (see +geo-init+ for details) + +*-c IP, --cluster-node=IP*:: + IP address of an already-configured geo cluster + +Usage: +............... +geo-init-arbitrator [options] +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_geo_join,Join cluster to existing geo cluster]] +==== `geo-join` + +This command should be run from one of the nodes in a cluster +which is currently not a member of a geo cluster. The geo +cluster configuration will be fetched from the provided node, +and the cluster will be added to the geo cluster. + +Note that each cluster in a geo cluster needs to have a unique +name set. The cluster name can be set using the `--name` argument +to `init`, or by configuring corosync with the cluster name in +an existing cluster. + +Options: + +*-c IP, --cluster-node=IP*:: + IP address of an already-configured geo cluster or arbitrator + +Usage: +............... +geo-join [options] +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_health,Cluster health check]] +==== `health` + +Runs a larger set of tests and queries on all nodes in the cluster to +verify the general system health and detect potential problems. + +Usage: +............... +health +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_init,Initializes a new HA cluster]] +==== `init` + +Initialize a cluster from scratch. This command configures +a complete cluster, and can also add additional cluster +nodes to the initial one-node cluster using the `--nodes` +option. + +Options: + +*-q, --quiet*:: + Be quiet (don't describe what's happening, just do it) + +*-y, --yes*:: + Answer "yes" to all prompts (use with caution, this + is destructive, especially during the "storage" stage) + +*-t TEMPLATE, --template=TEMPLATE**:: + Optionally configure cluster with template "name" + (currently only "ocfs2" is valid here) + +*-n NAME, --name=NAME*:: + Set the name of the configured cluster. + +*-N NODES, --nodes=NODES*:: + Additional nodes to add to the created cluster. May + include the current node, which will always be the + initial cluster node. + +*-w WATCHDOG, --watchdog=WATCHDOG*:: + Use the given watchdog device. + +Network configuration: + +Options for configuring the network and messaging layer. + +*-i IF, --interface=IF*:: + Bind to IP address on interface IF + +*-u, --unicast*:: + Configure corosync to communicate over unicast (UDP), + and not multicast. Default is multicast unless an + environment where multicast cannot be used is + detected. + +*-A IP, --admin-ip=IP*:: + Configure IP address as an administration virtual IP + +Storage configuration: + +Options for configuring shared storage. + +*-p DEVICE, --partition-device=DEVICE*:: + Partition this shared storage device (only used in + "storage" stage) + +*-s DEVICE, --sbd-device=DEVICE*:: + Block device to use for SBD fencing + +*-o DEVICE, --ocfs2-device=DEVICE*:: + Block device to use for OCFS2 (only used in "vgfs" + stage) + + +Stage can be one of: + +*ssh*:: + Create SSH keys for passwordless SSH between cluster nodes + +*csync2*:: + Configure csync2 + +*corosync*:: + Configure corosync + +*storage*:: + Partition shared storage (ocfs2 template only) + +*sbd*:: + Configure SBD (requires -s <dev>) + +*cluster*:: + Bring the cluster online + +*vgfs*:: + Create volume group and filesystem (ocfs2 template only, requires `-o <dev>`) + +*admin*:: + Create administration virtual IP (optional) + +[NOTE] +============ +- If stage is not specified, the script will run through each stage + in sequence, with prompts for required information. +- If using the ocfs2 template, the storage stage will partition a block + device into two pieces, one for SBD, the remainder for OCFS2. This is + good for testing and demonstration, but not ideal for production. + To use storage you have already configured, pass -s and -o to specify + the block devices for SBD and OCFS2, and the automatic partitioning + will be skipped. +============ + +Usage: +............... +init [options] [STAGE] +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_join,Join existing cluster]] +==== `join` + +Join the current node to an existing cluster. The +current node cannot be a member of a cluster already. +Pass any node in the existing cluster as the argument +to the `-c` option. + +Options: + +*-q, --quiet*:: + Be quiet (don't describe what's happening, just do it) + +*-y, --yes*:: + Answer "yes" to all prompts (use with caution) + +*-w WATCHDOG, --watchdog=WATCHDOG*:: + Use the given watchdog device + +Network configuration: + +Options for configuring the network and messaging layer. + + +*-c HOST, --cluster-node=HOST*:: + IP address or hostname of existing cluster node + +*-i IF, --interface=IF*:: + Bind to IP address on interface IF + + +Stage can be one of: + +*ssh*:: + Obtain SSH keys from existing cluster node (requires -c <host>) + +*csync2*:: + Configure csync2 (requires -c <host>) + +*ssh_merge*:: + Merge root's SSH known_hosts across all nodes (csync2 must + already be configured). + +*cluster*:: + Start the cluster on this node + +If stage is not specified, each stage will be invoked in sequence. + +Usage: +............... +join [options] [STAGE] +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_remove,Remove node(s) from the cluster]] +==== `remove` + +Remove one or more nodes from the cluster. + +This command can remove the last node in the cluster, +thus effectively removing the whole cluster. To remove +the last node, pass `--force` argument to `crm` or set +the `config.core.force` option. + +Options: + +*-q, --quiet*:: + Be quiet (don't describe what's happening, just do it) + +*-y, --yes*:: + Answer "yes" to all prompts (use with caution) + +*-c HOST, --cluster-node=HOST*:: + IP address or hostname of cluster node which will be + removed from the cluster + +Usage: +............... +remove [options] [<node> ...] +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_run,Execute an arbitrary command on all nodes]] +==== `run` + +This command takes a shell statement as argument, executes that +statement on all nodes in the cluster, and reports the result. + +Usage: +............... +run <command> +............... + +Example: +............... +run "cat /proc/uptime" +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_start,Start cluster services]] +==== `start` + +Starts the cluster-related system services on this node. + +Usage: +......... +start +......... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_status,Cluster status check]] +==== `status` + +Reports the status for the cluster messaging layer on the local +node. + +Usage: +............... +status +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_stop,Stop cluster services]] +==== `stop` + +Stops the cluster-related system services on this node. + +Usage: +......... +stop +......... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_wait_for_startup,Wait for cluster to start]] +==== `wait_for_startup` + +Mostly useful in scripts or automated workflows, this command will +attempt to connect to the local cluster node repeatedly. The command +will keep trying until the cluster node responds, or the `timeout` +elapses. The timeout can be changed by supplying a value in seconds as +an argument. + +Usage: +........ +wait_for_startup +........ + +[[cmdhelp_script,Cluster script management]] +=== `script` - Cluster script management + +A big part of the configuration and management of a cluster is +collecting information about all cluster nodes and deploying changes +to those nodes. Often, just performing the same procedure on all nodes +will encounter problems, due to subtle differences in the +configuration. + +For example, when configuring a cluster for the first time, the +software needs to be installed and configured on all nodes before the +cluster software can be launched and configured using `crmsh`. This +process is cumbersome and error-prone, and the goal is for scripts to +make this process easier. + +Scripts are implemented using the python `parallax` package which +provides a thin wrapper on top of SSH. This allows the scripts to +function through the usual SSH channels used for system maintenance, +requiring no additional software to be installed or maintained. + +[[cmdhelp_script_json,JSON API for cluster scripts]] +==== `json` + +This command provides a JSON API for the cluster scripts, intended for +use in user interface tools that want to interact with the cluster via +scripts. + +The command takes a single argument, which should be a JSON array with +the first member identifying the command to perform. + +The output is line-based: Commands that return multiple results will +return them line-by-line, ending with a terminator value: "end". + +When providing parameter values to this command, they should be +provided as nested objects, so +virtual-ip:ip=192.168.0.5+ on the +command line becomes the JSON object ++{"virtual-ip":{"ip":"192.168.0.5"}}+. + +API: +........ +["list"] +=> [{name, shortdesc, category}] + +["show", <name>] +=> [{name, shortdesc, longdesc, category, <<steps>>}] + +<<steps>> := [{name, shortdesc], longdesc, required, parameters, steps}] + +<<params>> := [{name, shortdesc, longdesc, required, unique, advanced, + type, value, example}] + +["verify", <name>, <<values>>] +=> [{shortdesc, longdesc, text, nodes}] + +["run", <name>, <<values>>] +=> [{shortdesc, rc, output|error}] +........ + + +[[cmdhelp_script_list,List available scripts]] +==== `list` + +Lists the available scripts, sorted by category. Scripts that have the +special `Script` category are hidden by default, since they are mainly +used by other scripts or commands. To also show these, pass `all` as +argument. + +To get a flat list of script names, not sorted by category, pass +`names` as an extra argument. + +Usage: +............ +list [all] [names] +............ + +Example: +............ +list +list all names +............ + +[[cmdhelp_script_run,Run the script]] +==== `run` + +Given a list of parameter values, this command will execute the +actions specified by the cluster script. The format for the parameter +values is the same as for the `verify` command. + +Can optionally take at least two parameters: +* `nodes=<nodes>`: List of nodes that the script runs over +* `dry_run=yes|no`: If set, the script will not perform any modifications. + +Additional parameters may be available depending on the script. + +Use the `show` command to see what parameters are available. + +Usage: +............. +run <script> [args...] +............. + +Example: +............. +run apache install=true +run sbd id=sbd-1 node=node1 sbd_device=/dev/disk/by-uuid/F00D-CAFE +............. + +[[cmdhelp_script_show,Describe the script]] +==== `show` + +Prints a description and short summary of the script, with +descriptions of the accepted parameters. + +Advanced parameters are hidden by default. To show the complete list +of parameters accepted by the script, pass `all` as argument. + +Usage: +............ +show <script> [all] +............ + +Example: +............ +show virtual-ip +............ + +[[cmdhelp_script_verify,Verify the script]] +==== `verify` + +Checks the given parameter values, and returns a list +of actions that will be executed when running the script +if provided the same list of parameter values. + +Usage: +............ +verify <script> [args...] +............ + +Example: +............ +verify sbd id=sbd-1 node=node1 sbd_device=/dev/disk/by-uuid/F00D-CAFE +............ + +[[cmdhelp_corosync,Corosync management]] +=== `corosync` - Corosync management + +Corosync is the underlying messaging layer for most HA clusters. +This level provides commands for editing and managing the corosync +configuration. + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_add-node,Add a corosync node]] +==== `add-node` + +Adds a node to the corosync configuration. This is used with the `udpu` +type configuration in corosync. + +A nodeid for the added node is generated automatically. + +Note that this command assumes that only a single ring is used, and +sets only the address for ring0. + +Usage: +......... +add-node <addr> [name] +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_del-node,Remove a corosync node]] +==== `del-node` + +Removes a node from the corosync configuration. The argument given is +the `ring0_addr` address set in the configuration file. + +Usage: +......... +del-node <addr> +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_diff,Diffs the corosync configuration]] +==== `diff` + +Diffs the corosync configurations on different nodes. If no nodes are +given as arguments, the corosync configurations on all nodes in the +cluster are compared. + +`diff` takes an option argument `--checksum`, to display a checksum +for each file instead of calculating a diff. + +Usage: +......... +diff [--checksum] [node...] +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_edit,Edit the corosync configuration]] +==== `edit` + +Opens the Corosync configuration file in an editor. + +Usage: +......... +edit +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_get,Get a corosync configuration value]] +==== `get` + +Returns the value configured in `corosync.conf`, which is not +necessarily the value used in the running configuration. See `reload` +for telling corosync about configuration changes. + +The argument is the complete dot-separated path to the value. + +If there are multiple values configured with the same path, the +command returns all values for that path. For example, to get all +configured `ring0_addr` values, use this command: + +Example: +........ +get nodelist.node.ring0_addr +........ + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_log,Show the corosync log file]] +==== `log` + +Opens the log file specified in the corosync configuration file. If no +log file is configured, this command returns an error. + +The pager used can be configured either using the PAGER +environment variable or in `crm.conf`. + +Usage: +......... +log +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_pull,Pulls the corosync configuration]] +==== `pull` + +Gets the corosync configuration from another node and copies +it to this node. + +Usage: +......... +pull <node> +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_push,Push the corosync configuration]] +==== `push` + +Pushes the corosync configuration file on this node to +the list of nodes provided. If no target nodes are given, +the configuration is pushed to all other nodes in the cluster. + +It is recommended to use `csync2` to distribute the cluster +configuration files rather than relying on this command. + +Usage: +......... +push [node] ... +......... + +Example: +......... +push node-2 node-3 +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_reload,Reload the corosync configuration]] +==== `reload` + +Tells all instances of corosync in this cluster to reload +`corosync.conf`. + +After pushing a new configuration to all cluster nodes, call this +command to make corosync use the new configuration. + +Usage: +......... +reload +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_set,Set a corosync configuration value]] +==== `set` + +Sets the value identified by the given path. If the value does not +exist in the configuration file, it will be added. However, if the +section containing the value does not exist, the command will fail. + +Usage: +......... +set quorum.expected_votes 2 +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_show,Display the corosync configuration]] +==== `show` + +Displays the corosync configuration on the current node. + +......... +show +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_status,Display the corosync status]] +==== `status` + +Displays the status of Corosync, including the votequorum state. + +Usage: +......... +status +......... + +[[cmdhelp_cib,CIB shadow management]] +=== `cib` - CIB shadow management + +This level is for management of shadow CIBs. It is available both +at the top level and the `configure` level. + +All the commands are implemented using `cib_shadow(8)` and the +`CIB_shadow` environment variable. The user prompt always +includes the name of the currently active shadow or the live CIB. + +[[cmdhelp_cib_cibstatus,CIB status management and editing]] +==== `cibstatus` + +Enter edit and manage the CIB status section level. See the +<<cmdhelp_cibstatus,CIB status management section>>. + +[[cmdhelp_cib_commit,copy a shadow CIB to the cluster]] +==== `commit` + +Apply a shadow CIB to the cluster. If the shadow name is omitted +then the current shadow CIB is applied. + +Temporary shadow CIBs are removed automatically on commit. + +Usage: +............... +commit [<cib>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_delete,delete a shadow CIB]] +==== `delete` + +Delete an existing shadow CIB. + +Usage: +............... +delete <cib> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_diff,diff between the shadow CIB and the live CIB]] +==== `diff` + +Print differences between the current cluster configuration and +the active shadow CIB. + +Usage: +............... +diff +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_import,import a CIB or PE input file to a shadow]] +==== `import` + +At times it may be useful to create a shadow file from the +existing CIB. The CIB may be specified as file or as a PE input +file number. The shell will look up files in the local directory +first and then in the PE directory (typically `/var/lib/pengine`). +Once the CIB file is found, it is copied to a shadow and this +shadow is immediately available for use at both `configure` and +`cibstatus` levels. + +If the shadow name is omitted then the target shadow is named +after the input CIB file. + +Note that there are often more than one PE input file, so you may +need to specify the full name. + +Usage: +............... +import {<file>|<number>} [<shadow>] +............... +Examples: +............... +import pe-warn-2222 +import 2289 issue2 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_list,list all shadow CIBs]] +==== `list` + +List existing shadow CIBs. + +Usage: +............... +list +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_new,create a new shadow CIB]] +==== `new` + +Create a new shadow CIB. The live cluster configuration and +status is copied to the shadow CIB. + +If the name of the shadow is omitted, we create a temporary CIB +shadow. It is useful if multiple level sessions are desired +without affecting the cluster. A temporary CIB shadow is short +lived and will be removed either on `commit` or on program exit. +Note that if the temporary shadow is not committed all changes in +the temporary shadow are lost. + +Specify `withstatus` if you want to edit the status section of +the shadow CIB (see the <<cmdhelp_cibstatus,cibstatus section>>). +Add `force` to force overwriting the existing shadow CIB. + +To start with an empty configuration that is not copied from the live +CIB, specify the `empty` keyword. (This also allows a shadow CIB to be +created in case no cluster is running.) + +Usage: +............... +new [<cib>] [withstatus] [force] [empty] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_reset,copy live cib to a shadow CIB]] +==== `reset` + +Copy the current cluster configuration into the shadow CIB. + +Usage: +............... +reset <cib> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_use,change working CIB]] +==== `use` + +Choose a CIB source. If you want to edit the status from the +shadow CIB specify `withstatus` (see <<cmdhelp_cibstatus,`cibstatus`>>). +Leave out the CIB name to switch to the running CIB. + +Usage: +............... +use [<cib>] [withstatus] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_ra,Resource Agents (RA) lists and documentation]] +=== `ra` - Resource Agents (RA) lists and documentation + +This level contains commands which show various information about +the installed resource agents. It is available both at the top +level and at the `configure` level. + +[[cmdhelp_ra_classes,list classes and providers]] +==== `classes` + +Print all resource agents' classes and, where appropriate, a list +of available providers. + +Usage: +............... +classes +............... + +[[cmdhelp_ra_info,show meta data for a RA]] +==== `info` (`meta`) + +Show the meta-data of a resource agent type. This is where users +can find information on how to use a resource agent. It is also +possible to get information from some programs: `pengine`, +`crmd`, `cib`, and `stonithd`. Just specify the program name +instead of an RA. + +Usage: +............... +info [<class>:[<provider>:]]<type> +info <type> <class> [<provider>] (obsolete) +............... +Example: +............... +info apache +info ocf:pacemaker:Dummy +info stonith:ipmilan +info pengine +............... + +[[cmdhelp_ra_list,list RA for a class (and provider)]] +==== `list` + +List available resource agents for the given class. If the class +is `ocf`, supply a provider to get agents which are available +only from that provider. + +Usage: +............... +list <class> [<provider>] +............... +Example: +............... +list ocf pacemaker +............... + +[[cmdhelp_ra_providers,show providers for a RA and a class]] +==== `providers` + +List providers for a resource agent type. The class parameter +defaults to `ocf`. + +Usage: +............... +providers <type> [<class>] +............... +Example: +............... +providers apache +............... + +[[cmdhelp_ra_validate,validate parameters for RA]] +==== `validate` + +If the resource agent supports the `validate-all` action, this calls +the action with the given parameters, printing any warnings or errors +reported by the agent. + +Usage: +................ +validate <agent> [<key>=<value> ...] +................ + +[[cmdhelp_resource,Resource management]] +=== `resource` - Resource management + +At this level resources may be managed. + +All (or almost all) commands are implemented with the CRM tools +such as `crm_resource(8)`. + +[[cmdhelp_resource_ban,ban a resource from a node]] +==== `ban` + +Ban a resource from running on a certain node. If no node is given +as argument, the resource is banned from the current location. + +See `move` for details on other arguments. + +Usage: +............... +ban <rsc> [<node>] [<lifetime>] [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_cleanup,cleanup resource status]] +==== `cleanup` + +Cleanup resource status. Typically done after the resource has +temporarily failed. If a node is omitted, cleanup on all nodes. +If there are many nodes, the command may take a while. + ++(Pacemaker 1.1.14)+ Pass force to cleanup the resource itself, +otherwise the cleanup command will apply to the parent resource (if +any). + +Usage: +............... +cleanup <rsc> [<node>] [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_clear,Clear any relocation constraint]] +==== `clear` (`unmove`, `unmigrate`, `unban`) + +Remove any relocation constraint created by +the `move`, `migrate` or `ban` command. + +Usage: +............... +clear <rsc> +unmigrate <rsc> +unban <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_constraints,Show constraints affecting a resource]] +==== `constraints` + +Display the location and colocation constraints affecting the +resource. + +Usage: +................ +constraints <rsc> +................ + +[[cmdhelp_resource_demote,demote a master-slave resource]] +==== `demote` + +Demote a master-slave resource using the `target-role` +attribute. + +Usage: +............... +demote <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_failcount,manage failcounts]] +==== `failcount` + +Show/edit/delete the failcount of a resource. + +Usage: +............... +failcount <rsc> set <node> <value> +failcount <rsc> delete <node> +failcount <rsc> show <node> +............... +Example: +............... +failcount fs_0 delete node2 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_locate,show the location of resources]] +==== `locate` + +Show the current location of one or more resources. + +Usage: +............... +locate [<rsc> ...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_maintenance,Enable/disable per-resource maintenance mode]] +==== `maintenance` + +Enables or disables the per-resource maintenance mode. When this mode +is enabled, no monitor operations will be triggered for the resource. +`maintenance` attribute conflicts with the `is-managed`. When setting +the `maintenance` attribute, the user is proposed to remove the +`is-managed` attribute if it exists. + +Usage: +.................. +maintenance <resource> [on|off|true|false] +.................. + +Example: +.................. +maintenance rsc1 +maintenance rsc2 off +.................. + +[[cmdhelp_resource_manage,put a resource into managed mode]] +==== `manage` + +Manage a resource using the `is-managed` attribute. If there +are multiple meta attributes sets, the attribute is set in all of +them. If the resource is a clone, all `is-managed` attributes are +removed from the children resources. +`is-managed` attribute conflicts with the `maintenance`. When setting +the `is-managed` attribute, the user is proposed to remove the +`maintenance` attribute if it exists. + +For details on group management see <<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... +manage <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_meta,manage a meta attribute]] +==== `meta` + +Show/edit/delete a meta attribute of a resource. Currently, all +meta attributes of a resource may be managed with other commands +such as `resource stop`. + +Usage: +............... +meta <rsc> set <attr> <value> +meta <rsc> delete <attr> +meta <rsc> show <attr> +............... +Example: +............... +meta ip_0 set target-role stopped +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_move,Move a resource to another node]] +==== `move` (`migrate`) + +Move a resource away from its current location. + +If the destination node is left out, the resource is migrated by +creating a constraint which prevents it from running on the current +node. For this type of constraint to be created, the +force+ argument +is required. + +A lifetime may be given for the constraint. Once it expires, the +location constraint will no longer be active. + +Usage: +............... +move <rsc> [<node>] [<lifetime>] [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_operations,Show active resource operations]] +==== `operations` + +Show active operations, optionally filtered by resource and node. + +Usage: +................ +operations [<rsc>] [<node>] +................ + +[[cmdhelp_resource_param,manage a parameter of a resource]] +==== `param` + +Show/edit/delete a parameter of a resource. + +Usage: +............... +param <rsc> set <param> <value> +param <rsc> delete <param> +param <rsc> show <param> +............... +Example: +............... +param ip_0 show ip +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_promote,promote a master-slave resource]] +==== `promote` + +Promote a master-slave resource using the `target-role` +attribute. + +Usage: +............... +promote <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_refresh,refresh CIB from the LRM status]] +==== `refresh` + +Refresh CIB from the LRM status. + +.Note +**************************** +`refresh` has been deprecated and is now +an alias for `cleanup`. +**************************** + +Usage: +............... +refresh [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_reprobe,probe for resources not started by the CRM]] +==== `reprobe` + +Probe for resources not started by the CRM. + +.Note +**************************** +`reprobe` has been deprecated and is now +an alias for `cleanup`. +**************************** + +Usage: +............... +reprobe [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_restart,restart resources]] +==== `restart` + +Restart one or more resources. This is essentially a shortcut for +resource stop followed by a start. The shell is first going to wait +for the stop to finish, that is for all resources to really stop, and +only then to order the start action. Due to this command +entailing a whole set of operations, informational messages are +printed to let the user see some progress. + +For details on group management see +<<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... +restart <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +# crm resource restart g_webserver +INFO: ordering g_webserver to stop +waiting for stop to finish .... done +INFO: ordering g_webserver to start +# +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_scores,Display resource scores]] +==== `scores` + +Display the allocation scores for all resources. + +Usage: +................ +scores +................ + +[[cmdhelp_resource_secret,manage sensitive parameters]] +==== `secret` + +Sensitive parameters can be kept in local files rather than CIB +in order to prevent accidental data exposure. Use the `secret` +command to manage such parameters. `stash` and `unstash` move the +value from the CIB and back to the CIB respectively. The `set` +subcommand sets the parameter to the provided value. `delete` +removes the parameter completely. `show` displays the value of +the parameter from the local file. Use `check` to verify if the +local file content is valid. + +Usage: +............... +secret <rsc> set <param> <value> +secret <rsc> stash <param> +secret <rsc> unstash <param> +secret <rsc> delete <param> +secret <rsc> show <param> +secret <rsc> check <param> +............... +Example: +............... +secret fence_1 show password +secret fence_1 stash password +secret fence_1 set password secret_value +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_start,start resources]] +==== `start` + +Start one or more resources by setting the `target-role` attribute. If +there are multiple meta attributes sets, the attribute is set in all +of them. If the resource is a clone, all `target-role` attributes are +removed from the children resources. + +For details on group management see +<<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... +start <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_status,show status of resources]] +==== `status` (`show`, `list`) + +Print resource status. More than one resource can be shown at once. If +the resource parameter is left out, the status of all resources is +printed. + +Usage: +............... +status [<rsc> ...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_stop,stop resources]] +==== `stop` + +Stop one or more resources using the `target-role` attribute. If there +are multiple meta attributes sets, the attribute is set in all of +them. If the resource is a clone, all `target-role` attributes are +removed from the children resources. + +For details on group management see +<<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... +stop <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_trace,start RA tracing]] +==== `trace` + +Start tracing RA for the given operation. The trace files are +stored in `$HA_VARLIB/trace_ra`. If the operation to be traced is +monitor, note that the number of trace files can grow very +quickly. + +If no operation name is given, crmsh will attempt to trace all +operations for the RA. This includes any configured operations, start +and stop as well as promote/demote for multistate resources. + +To trace the probe operation which exists for all resources, either +set a trace for `monitor` with interval `0`, or use `probe` as the +operation name. + +Usage: +............... +trace <rsc> [<op> [<interval>] ] +............... +Example: +............... +trace fs start +trace webserver +trace webserver probe +trace fs monitor 0 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_unmanage,put a resource into unmanaged mode]] +==== `unmanage` + +Unmanage a resource using the `is-managed` attribute. If there +are multiple meta attributes sets, the attribute is set in all of +them. If the resource is a clone, all `is-managed` attributes are +removed from the children resources. + +For details on group management see <<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... +unmanage <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_untrace,stop RA tracing]] +==== `untrace` + +Stop tracing RA for the given operation. If no operation name is +given, crmsh will attempt to stop tracing all operations in resource. + +Usage: +............... +untrace <rsc> [<op> [<interval>] ] +............... +Example: +............... +untrace fs start +untrace webserver +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_utilization,manage a utilization attribute]] +==== `utilization` + +Show/edit/delete a utilization attribute of a resource. These +attributes describe hardware requirements. By setting the +`placement-strategy` cluster property appropriately, it is +possible then to distribute resources based on resource +requirements and node size. See also <<cmdhelp_node_utilization,node utilization attributes>>. + +Usage: +............... +utilization <rsc> set <attr> <value> +utilization <rsc> delete <attr> +utilization <rsc> show <attr> +............... +Example: +............... +utilization xen1 set memory 4096 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node,Node management]] +=== `node` - Node management + +Node management and status commands. + +[[cmdhelp_node_attribute,manage attributes]] +==== `attribute` + +Edit node attributes. This kind of attribute should refer to +relatively static properties, such as memory size. + +Usage: +............... +attribute <node> set <attr> <value> +attribute <node> delete <attr> +attribute <node> show <attr> +............... +Example: +............... +attribute node_1 set memory_size 4096 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_clearstate,Clear node state]] +==== `clearstate` + +Resets and clears the state of the specified node. This node is +afterwards assumed clean and offline. This command can be used to +manually confirm that a node has been fenced (e.g., powered off). + +Be careful! This can cause data corruption if you confirm that a node is +down that is, in fact, not cleanly down - the cluster will proceed as if +the fence had succeeded, possibly starting resources multiple times. + +Usage: +............... +clearstate <node> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_delete,delete node]] +==== `delete` + +Delete a node. This command will remove the node from the CIB +and, in case the cluster stack is running, use the appropriate +program (`crm_node` or `hb_delnode`) to remove the node from the +membership. + +If the node is still listed as active and a member of our +partition we refuse to remove it. With the global force option +(`-F`) we will try to delete the node anyway. + +Usage: +............... +delete <node> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_fence,fence node]] +==== `fence` + +Make CRM fence a node. This functionality depends on stonith +resources capable of fencing the specified node. No such stonith +resources, no fencing will happen. + +Usage: +............... +fence <node> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_maintenance,put node into maintenance mode]] +==== `maintenance` + +Set the node status to maintenance. This is equivalent to the +cluster-wide `maintenance-mode` property but puts just one node +into the maintenance mode. If there are maintenaned resources on +the node, the user will be proposed to remove the maintenance +property from them. + +The node parameter defaults to the node where the command is run. + +Usage: +............... +maintenance [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_online,set node online]] +==== `online` + +Set a node to online status. + +The node parameter defaults to the node where the command is run. + +Usage: +............... +online [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_ready,put node into ready mode]] +==== `ready` + +Set the node's maintenance status to `off`. The node should be +now again fully operational and capable of running resource +operations. + +The node parameter defaults to the node where the command is run. + +Usage: +............... +ready [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_server,show node hostname or server address]] +==== `server` + +Remote nodes may have a configured server address which should +be used when contacting the node. This command prints the +server address if configured, else the node name. + +If no parameter is given, the addresses or names for all nodes +are printed. + +Usage: +............... +server [<node> ...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_show,show node]] +==== `show` + +Show a node definition. If the node parameter is omitted then all +nodes are shown. + +Usage: +............... +show [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_standby,put node into standby]] +==== `standby` + +Set a node to standby status. The node parameter defaults to the +node where the command is run. + +Additionally, you may specify a lifetime for the standby---if set to +`reboot`, the node will be back online once it reboots. `forever` will +keep the node in standby after reboot. The life time defaults to +`forever`. + +Usage: +............... +standby [<node>] [<lifetime>] + +lifetime :: reboot | forever +............... + +Example: +............... +standby bob reboot +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_node_status,show nodes' status as XML]] +==== `status` + +Show nodes' status as XML. If the node parameter is omitted then +all nodes are shown. + +Usage: +............... +status [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_status-attr,manage status attributes]] +==== `status-attr` + +Edit node attributes which are in the CIB status section, i.e. +attributes which hold properties of a more volatile nature. One +typical example is attribute generated by the `pingd` utility. + +Usage: +............... +status-attr <node> set <attr> <value> +status-attr <node> delete <attr> +status-attr <node> show <attr> +............... +Example: +............... +status-attr node_1 show pingd +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_utilization,manage utilization attributes]] +==== `utilization` + +Edit node utilization attributes. These attributes describe +hardware characteristics as integer numbers such as memory size +or the number of CPUs. By setting the `placement-strategy` +cluster property appropriately, it is possible then to distribute +resources based on resource requirements and node size. See also +<<cmdhelp_resource_utilization,resource utilization attributes>>. + +Usage: +............... +utilization <node> set <attr> <value> +utilization <node> delete <attr> +utilization <node> show <attr> +............... +Examples: +............... +utilization node_1 set memory 16384 +utilization node_1 show cpu +............... + +[[cmdhelp_site,GEO clustering site support]] +=== `site` - GEO clustering site support + +A cluster may consist of two or more subclusters in different and +distant locations. This set of commands supports such setups. + +[[cmdhelp_site_ticket,manage site tickets]] +==== `ticket` + +Tickets are cluster-wide attributes. They can be managed at the +site where this command is executed. + +It is then possible to constrain resources depending on the +ticket availability (see the <<cmdhelp_configure_rsc_ticket,`rsc_ticket`>> command +for more details). + +Usage: +............... +ticket {grant|revoke|standby|activate|show|time|delete} <ticket> +............... +Example: +............... +ticket grant ticket1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options,User preferences]] +=== `options` - User preferences + +The user may set various options for the crm shell itself. + +[[cmdhelp_options_add-quotes,add quotes around parameters containing spaces]] +==== `add-quotes` + +The shell (as in `/bin/sh`) parser strips quotes from the command +line. This may sometimes make it really difficult to type values +which contain white space. One typical example is the configure +filter command. The crm shell will supply extra quotes around +arguments which contain white space. The default is `yes`. + +.Note on quotes use +**************************** +Adding quotes around arguments automatically has been introduced +with version 1.2.2 and it is technically a regression. Being a +regression is the only reason the `add-quotes` option exists. If +you have custom shell scripts which would break, just set the +`add-quotes` option to `no`. + +For instance, with adding quotes enabled, it is possible to do +the following: +............... +# crm configure primitive d1 Dummy \ + meta description="some description here" +# crm configure filter 'sed "s/hostlist=./&node-c /"' fencing +............... +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_options_check-frequency,when to perform semantic check]] +==== `check-frequency` + +Semantic check of the CIB or elements modified or created may be +done on every configuration change (`always`), when verifying +(`on-verify`) or `never`. It is by default set to `always`. +Experts may want to change the setting to `on-verify`. + +The checks require that resource agents are present. If they are +not installed at the configuration time set this preference to +`never`. + +See <<topics_Features_Checks,Configuration semantic checks>> for more details. + +[[cmdhelp_options_check-mode,how to treat semantic errors]] +==== `check-mode` + +Semantic check of the CIB or elements modified or created may be +done in the `strict` mode or in the `relaxed` mode. In the former +certain problems are treated as configuration errors. In the +`relaxed` mode all are treated as warnings. The default is `strict`. + +See <<topics_Features_Checks,Configuration semantic checks>> for more details. + +[[cmdhelp_options_colorscheme,set colors for output]] +==== `colorscheme` + +With `output` set to `color`, a comma separated list of colors +from this option are used to emphasize: + +- keywords +- object ids +- attribute names +- attribute values +- scores +- resource references + +`crm` can show colors only if there is curses support for python +installed (usually provided by the `python-curses` package). The +colors are whatever is available in your terminal. Use `normal` +if you want to keep the default foreground color. + +This user preference defaults to +`yellow,normal,cyan,red,green,magenta` which is good for +terminals with dark background. You may want to change the color +scheme and save it in the preferences file for other color +setups. + +Example: +............... +colorscheme yellow,normal,blue,red,green,magenta +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options_editor,set preferred editor program]] +==== `editor` + +The `edit` command invokes an editor. Use this to specify your +preferred editor program. If not set, it will default to either +the value of the `EDITOR` environment variable or to one of the +standard UNIX editors (`vi`,`emacs`,`nano`). + +Usage: +............... +editor program +............... +Example: +............... +editor vim +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options_manage-children,how to handle children resource attributes]] +==== `manage-children` + +Some resource management commands, such as `resource stop`, when +the target resource is a group, may not always produce desired +result. Each element, group and the primitive members, can have a +meta attribute and those attributes may end up with conflicting +values. Consider the following construct: +............... +crm(live)# configure show svc fs virtual-ip +primitive fs Filesystem \ + params device="/dev/drbd0" directory="/srv/nfs" fstype=ext3 \ + op monitor interval=10s \ + meta target-role=Started +primitive virtual-ip IPaddr2 \ + params ip=10.2.13.110 iflabel=1 \ + op monitor interval=10s \ + op start interval=0 \ + meta target-role=Started +group svc fs virtual-ip \ + meta target-role=Stopped +............... + +Even though the element +svc+ should be stopped, the group is +actually running because all its members have the +target-role+ +set to +Started+: +............... +crm(live)# resource show svc +resource svc is running on: xen-f +............... + +Hence, if the user invokes +resource stop svc+ the intention is +not clear. This preference gives the user an opportunity to +better control what happens if attributes of group members have +values which are in conflict with the same attribute of the group +itself. + +Possible values are +ask+ (the default), +always+, and +never+. +If set to +always+, the crm shell removes all children attributes +which have values different from the parent. If set to +never+, +all children attributes are left intact. Finally, if set to ++ask+, the user will be asked for each member what is to be done. + +[[cmdhelp_options_output,set output type]] +==== `output` + +`crm` can adorn configurations in two ways: in color (similar to +for instance the `ls --color` command) and by showing keywords in +upper case. Possible values are `plain`, `color-always`, `color`, +and 'uppercase'. It is possible to combine `uppercase` with one +of the color values in order to get an upper case xmass tree. Just +set this option to `color,uppercase` or `color-always,uppercase`. +In case you need color codes in pipes, `color-always` forces color +codes even in case the terminal is not a tty (just like `ls +--color=always`). + +[[cmdhelp_options_pager,set preferred pager program]] +==== `pager` + +The `view` command displays text through a pager. Use this to +specify your preferred pager program. If not set, it will default +to either the value of the `PAGER` environment variable or to one +of the standard UNIX system pagers (`less`,`more`,`pg`). + +[[cmdhelp_options_reset,reset user preferences to factory defaults]] +==== `reset` + +This command resets all user options to the defaults. If used as +a single-shot command, the rc file (+$HOME/.config/crm/rc+) is +reset to the defaults too. + +[[cmdhelp_options_save,save the user preferences to the rc file]] +==== `save` + +Save current settings to the rc file (+$HOME/.config/crm/rc+). On +further `crm` runs, the rc file is automatically read and parsed. + +[[cmdhelp_options_set,Set the value of a given option]] +==== `set` + +Sets the value of an option. Takes the fully qualified +name of the option as argument, as displayed by +show all+. + +The modified option value is stored in the user-local +configuration file, usually found in +~/.config/crm/crm.conf+. + +Usage: +........ +set <option> <value> +........ + +Example: +........ +set color.warn "magenta bold" +set editor nano +........ + +[[cmdhelp_options_show,show current user preference]] +==== `show` + +Display all current settings. + +Given an option name as argument, `show` will display only the value +of that argument. + +Given +all+ as argument, `show` displays all available user options. + +Usage: +........ +show [all|<option>] +........ + +Example: +........ +show +show skill-level +show all +........ + +[[cmdhelp_options_skill-level,set skill level]] +==== `skill-level` + +Based on the skill-level setting, the user is allowed to use only +a subset of commands. There are three levels: operator, +administrator, and expert. The operator level allows only +commands at the `resource` and `node` levels, but not editing +or deleting resources. The administrator may do that and may also +configure the cluster at the `configure` level and manage the +shadow CIBs. The expert may do all. + +Usage: +............... +skill-level <level> + +level :: operator | administrator | expert +............... + +.Note on security +**************************** +The `skill-level` option is advisory only. There is nothing +stopping any users change their skill level (see +<<topics_Features_Security,Access Control Lists (ACL)>> on how to enforce +access control). +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_options_sort-elements,sort CIB elements]] +==== `sort-elements` + +`crm` by default sorts CIB elements. If you want them appear in +the order they were created, set this option to `no`. + +Usage: +............... +sort-elements {yes|no} +............... +Example: +............... +sort-elements no +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options_user,set the cluster user]] +==== `user` + +Sufficient privileges are necessary in order to manage a +cluster: programs such as `crm_verify` or `crm_resource` and, +ultimately, `cibadmin` have to be run either as `root` or as the +CRM owner user (typically `hacluster`). You don't have to worry +about that if you run `crm` as `root`. A more secure way is to +run the program with your usual privileges, set this option to +the appropriate user (such as `hacluster`), and setup the +`sudoers` file. + +Usage: +............... +user system-user +............... +Example: +............... +user hacluster +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options_wait,synchronous operation]] +==== `wait` + +In normal operation, `crm` runs a command and gets back +immediately to process other commands or get input from the user. +With this option set to `yes` it will wait for the started +transition to finish. In interactive mode dots are printed to +indicate progress. + +Usage: +............... +wait {yes|no} +............... +Example: +............... +wait yes +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure,CIB configuration]] +=== `configure` - CIB configuration + +This level enables all CIB object definition commands. + +The configuration may be logically divided into four parts: +nodes, resources, constraints, and (cluster) properties and +attributes. Each of these commands support one or more basic CIB +objects. + +Nodes and attributes describing nodes are managed using the +`node` command. + +Commands for resources are: + +- `primitive` +- `monitor` +- `group` +- `clone` +- `ms`/`master` (master-slave) + +In order to streamline large configurations, it is possible to +define a template which can later be referenced in primitives: + +- `rsc_template` + +In that case the primitive inherits all attributes defined in the +template. + +There are three types of constraints: + +- `location` +- `colocation` +- `order` + +It is possible to define fencing order (stonith resource +priorities): + +- `fencing_topology` + +Finally, there are the cluster properties, resource meta +attributes defaults, and operations defaults. All are just a set +of attributes. These attributes are managed by the following +commands: + +- `property` +- `rsc_defaults` +- `op_defaults` + +In addition to the cluster configuration, the Access Control +Lists (ACL) can be setup to allow access to parts of the CIB for +users other than +root+ and +hacluster+. The following commands +manage ACL: + +- `user` +- `role` + +In Pacemaker 1.1.12 and up, this command replaces the `user` command +for handling ACLs: + +- `acl_target` + +The changes are applied to the current CIB only on ending the +configuration session or using the `commit` command. + +Comments start with +#+ in the first line. The comments are tied +to the element which follows. If the element moves, its comments +will follow. + +[[cmdhelp_configure_acl_target,Define target access rights]] +==== `acl_target` + +Defines an ACL target. + +Usage: +................ +acl_target <tid> [<role> ...] +................ +Example: +................ +acl_target joe resource_admin constraint_editor +................ + +[[cmdhelp_configure_alert,Event-driven alerts]] +==== `alert` + +.Version note +**************************** +This feature is only available +in Pacemaker 1.1.15+. +**************************** + +Event-driven alerts enables calling scripts whenever interesting +events occur in the cluster (nodes joining or leaving, resources +starting or stopping, etc.). + +The +path+ is an arbitrary file path to an alert script. Existing +external scripts used with ClusterMon resources can be used as alert +scripts, since the interface is compatible. + +Each alert may have a number of receipients configured. These will be +passed to the script as arguments. The first recipient will also be +passed as the +CRM_alert_recipient+ environment variable, for +compatibility with existing scripts that only support one recipient. + +The available meta attributes are +timeout+ (default 30s) and ++timestamp-format+ (default `"%H:%M:%S.%06N"`). + +Some configurations may require each recipient to be delimited by +brackets, to avoid ambiguity. In the example +alert-2+ below, the meta +attribute for `timeout` is defined after the recipient, so the +brackets are used to ensure that the meta attribute is set for the +alert and not just the recipient. This can be avoided by setting any +alert attributes before defining the recipients. + +Usage: +............... +alert <id> <path> \ + [attributes <nvpair> ...] \ + [meta <nvpair> ...] \ + [to [{] <recipient> + [attributes <nvpair> ...] \ + [meta <nvpair> ...] [}] \ + ...] +............... + +Example: +............... +alert alert-1 /srv/pacemaker/pcmk_alert_sample.sh \ + to /var/log/cluster-alerts.log + +alert alert-2 /srv/pacemaker/example_alert.sh \ + meta timeout=60s \ + to { /var/log/cluster-alerts.log } +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_cib,CIB shadow management]] +==== `cib` + +This level is for management of shadow CIBs. It is available at +the `configure` level to enable saving intermediate changes to a +shadow CIB instead of to the live cluster. This short excerpt +shows how: +............... +crm(live)configure# cib new test-2 +INFO: test-2 shadow CIB created +crm(test-2)configure# commit +............... +Note how the current CIB in the prompt changed from +live+ to ++test-2+ after issuing the `cib new` command. See also the +<<cmdhelp_cib,CIB shadow management>> for more information. + +[[cmdhelp_configure_cibstatus,CIB status management and editing]] +==== `cibstatus` + +Enter edit and manage the CIB status section level. See the +<<cmdhelp_cibstatus,CIB status management section>>. + +[[cmdhelp_configure_clone,define a clone]] +==== `clone` + +The `clone` command creates a resource clone. It may contain a +single primitive resource or one group of resources. + +Usage: +............... +clone <name> <rsc> + [description=<description>] + [meta <attr_list>] + [params <attr_list>] + +attr_list :: [$id=<id>] <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...] | $id-ref=<id> +............... +Example: +............... +clone cl_fence apc_1 \ + meta clone-node-max=1 globally-unique=false +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_colocation,colocate resources]] +==== `colocation` (`collocation`) + +This constraint expresses the placement relation between two +or more resources. If there are more than two resources, then the +constraint is called a resource set. + +The score is used to indicate the priority of the constraint. A +positive score indicates that the resources should run on the same +node. A negative score that they should not run on the same +node. Values of positive or negative +infinity+ indicate a mandatory +constraint. + +In the two resource form, the cluster will place +<with-rsc>+ first, +and then decide where to put the +<rsc>+ resource. + +Collocation resource sets have an extra attribute (+sequential+) +to allow for sets of resources which don't depend on each other +in terms of state. The shell syntax for such sets is to put +resources in parentheses. + +Sets cannot be nested. + +The optional +node-attribute+ can be used to colocate resources on a +set of nodes and not necessarily on the same node. For example, by +setting a node attribute +color+ on all nodes and setting the ++node-attribute+ value to +color+ as well, the colocated resources +will be placed on any node that has the same color. + +For more details on how to configure resource sets, see +<<topics_Features_Resourcesets,`Syntax: Resource sets`>>. + +Usage: +............... +colocation <id> <score>: <rsc>[:<role>] <with-rsc>[:<role>] + [node-attribute=<node_attr>] + +colocation <id> <score>: <resource_sets> + [node-attribute=<node_attr>] + +resource_sets :: <resource_set> [<resource_set> ...] + +resource_set :: ["("|"["] <rsc>[:<role>] [<rsc>[:<role>] ...] \ + [<attributes>] [")"|"]"] + +attributes :: [require-all=(true|false)] [sequential=(true|false)] + +............... +Example: +............... +colocation never_put_apache_with_dummy -inf: apache dummy +colocation c1 inf: A ( B C ) +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_commit,commit the changes to the CIB]] +==== `commit` + +Commit the current configuration to the CIB in use. As noted +elsewhere, commands in a configure session don't have immediate +effect on the CIB. All changes are applied at one point in time, +either using `commit` or when the user leaves the configure +level. In case the CIB in use changed in the meantime, presumably +by somebody else, the crm shell will refuse to apply the changes. + +If you know that it's fine to still apply them, add +force+ to the +command line. + +To disable CIB patching and apply the changes by replacing the CIB +completely, add +replace+ to the command line. Note that this can lead +to previous changes being overwritten if some other process +concurrently modifies the CIB. + +Usage: +............... +commit [force] [replace] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_default-timeouts,set timeouts for operations to minimums from the meta-data]] +==== `default-timeouts` + +This command takes the timeouts from the actions section of the +resource agent meta-data and sets them for the operations of the +primitive. + +Usage: +............... +default-timeouts <id> [<id>...] +............... + +.Note on `default-timeouts` +**************************** +The use of this command is discouraged in favor of manually +determining the best timeouts required for the particular +configuration. Relying on the resource agent to supply appropriate +timeouts can cause the resource to fail at the worst possible moment. + +Appropriate timeouts for resource actions are context-sensitive, and +should be carefully considered with the whole configuration in mind. +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_configure_delete,delete CIB objects]] +==== `delete` + +Delete one or more objects. If an object to be deleted belongs to +a container object, such as a group, and it is the only resource +in that container, then the container is deleted as well. Any +related constraints are removed as well. + +If the object is a started resource, it will not be deleted unless the ++--force+ flag is passed to the command, or the +force+ option is set. + +Usage: +............... +delete [--force] <id> [<id>...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_edit,edit CIB objects]] +==== `edit` + +This command invokes the editor with the object description. As +with the `show` command, the user may choose to edit all objects +or a set of objects. + +If the user insists, he or she may edit the XML edition of the +object. If you do that, don't modify any id attributes. + +Usage: +............... +edit [xml] [<id> ...] +edit [xml] changed +............... + +.Note on renaming element ids +**************************** +The edit command sometimes cannot properly handle modifying +element ids. In particular for elements which belong to group or +ms resources. Group and ms resources themselves also cannot be +renamed. Please use the `rename` command instead. +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_configure_erase,erase the CIB]] +==== `erase` + +The `erase` clears all configuration. Apart from nodes. To remove +nodes, you have to specify an additional keyword `nodes`. + +Note that removing nodes from the live cluster may have some +strange/interesting/unwelcome effects. + +Usage: +............... +erase [nodes] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_fencing_topology,node fencing order]] +==== `fencing_topology` + +If multiple fencing (stonith) devices are available capable of +fencing a node, their order may be specified by +fencing_topology+. +The order is specified per node. + +Stonith resources can be separated by +,+ in which case all of +them need to succeed. If they fail, the next stonith resource (or +set of resources) is used. In other words, use comma to separate +resources which all need to succeed and whitespace for serial +order. It is not allowed to use whitespace around comma. + +If the node is left out, the order is used for all nodes. +That should reduce the configuration size in some stonith setups. + +From Pacemaker version 1.1.14, it is possible to use a node attribute +as the +target+ in a fencing topology. The syntax for this usage is +described below. + +From Pacemaker version 1.1.14, it is also possible to use regular +expression patterns as the +target+ in a fencing topology. The configured +fencing sequence then applies to all devices matching the pattern. + +Usage: +............... +fencing_topology <stonith_resources> [<stonith_resources> ...] +fencing_topology <fencing_order> [<fencing_order> ...] + +fencing_order :: <target> <stonith_resources> [<stonith_resources> ...] + +stonith_resources :: <rsc>[,<rsc>...] +target :: <node>: | attr:<node-attribute>=<value> | pattern:<pattern> +............... +Example: +............... +# Only kill the power if poison-pill fails +fencing_topology poison-pill power + +# As above for node-a, but a different strategy for node-b +fencing_topology \ + node-a: poison-pill power \ + node-b: ipmi serial + +# Fencing anything on rack 1 requires fencing via both APC 1 and 2, +# to defeat the redundancy provided by two separate UPS units. +fencing_topology attr:rack=1 apc01,apc02 + +# Fencing for all machines named green.* is done using the pear +# fencing device first, while all machines named red.* are fenced +# using the apple fencing device first. +fencing_topology \ + pattern:green.* pear apple \ + pattern:red.* apple pear +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_filter,filter CIB objects]] +==== `filter` + +This command filters the given CIB elements through an external +program. The program should accept input on `stdin` and send +output to `stdout` (the standard UNIX filter conventions). As +with the `show` command, the user may choose to filter all or +just a subset of elements. + +It is possible to filter the XML representation of objects, but +probably not as useful as the configuration language. The +presentation is somewhat different from what would be displayed +by the `show` command---each element is shown on a single line, +i.e. there are no backslashes and no other embelishments. + +Don't forget to put quotes around the filter if it contains +spaces. + +Usage: +............... +filter <prog> [xml] [<id> ...] +filter <prog> [xml] changed +............... +Examples: +............... +filter "sed '/^primitive/s/target-role=[^ ]*//'" +# crm configure filter "sed '/^primitive/s/target-role=[^ ]*//'" +crm configure <<END + filter "sed '/threshold=\"1\"/s/=\"1\"/=\"0\"/g'" +END +............... + +.Note on quotation marks +************************** +Filter commands which feature a blend of quotation marks can be +difficult to get right, especially when used directly from bash, since +bash does its own quotation parsing. In these cases, it can be easier +to supply the filter command as standard input. See the last example +above. +************************** + +[[cmdhelp_configure_get_property,Get property value]] +==== `get-property` + +Show the value of the given property. If the value is not set, the +command will print the default value for the property, if known. + +If no property name is passed to the command, the list of known +cluster properties is printed. + +If the property is set multiple times, for example using multiple +property sets with different rule expressions, the output of this +command is undefined. + +Pass the argument +-t+ or +--true+ to `get-property` to translate +the argument value into +true+ or +false+. If the value is not +set, the command will print +false+. + +Usage: +............... +get-property [-t|--true] [<name>] +............... + +Example: +............... +get-property stonith-enabled +get-property -t maintenance-mode +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_graph,generate a directed graph]] +==== `graph` + +Create a graphviz graphical layout from the current cluster +configuration. + +Currently, only `dot` (directed graph) is supported. It is +essentially a visualization of resource ordering. + +The graph may be saved to a file which can be used as source for +various graphviz tools (by default it is displayed in the user's +X11 session). Optionally, by specifying the format, one can also +produce an image instead. + +For more or different graphviz attributes, it is possible to save +the default set of attributes to an ini file. If this file exists +it will always override the builtin settings. The +exportsettings+ +subcommand also prints the location of the ini file. + +Usage: +............... +graph [<gtype> [<file> [<img_format>]]] +graph exportsettings + +gtype :: dot +img_format :: `dot` output format (see the +-T+ option) +............... +Example: +............... +graph dot +graph dot clu1.conf.dot +graph dot clu1.conf.svg svg +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_group,define a group]] +==== `group` + +The `group` command creates a group of resources. This can be useful +when resources depend on other resources and require that those +resources start in order on the same node. A common use of resource +groups is to ensure that a server and a virtual IP are located +together, and that the virtual IP is started before the server. + +Grouped resources are started in the order they appear in the group, +and stopped in the reverse order. If a resource in the group cannot +run anywhere, resources following it in the group will not start. + +`group` can be passed the "container" meta attribute, to indicate that +it is to be used to group VM resources monitored using Nagios. The +resource referred to by the container attribute must be of type +`ocf:heartbeat:Xen`, `ocf:heartbeat:VirtualDomain` or `ocf:heartbeat:lxc`. + +Usage: +............... +group <name> <rsc> [<rsc>...] + [description=<description>] + [meta attr_list] + [params attr_list] + +attr_list :: [$id=<id>] <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...] | $id-ref=<id> +............... +Example: +............... +group internal_www disk0 fs0 internal_ip apache \ + meta target_role=stopped + +group vm-and-services vm vm-sshd meta container="vm" +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_load,import the CIB from a file]] +==== `load` + +Load a part of configuration (or all of it) from a local file or +a network URL. The +replace+ method replaces the current +configuration with the one from the source. The +update+ method +tries to import the contents into the current configuration. The ++push+ method imports the contents into the current configuration +and removes any lines that are not present in the given +configuration. +The file may be a CLI file or an XML file. + +If the URL is `-`, the configuration is read from standard input. + +Usage: +............... +load [xml] <method> URL + +method :: replace | update | push +............... +Example: +............... +load xml update myfirstcib.xml +load xml replace http://storage.big.com/cibs/bigcib.xml +load xml push smallcib.xml +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_location,a location preference]] +==== `location` + +`location` defines the preference of nodes for the given +resource. The location constraints consist of one or more rules +which specify a score to be awarded if the rule matches. + +The resource referenced by the location constraint can be one of the +following: + +* Plain resource reference: +location loc1 webserver 100: node1+ +* Resource set in curly brackets: +location loc1 { virtual-ip webserver } 100: node1+ +* Tag containing resource ids: +location loc1 tag1 100: node1+ +* Resource pattern: +location loc1 /web.*/ 100: node1+ + +The +resource-discovery+ attribute allows probes to be selectively +enabled or disabled per resource and node. + +The syntax for resource sets is described in detail for +<<cmdhelp_configure_colocation,`colocation`>>. + +For more details on how to configure resource sets, see +<<topics_Features_Resourcesets,`Syntax: Resource sets`>>. + +For more information on rule expressions, see +<<topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions>>. + +Usage: +............... +location <id> <rsc> [<attributes>] {<node_pref>|<rules>} + +rsc :: /<rsc-pattern>/ + | { resource_sets } + | <rsc> + +attributes :: role=<role> | resource-discovery=always|never|exclusive + +node_pref :: <score>: <node> + +rules :: + rule [id_spec] [$role=<role>] <score>: <expression> + [rule [id_spec] [$role=<role>] <score>: <expression> ...] + +id_spec :: $id=<id> | $id-ref=<id> +score :: <number> | <attribute> | [-]inf +expression :: <simple_exp> [<bool_op> <simple_exp> ...] +bool_op :: or | and +simple_exp :: <attribute> [type:]<binary_op> <value> + | <unary_op> <attribute> + | date <date_expr> +type :: string | version | number +binary_op :: lt | gt | lte | gte | eq | ne +unary_op :: defined | not_defined + +date_expr :: lt <end> + | gt <start> + | in start=<start> end=<end> + | in start=<start> <duration> + | spec <date_spec> +duration|date_spec :: + hours=<value> + | monthdays=<value> + | weekdays=<value> + | yearsdays=<value> + | months=<value> + | weeks=<value> + | years=<value> + | weekyears=<value> + | moon=<value> +............... +Examples: +............... +location conn_1 internal_www 100: node1 + +location conn_1 internal_www \ + rule 50: #uname eq node1 \ + rule pingd: defined pingd + +location conn_2 dummy_float \ + rule -inf: not_defined pingd or pingd number:lte 0 + +# never probe for rsc1 on node1 +location no-probe rsc1 resource-discovery=never -inf: node1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_modgroup,modify group]] +==== `modgroup` + +Add or remove primitives in a group. The `add` subcommand appends +the new group member by default. Should it go elsewhere, there +are `after` and `before` clauses. + +Usage: +............... +modgroup <id> add <id> [after <id>|before <id>] +modgroup <id> remove <id> +............... +Examples: +............... +modgroup share1 add storage2 before share1-fs +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_monitor,add monitor operation to a primitive]] +==== `monitor` + +Monitor is by far the most common operation. It is possible to +add it without editing the whole resource. Also, long primitive +definitions may be a bit uncluttered. In order to make this +command as concise as possible, less common operation attributes +are not available. If you need them, then use the `op` part of +the `primitive` command. + +Usage: +............... +monitor <rsc>[:<role>] <interval>[:<timeout>] +............... +Example: +............... +monitor apcfence 60m:60s +............... + +Note that after executing the command, the monitor operation may +be shown as part of the primitive definition. + +[[cmdhelp_configure_ms,define a master-slave resource]] +==== `ms` (`master`) + +The `ms` command creates a master/slave resource type. It may contain a +single primitive resource or one group of resources. + +Usage: +............... +ms <name> <rsc> + [description=<description>] + [meta attr_list] + [params attr_list] + +attr_list :: [$id=<id>] <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...] | $id-ref=<id> +............... +Example: +............... +ms disk1 drbd1 \ + meta notify=true globally-unique=false +............... + +.Note on `id-ref` usage +**************************** +Instance or meta attributes (`params` and `meta`) may contain +a reference to another set of attributes. In that case, no other +attributes are allowed. Since attribute sets' ids, though they do +exist, are not shown in the `crm`, it is also possible to +reference an object instead of an attribute set. `crm` will +automatically replace such a reference with the right id: + +............... +crm(live)configure# primitive a2 www-2 meta $id-ref=a1 +crm(live)configure# show a2 +primitive a2 apache \ + meta $id-ref=a1-meta_attributes + [...] +............... +It is advisable to give meaningful names to attribute sets which +are going to be referenced. +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_configure_node,define a cluster node]] +==== `node` + +The node command describes a cluster node. Nodes in the CIB are +commonly created automatically by the CRM. Hence, you should not +need to deal with nodes unless you also want to define node +attributes. Note that it is also possible to manage node +attributes at the `node` level. + +Usage: +............... +node [$id=<id>] <uname>[:<type>] + [description=<description>] + [attributes [$id=<id>] [<score>:] [rule...] + <param>=<value> [<param>=<value>...]] | $id-ref=<ref> + [utilization [$id=<id>] [<score>:] [rule...] + <param>=<value> [<param>=<value>...]] | $id-ref=<ref> + +type :: normal | member | ping | remote +............... +Example: +............... +node node1 +node big_node attributes memory=64 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_op_defaults,set resource operations defaults]] +==== `op_defaults` + +Set defaults for the operations meta attributes. + +For more information on rule expressions, see +<<topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions>>. + +Usage: +............... +op_defaults [$id=<set_id>] [rule ...] <option>=<value> [<option>=<value> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +op_defaults record-pending=true +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_order,order resources]] +==== `order` + +This constraint expresses the order of actions on two resources +or more resources. If there are more than two resources, then the +constraint is called a resource set. + +Ordered resource sets have an extra attribute to allow for sets +of resources whose actions may run in parallel. The shell syntax +for such sets is to put resources in parentheses. + +If the subsequent resource can start or promote after any one of the +resources in a set has done, enclose the set in brackets (+[+ and +]+). + +Sets cannot be nested. + +Three strings are reserved to specify a kind of order constraint: ++Mandatory+, +Optional+, and +Serialize+. It is preferred to use +one of these settings instead of score. Previous versions mapped +scores +0+ and +inf+ to keywords +advisory+ and +mandatory+. +That is still valid but deprecated. + +For more details on how to configure resource sets, see +<<topics_Features_Resourcesets,`Syntax: Resource sets`>>. + +Usage: +............... +order <id> [{kind|<score>}:] first then [symmetrical=<bool>] + +order <id> [{kind|<score>}:] resource_sets [symmetrical=<bool>] + +kind :: Mandatory | Optional | Serialize + +first :: <rsc>[:<action>] + +then :: <rsc>[:<action>] + +resource_sets :: resource_set [resource_set ...] + +resource_set :: ["["|"("] <rsc>[:<action>] [<rsc>[:<action>] ...] \ + [attributes] ["]"|")"] + +attributes :: [require-all=(true|false)] [sequential=(true|false)] + +............... +Example: +............... +order o-1 Mandatory: apache:start ip_1 +order o-2 Serialize: A ( B C ) +order o-3 inf: [ A B ] C +order o-4 first-resource then-resource +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_primitive,define a resource]] +==== `primitive` + +The primitive command describes a resource. It may be referenced +only once in group, clone, or master-slave objects. If it's not +referenced, then it is placed as a single resource in the CIB. + +Operations may be specified anonymously, as a group or by reference: + +* "Anonymous", as a list of +op+ specifications. Use this + method if you don't need to reference the set of operations + elsewhere. This is the most common way to define operations. + +* If reusing operation sets is desired, use the +operations+ keyword + along with an id to give the operations set a name. Use the + +operations+ keyword and an id-ref value set to the id of another + operations set, to apply the same set of operations to this + primitive. + +Operation attributes which are not recognized are saved as +instance attributes of that operation. A typical example is ++OCF_CHECK_LEVEL+. + +For multistate resources, roles are specified as +role=<role>+. + +A template may be defined for resources which are of the same +type and which share most of the configuration. See +<<cmdhelp_configure_rsc_template,`rsc_template`>> for more information. + +Attributes containing time values, such as the +interval+ attribute on +operations, are configured either as a plain number, which is +interpreted as a time in seconds, or using one of the following +suffixes: + +* +s+, +sec+ - time in seconds (same as no suffix) +* +ms+, +msec+ - time in milliseconds +* +us+, +usec+ - time in microseconds +* +m+, +min+ - time in minutes +* +h+, +hr+ - time in hours + +Usage: +............... +primitive <rsc> {[<class>:[<provider>:]]<type>|@<template>} + [description=<description>] + [[params] attr_list] + [meta attr_list] + [utilization attr_list] + [operations id_spec] + [op op_type [<attribute>=<value>...] ...] + +attr_list :: [$id=<id>] [<score>:] [rule...] + <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...]] | $id-ref=<id> +id_spec :: $id=<id> | $id-ref=<id> +op_type :: start | stop | monitor +............... +Example: +............... +primitive apcfence stonith:apcsmart \ + params ttydev=/dev/ttyS0 hostlist="node1 node2" \ + op start timeout=60s \ + op monitor interval=30m timeout=60s + +primitive www8 apache \ + configfile=/etc/apache/www8.conf \ + operations $id-ref=apache_ops + +primitive db0 mysql \ + params config=/etc/mysql/db0.conf \ + op monitor interval=60s \ + op monitor interval=300s OCF_CHECK_LEVEL=10 + +primitive r0 ocf:linbit:drbd \ + params drbd_resource=r0 \ + op monitor role=Master interval=60s \ + op monitor role=Slave interval=300s + +primitive xen0 @vm_scheme1 xmfile=/etc/xen/vm/xen0 + +primitive mySpecialRsc Special \ + params 3: rule #uname eq node1 interface=eth1 \ + params 2: rule #uname eq node2 interface=eth2 port=8888 \ + params 1: interface=eth0 port=9999 + +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_property,set a cluster property]] +==== `property` + +Set cluster configuration properties. To list the +available cluster configuration properties, use the +<<cmdhelp_ra_info,`ra info`>> command with +pengine+, +crmd+, ++cib+ and +stonithd+ as arguments. +When setting the +maintenance-mode+ property, it will +inform the user if there are nodes or resources that +have the +maintenance+ property. + +For more information on rule expressions, see +<<topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions>>. + +Usage: +............... +property [<set_id>:] [rule ...] <option>=<value> [<option>=<value> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +property stonith-enabled=true +property rule date spec years=2014 stonith-enabled=false +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_ptest,show cluster actions if changes were committed]] +==== `ptest` (`simulate`) + +Show PE (Policy Engine) motions using `ptest(8)` or +`crm_simulate(8)`. + +A CIB is constructed using the current user edited configuration +and the status from the running CIB. The resulting CIB is run +through `ptest` (or `crm_simulate`) to show changes which would +happen if the configuration is committed. + +The status section may be loaded from another source and modified +using the <<cmdhelp_cibstatus,`cibstatus`>> level commands. In that case, the +`ptest` command will issue a message informing the user that the +Policy Engine graph is not calculated based on the current status +section and therefore won't show what would happen to the +running but some imaginary cluster. + +If you have graphviz installed and X11 session, `dotty(1)` is run +to display the changes graphically. + +Add a string of +v+ characters to increase verbosity. `ptest` +can also show allocation scores. +utilization+ turns on +information about the remaining capacity of nodes. With the ++actions+ option, `ptest` will print all resource actions. + +The `ptest` program has been replaced by `crm_simulate` in newer +Pacemaker versions. In some installations both could be +installed. Use `simulate` to enfore using `crm_simulate`. + +Usage: +............... +ptest [nograph] [v...] [scores] [actions] [utilization] +............... +Examples: +............... +ptest scores +ptest vvvvv +simulate actions +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_refresh,refresh from CIB]] +==== `refresh` + +Refresh the internal structures from the CIB. All changes made +during this session are lost. + +Usage: +............... +refresh +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rename,rename a CIB object]] +==== `rename` + +Rename an object. It is recommended to use this command to rename +a resource, because it will take care of updating all related +constraints and a parent resource. Changing ids with the edit +command won't have the same effect. + +If you want to rename a resource, it must be in the stopped state. + +Usage: +............... +rename <old_id> <new_id> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_role,define role access rights]] +==== `role` + +An ACL role is a set of rules which describe access rights to +CIB. Rules consist of an access right +read+, +write+, or +deny+ +and a specification denoting part of the configuration to which +the access right applies. The specification can be an XPath or a +combination of tag and id references. If an attribute is +appended, then the specification applies only to that attribute +of the matching element. + +There is a number of shortcuts for XPath specifications. The ++meta+, +params+, and +utilization+ shortcuts reference resource +meta attributes, parameters, and utilization respectively. The +`location` may be used to specify location constraints most of +the time to allow resource `move` and `unmove` commands. The +`property` references cluster properties. The `node` allows +reading node attributes. +nodeattr+ and +nodeutil+ reference node +attributes and node capacity (utilization). The `status` shortcut +references the whole status section of the CIB. Read access to +status is necessary for various monitoring tools such as +`crm_mon(8)` (aka `crm status`). + +For more information on rule expressions, see +<<topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions>>. + +Usage: +............... +role <role-id> rule [rule ...] + +rule :: acl-right cib-spec [attribute:<attribute>] + +acl-right :: read | write | deny + +cib-spec :: xpath-spec | tag-ref-spec +xpath-spec :: xpath:<xpath> | shortcut +tag-ref-spec :: tag:<tag> | ref:<id> | tag:<tag> ref:<id> + +shortcut :: meta:<rsc>[:<attr>] + params:<rsc>[:<attr>] + utilization:<rsc> + location:<rsc> + property[:<attr>] + node[:<node>] + nodeattr[:<attr>] + nodeutil[:<node>] + status +............... +Example: +............... +role app1_admin \ + write meta:app1:target-role \ + write meta:app1:is-managed \ + write location:app1 \ + read ref:app1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rsc_defaults,set resource defaults]] +==== `rsc_defaults` + +Set defaults for the resource meta attributes. + +For more information on rule expressions, see +<<topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions>>. + +Usage: +............... +rsc_defaults [<set_id>:] [rule ...] <option>=<value> [<option>=<value> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +rsc_defaults failure-timeout=3m +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rsc_template,define a resource template]] +==== `rsc_template` + +The `rsc_template` command creates a resource template. It may be +referenced in primitives. It is used to reduce large +configurations with many similar resources. + +Usage: +............... +rsc_template <name> [<class>:[<provider>:]]<type> + [description=<description>] + [params attr_list] + [meta attr_list] + [utilization attr_list] + [operations id_spec] + [op op_type [<attribute>=<value>...] ...] + +attr_list :: [$id=<id>] <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...] | $id-ref=<id> +id_spec :: $id=<id> | $id-ref=<id> +op_type :: start | stop | monitor +............... +Example: +............... +rsc_template public_vm Xen \ + op start timeout=300s \ + op stop timeout=300s \ + op monitor interval=30s timeout=60s \ + op migrate_from timeout=600s \ + op migrate_to timeout=600s +primitive xen0 @public_vm \ + params xmfile=/etc/xen/xen0 +primitive xen1 @public_vm \ + params xmfile=/etc/xen/xen1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rsc_ticket,resources ticket dependency]] +==== `rsc_ticket` + +This constraint expresses dependency of resources on cluster-wide +attributes, also known as tickets. Tickets are mainly used in +geo-clusters, which consist of multiple sites. A ticket may be +granted to a site, thus allowing resources to run there. + +The +loss-policy+ attribute specifies what happens to the +resource (or resources) if the ticket is revoked. The default is +either +stop+ or +demote+ depending on whether a resource is +multi-state. + +See also the <<cmdhelp_site_ticket,`site`>> set of commands. + +Usage: +............... +rsc_ticket <id> <ticket_id>: <rsc>[:<role>] [<rsc>[:<role>] ...] + [loss-policy=<loss_policy_action>] + +loss_policy_action :: stop | demote | fence | freeze +............... +Example: +............... +rsc_ticket ticket-A_public-ip ticket-A: public-ip +rsc_ticket ticket-A_bigdb ticket-A: bigdb loss-policy=fence +rsc_ticket ticket-B_storage ticket-B: drbd-a:Master drbd-b:Master +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rsctest,test resources as currently configured]] +==== `rsctest` + +Test resources with current resource configuration. If no nodes +are specified, tests are run on all known nodes. + +The order of resources is significant: it is assumed that later +resources depend on earlier ones. + +If a resource is multi-state, it is assumed that the role on +which later resources depend is master. + +Tests are run sequentially to prevent running the same resource +on two or more nodes. Tests are carried out only if none of the +specified nodes currently run any of the specified resources. +However, it won't verify whether resources run on the other +nodes. + +Superuser privileges are obviously required: either run this as +root or setup the `sudoers` file appropriately. + +Note that resource testing may take some time. + +Usage: +............... +rsctest <rsc_id> [<rsc_id> ...] [<node_id> ...] +............... +Examples: +............... +rsctest my_ip websvc +rsctest websvc nodeB +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_save,save the CIB to a file]] +==== `save` + +Save the current configuration to a file. Optionally, as XML. Use ++-+ instead of file name to write the output to `stdout`. + +The `save` command accepts the same selection arguments as the `show` +command. See the <<cmdhelp_configure_show,help section>> for `show` +for more details. + +Usage: +............... +save [xml] [<id> | type:<type | tag:<tag> | + related:<obj> | changed ...] <file> +............... +Example: +............... +save myfirstcib.txt +save web-server server-config.txt +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_schema,set or display current CIB RNG schema]] +==== `schema` + +CIB's content is validated by a RNG schema. Pacemaker supports +several, depending on version. At least the following schemas are +accepted by `crmsh`: + +* +pacemaker-1.0+ +* +pacemaker-1.1+ +* +pacemaker-1.2+ +* +pacemaker-1.3+ +* +pacemaker-2.0+ + +Use this command to display or switch to another RNG schema. + +Usage: +............... +schema [<schema>] +............... +Example: +............... +schema pacemaker-1.1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_set,set an attribute value]] +==== `set` + +Set the value of a configured attribute. The attribute must +have a value configured previously, and can be an agent +parameter, meta attribute or utilization value. + +The first argument to the command is a path to an attribute. +This is a dot-separated sequence beginning with the name of +the resource, and ending with the name of the attribute to +set. + +Usage: +............... +set <path> <value> +............... +Examples: +............... +set vip1.ip 192.168.20.5 +set vm-a.force_stop 1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_show,display CIB objects]] +==== `show` + +The `show` command displays CIB objects. Without any argument, it +displays all objects in the CIB, but the set of objects displayed by +`show` can be limited to only objects with the given IDs or by using +one or more of the special prefixes described below. + +The XML representation for the objects can be displayed by passing ++xml+ as the first argument. + +To show one or more specific objects, pass the object IDs as +arguments. + +To show all objects of a certain type, use the +type:+ prefix. + +To show all objects in a tag, use the +tag:+ prefix. + +To show all constraints related to a primitive, use the +related:+ prefix. + +To show all modified objects, pass the argument +changed+. + +The prefixes can be used together on a single command line. For +example, to show both the tag itself and the objects tagged by it the +following combination can be used: +show tag:my-tag my-tag+. + +To refine a selection of objects using multiple modifiers, the keywords ++and+ and +or+ can be used. For example, to select all primitives tagged ++foo+, the following combination can be used: ++show type:primitive and tag:foo+. + +To hide values when displaying the configuration, use the ++obscure:<glob>+ argument. This can be useful when sending the +configuration over a public channel, to avoid exposing potentially +sensitive information. The +<glob>+ argument is a bash-style pattern +matching attribute keys. + +Usage: +............... +show [xml] [<id> + | changed + | type:<type> + | tag:<id> + | related:<obj> + | obscure:<glob> + ...] + +type :: node | primitive | group | clone | ms | rsc_template + | location | colocation | order + | rsc_ticket + | property | rsc_defaults | op_defaults + | fencing_topology + | role | user | acl_target + | tag +............... + +Example: +............... +show webapp +show type:primitive +show xml tag:db tag:fs +show related:webapp +show type:primitive obscure:passwd +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_tag,Define resource tags]] +==== `tag` + +Define a resource tag. A tag is an id referring to one or more +resources, without implying any constraints between the tagged +resources. This can be useful for grouping conceptually related +resources. + +Usage: +............... +tag <tag-name>: <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +tag <tag-name> <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +tag web: p-webserver p-vip +tag ips server-vip admin-vip +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_template,edit and import a configuration from a template]] +==== `template` + +The specified template is loaded into the editor. It's up to the +user to make a good CRM configuration out of it. See also the +<<cmdhelp_template,template section>>. + +Usage: +............... +template [xml] url +............... +Example: +............... +template two-apaches.txt +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_upgrade,upgrade the CIB]] +==== `upgrade` + +Attempts to upgrade the CIB to validate with the current +version. Commonly, this is required if the error +`CIB not supported` occurs. It typically means that the +active CIB version is coming from an older release. + +As a safety precaution, the force argument is required if the ++validation-with+ attribute is set to anything other than ++0.6+. Thus in most cases, it is required. + +Usage: +............... +upgrade [force] +............... + +Example: +............... +upgrade force +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_user,define user access rights]] +==== `user` + +Users which normally cannot view or manage cluster configuration +can be allowed access to parts of the CIB. The access is defined +by a set of +read+, +write+, and +deny+ rules as in role +definitions or by referencing roles. The latter is considered +best practice. + +For more information on rule expressions, see +<<topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions>>. + +Usage: +............... +user <uid> {roles|rules} + +roles :: role:<role-ref> [role:<role-ref> ...] +rules :: rule [rule ...] +............... +Example: +............... +user joe \ + role:app1_admin \ + role:read_all +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_validate_all,call agent validate-all for resource]] +==== `validate-all` + +Call the `validate-all` action for the resource, if possible. + +Limitations: + +* The resource agent must implement the `validate-all` action. +* The current user must be root. +* The primitive resource must not use nvpair references. + +Usage: +............... +validate-all <rsc> +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_configure_verify,verify the CIB with crm_verify]] +==== `verify` + +Verify the contents of the CIB which would be committed. + +Usage: +............... +verify +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_xml,raw xml]] +==== `xml` + +Even though we promissed no xml, it may happen, but hopefully +very very seldom, that an element from the CIB cannot be rendered +in the configuration language. In that case, the element will be +shown as raw xml, prefixed by this command. That element can then +be edited like any other. If the shell finds out that after the +change it can digest it, then it is going to be converted into +the normal configuration language. Otherwise, there is no need to +use `xml` for configuration. + +Usage: +............... +xml <xml> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template,edit and import a configuration from a template]] +=== `template` - Import configuration from templates + +User may be assisted in the cluster configuration by templates +prepared in advance. Templates consist of a typical ready +configuration which may be edited to suit particular user needs. + +This command enters a template level where additional commands +for configuration/template management are available. + +[[cmdhelp_template_apply,process and apply the current configuration to the current CIB]] +==== `apply` + +Copy the current or given configuration to the current CIB. By +default, the CIB is replaced, unless the method is set to +"update". + +Usage: +............... +apply [<method>] [<config>] + +method :: replace | update +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_delete,delete a configuration]] +==== `delete` + +Remove a configuration. The loaded (active) configuration may be +removed by force. + +Usage: +............... +delete <config> [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_edit,edit a configuration]] +==== `edit` + +Edit current or given configuration using your favourite editor. + +Usage: +............... +edit [<config>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_list,list configurations/templates]] +==== `list` + +When called with no argument, lists existing templates and +configurations. + +Given the argument +templates+, lists the available templates. + +Given the argument +configs+, lists the available configurations. + +Usage: +............... +list [templates|configs] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_load,load a configuration]] +==== `load` + +Load an existing configuration. Further `edit`, `show`, and +`apply` commands will refer to this configuration. + +Usage: +............... +load <config> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_new,create a new configuration from templates]] +==== `new` + +Create a new configuration from one or more templates. Note that +configurations and templates are kept in different places, so it +is possible to have a configuration name equal a template name. + +If you already know which parameters are required, you can set +them directly on the command line. + +The parameter name +id+ is set by default to the name of the +configuration. + +If no parameters are being set and you don't want a particular name +for your configuration, you can call this command with a template name +as the only parameter. A unique configuration name based on the +template name will be generated. + +Usage: +............... +new [<config>] <template> [<template> ...] [params name=value ...] +............... + +Example: +............... +new vip virtual-ip +new bigfs ocfs2 params device=/dev/sdx8 directory=/bigfs +new apache +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_show,show the processed configuration]] +==== `show` + +Process the current or given configuration and display the result. + +Usage: +............... +show [<config>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus,CIB status management and editing]] +=== `cibstatus` - CIB status management and editing + +The `status` section of the CIB keeps the current status of nodes +and resources. It is modified _only_ on events, i.e. when some +resource operation is run or node status changes. For obvious +reasons, the CRM has no user interface with which it is possible +to affect the status section. From the user's point of view, the +status section is essentially a read-only part of the CIB. The +current status is never even written to disk, though it is +available in the PE (Policy Engine) input files which represent +the history of cluster motions. The current status may be read +using the +cibadmin -Q+ command. + +It may sometimes be of interest to see how status changes would +affect the Policy Engine. The set of `cibstatus` level commands +allow the user to load status sections from various sources and +then insert or modify resource operations or change nodes' state. + +The effect of those changes may then be observed by running the +<<cmdhelp_configure_ptest,`ptest`>> command at the `configure` level +or `simulate` and `run` commands at this level. The `ptest` +runs with the user edited CIB whereas the latter two commands +run with the CIB which was loaded along with the status section. + +The `simulate` and `run` commands as well as all status +modification commands are implemented using `crm_simulate(8)`. + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_load,load the CIB status section]] +==== `load` + +Load a status section from a file, a shadow CIB, or the running +cluster. By default, the current (+live+) status section is +modified. Note that if the +live+ status section is modified it +is not going to be updated if the cluster status changes, because +that would overwrite the user changes. To make `crm` drop changes +and resume use of the running cluster status, run +load live+. + +All CIB shadow configurations contain the status section which is +a snapshot of the status section taken at the time the shadow was +created. Obviously, this status section doesn't have much to do +with the running cluster status, unless the shadow CIB has just +been created. Therefore, the `ptest` command by default uses the +running cluster status section. + +Usage: +............... +load {<file>|shadow:<cib>|live} +............... +Example: +............... +load bug-12299.xml +load shadow:test1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_node,change node status]] +==== `node` + +Change the node status. It is possible to throw a node out of +the cluster, make it a member, or set its state to unclean. + ++online+:: Set the +node_state+ `crmd` attribute to +online+ +and the +expected+ and +join+ attributes to +member+. The effect +is that the node becomes a cluster member. + ++offline+:: Set the +node_state+ `crmd` attribute to +offline+ +and the +expected+ attribute to empty. This makes the node +cleanly removed from the cluster. + ++unclean+:: Set the +node_state+ `crmd` attribute to +offline+ +and the +expected+ attribute to +member+. In this case the node +has unexpectedly disappeared. + +Usage: +............... +node <node> {online|offline|unclean} +............... +Example: +............... +node xen-b unclean +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_op,edit outcome of a resource operation]] +==== `op` + +Edit the outcome of a resource operation. This way you can +tell CRM that it ran an operation and that the resource agent +returned certain exit code. It is also possible to change the +operation's status. In case the operation status is set to +something other than +done+, the exit code is effectively +ignored. + +Usage: +............... +op <operation> <resource> <exit_code> [<op_status>] [<node>] + +operation :: probe | monitor[:<n>] | start | stop | + promote | demote | notify | migrate_to | migrate_from +exit_code :: <rc> | success | generic | args | + unimplemented | perm | installed | configured | not_running | + master | failed_master +op_status :: pending | done | cancelled | timeout | notsupported | error + +n :: the monitor interval in seconds; if omitted, the first + recurring operation is referenced +rc :: numeric exit code in range 0..9 +............... +Example: +............... +op start d1 xen-b generic +op start d1 xen-b 1 +op monitor d1 xen-b not_running +op stop d1 xen-b 0 timeout +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_origin,display origin of the CIB status section]] +==== `origin` + +Show the origin of the status section currently in use. This +essentially shows the latest `load` argument. + +Usage: +............... +origin +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_quorum,set the quorum]] +==== `quorum` + +Set the quorum value. + +Usage: +............... +quorum <bool> +............... +Example: +............... +quorum false +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_run,run policy engine]] +==== `run` + +Run the policy engine with the edited status section. + +Add a string of +v+ characters to increase verbosity. Specify ++scores+ to see allocation scores also. +utilization+ turns on +information about the remaining capacity of nodes. + +If you have graphviz installed and X11 session, `dotty(1)` is run +to display the changes graphically. + +Usage: +............... +run [nograph] [v...] [scores] [utilization] +............... +Example: +............... +run +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_save,save the CIB status section]] +==== `save` + +The current internal status section with whatever modifications +were performed can be saved to a file or shadow CIB. + +If the file exists and contains a complete CIB, only the status +section is going to be replaced and the rest of the CIB will +remain intact. Otherwise, the current user edited configuration +is saved along with the status section. + +Note that all modifications are saved in the source file as soon +as they are run. + +Usage: +............... +save [<file>|shadow:<cib>] +............... +Example: +............... +save bug-12299.xml +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_show,show CIB status section]] +==== `show` + +Show the current status section in the XML format. Brace yourself +for some unreadable output. Add +changed+ option to get a human +readable output of all changes. + +Usage: +............... +show [changed] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_simulate,simulate cluster transition]] +==== `simulate` + +Run the policy engine with the edited status section and simulate +the transition. + +Add a string of +v+ characters to increase verbosity. Specify ++scores+ to see allocation scores also. +utilization+ turns on +information about the remaining capacity of nodes. + +If you have graphviz installed and X11 session, `dotty(1)` is run +to display the changes graphically. + +Usage: +............... +simulate [nograph] [v...] [scores] [utilization] +............... +Example: +............... +simulate +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_ticket,manage tickets]] +==== `ticket` + +Modify the ticket status. Tickets can be granted and revoked. +Granted tickets could be activated or put in standby. + +Usage: +............... +ticket <ticket> {grant|revoke|activate|standby} +............... +Example: +............... +ticket ticketA grant +............... + +[[cmdhelp_assist,Configuration assistant]] +=== `assist` - Configuration assistant + +The `assist` sublevel is a collection of helper +commands that create or modify resources and +constraints, to simplify the creation of certain +configurations. + +For more information on individual commands, see +the help text for those commands. + +[[cmdhelp_assist_template,Create template for primitives]] +==== `template` + +This command takes a list of primitives as argument, and creates a new +`rsc_template` for these primitives. It can only do this if the +primitives do not already share a template and are of the same type. + +Usage: +........ +template primitive-1 primitive-2 primitive-3 +........ + +[[cmdhelp_assist_weak-bond,Create a weak bond between resources]] +==== `weak-bond` + +A colocation between a group of resources says that the resources +should be located together, but it also means that those resources are +dependent on each other. If one of the resources fails, the others +will be restarted. + +If this is not desired, it is possible to circumvent: By placing the +resources in a non-sequential set and colocating the set with a dummy +resource which is not monitored, the resources will be placed together +but will have no further dependency on each other. + +This command creates both the constraint and the dummy resource needed +for such a colocation. + +Usage: +........ +weak-bond resource-1 resource-2 +........ + +[[cmdhelp_maintenance,Maintenance mode commands]] +=== `maintenance` - Maintenance mode commands + +Maintenance mode commands are commands that manipulate resources +directly without going through the cluster infrastructure. Therefore, +it is essential to ensure that the cluster does not attempt to monitor +or manipulate the resources while these commands are being executed. + +To ensure this, these commands require that maintenance mode is set +either for the particular resource, or for the whole cluster. + +[[cmdhelp_maintenance_action,Invoke a resource action]] +==== `action` + +Invokes the given action for the resource. This is +done directly via the resource agent, so the command must +be issued while the cluster or the resource is in +maintenance mode. + +Unless the action is `start` or `monitor`, the action must be invoked +on the same node as where the resource is running. If the resource is +running on multiple nodes, the command will fail. + +To use SSH for executing resource actions on multiple nodes, append +`ssh` after the action name. This requires SSH access to be configured +between the nodes and the parallax python package to be installed. + +Usage: +............... +action <rsc> <action> +action <rsc> <action> ssh +............... +Example: +............... +action webserver reload +action webserver monitor ssh +............... + +[[cmdhelp_maintenance_off,Disable maintenance mode]] +==== `off` + +Disables maintenances mode, either for the whole cluster +or for the given resource. + +Usage: +............... +off +off <rsc> +............... +Example: +............... +off rsc1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_maintenance_on,Enable maintenance mode]] +==== `on` + +Enables maintenances mode, either for the whole cluster +or for the given resource. + +Usage: +............... +on +on <rsc> +............... +Example: +............... +on rsc1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history,Cluster history]] +=== `history` - Cluster history + +Examining Pacemaker's history is a particularly involved task. The +number of subsystems to be considered, the complexity of the +configuration, and the set of various information sources, most of +which are not exactly human readable, keep analyzing resource or node +problems accessible to only the most knowledgeable. Or, depending on +the point of view, to the most persistent. The following set of +commands has been devised in hope to make cluster history more +accessible. + +Of course, looking at _all_ history could be time consuming regardless +of how good the tools at hand are. Therefore, one should first say +which period he or she wants to analyze. If not otherwise specified, +the last hour is considered. Logs and other relevant information is +collected using `crm report`. Since this process takes some time and +we always need fresh logs, information is refreshed in a much faster +way using the python parallax module. If +python-parallax+ is not +found on the system, examining a live cluster is still possible -- +though not as comfortable. + +Apart from examining a live cluster, events may be retrieved from a +report generated by `crm report` (see also the +-H+ option). In that +case we assume that the period stretching the whole report needs to be +investigated. Of course, it is still possible to further reduce the +time range. + +If you have discovered an issue that you want to show someone else, +you can use the `session pack` command to save the current session as +a tarball, similar to those generated by `crm report`. + +In order to minimize the size of the tarball, and to make it easier +for others to find the interesting events, it is recommended to limit +the time frame which the saved session covers. This can be done using +the `timeframe` command (example below). + +It is also possible to name the saved session using the `session save` +command. + +Example: +............... +crm(live)history# limit "Jul 18 12:00" "Jul 18 12:30" +crm(live)history# session save strange_restart +crm(live)history# session pack +Report saved in .../strange_restart.tar.bz2 +crm(live)history# +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_detail,set the level of detail shown]] +==== `detail` + +How much detail to show from the logs. Valid detail levels are either +`0` or `1`, where `1` is the highest detail level. The default detail +level is `0`. + +Usage: +............... +detail <detail_level> + +detail_level :: small integer (defaults to 0) +............... +Example: +............... +detail 1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_diff,cluster states/transitions difference]] +==== `diff` + +A transition represents a change in cluster configuration or +state. Use `diff` to see what has changed between two +transitions. + +If you want to specify the current cluster configuration and +status, use the string +live+. + +Normally, the first transition specified should be the one which +is older, but we are not going to enforce that. + +Note that a single configuration update may result in more than +one transition. + +Usage: +............... +diff <pe> <pe> [status] [html] + +pe :: <number>|<index>|<file>|live +............... +Examples: +............... +diff 2066 2067 +diff pe-input-2080.bz2 live status +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_events,Show events in log]] +==== `events` + +By analysing the log output and looking for particular +patterns, the `events` command helps sifting through +the logs to find when particular events like resources +changing state or node failure may have occurred. + +This can be used to generate a combined list of events +from all nodes. + +Usage: +............... +events +............... + +Example: +............... +events +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_exclude,exclude log messages]] +==== `exclude` + +If a log is infested with irrelevant messages, those messages may +be excluded by specifying a regular expression. The regular +expressions used are Python extended. This command is additive. +To drop all regular expressions, use +exclude clear+. Run +`exclude` only to see the current list of regular expressions. +Excludes are saved along with the history sessions. + +Usage: +............... +exclude [<regex>|clear] +............... +Example: +............... +exclude kernel.*ocfs2 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_graph,generate a directed graph from the PE file]] +==== `graph` + +Create a graphviz graphical layout from the PE file (the +transition). Every transition contains the cluster configuration +which was active at the time. See also <<cmdhelp_configure_graph,generate a directed graph +from configuration>>. + +Usage: +............... +graph <pe> [<gtype> [<file> [<img_format>]]] + +gtype :: dot +img_format :: `dot` output format (see the +-T+ option) +............... +Example: +............... +graph -1 +graph 322 dot clu1.conf.dot +graph 322 dot clu1.conf.svg svg +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_info,Cluster information summary]] +==== `info` + +The `info` command provides a summary of the information source, which +can be either a live cluster snapshot or a previously generated +report. + +Usage: +............... +info +............... +Example: +............... +info +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_latest,show latest news from the cluster]] +==== `latest` + +The `latest` command shows a bit of recent history, more +precisely whatever happened since the last cluster change (the +latest transition). If the transition is running, the shell will +first wait until it finishes. + +Usage: +............... +latest +............... +Example: +............... +latest +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_limit,limit timeframe to be examined]] +==== `limit` (`timeframe`) + +This command can be used to modify the time span to examine. All +history commands look at events within a certain time span. + +For the `live` source, the default time span is the _last hour_. + +There is no time span limit for the `hb_report` source. + +The time period is parsed by the `dateutil` python module. It +covers a wide range of date formats. For instance: + +- 3:00 (today at 3am) +- 15:00 (today at 3pm) +- 2010/9/1 2pm (September 1st 2010 at 2pm) + +For more examples of valid time/date statements, please refer to the +`python-dateutil` documentation: + +- https://dateutil.readthedocs.org/[dateutil.readthedocs.org] + +If the dateutil module is not available, then the time is parsed using +strptime and only the kind as printed by `date(1)` is allowed: + +- Tue Sep 15 20:46:27 CEST 2010 + +Usage: +............... +limit [<from_time>] [<to_time>] +............... +Examples: +............... +limit 10:15 +limit 15h22m 16h +limit "Sun 5 20:46" "Sun 5 22:00" +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_log,log content]] +==== `log` + +Show messages logged on one or more nodes. Leaving out a node +name produces combined logs of all nodes. Messages are sorted by +time and, if the terminal emulations supports it, displayed in +different colours depending on the node to allow for easier +reading. + +The sorting key is the timestamp as written by syslog which +normally has the maximum resolution of one second. Obviously, +messages generated by events which share the same timestamp may +not be sorted in the same way as they happened. Such close events +may actually happen fairly often. + +Usage: +............... +log [<node> [<node> ...] ] +............... +Example: +............... +log node-a +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_node,node events]] +==== `node` + +Show important events that happened on a node. Important events +are node lost and join, standby and online, and fence. Use either +node names or extended regular expressions. + +Usage: +............... +node <node> [<node> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +node node1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_peinputs,list or get PE input files]] +==== `peinputs` + +Every event in the cluster results in generating one or more +Policy Engine (PE) files. These files describe future motions of +resources. The files are listed as full paths in the current +report directory. Add +v+ to also see the creation time stamps. + +Usage: +............... +peinputs [{<range>|<number>} ...] [v] + +range :: <n1>:<n2> +............... +Example: +............... +peinputs +peinputs 440:444 446 +peinputs v +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_refresh,refresh live report]] +==== `refresh` + +This command makes sense only for the +live+ source and makes +`crm` collect the latest logs and other relevant information from +the logs. If you want to make a completely new report, specify ++force+. + +Usage: +............... +refresh [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_resource,resource events]] +==== `resource` + +Show actions and any failures that happened on all specified +resources on all nodes. Normally, one gives resource names as +arguments, but it is also possible to use extended regular +expressions. Note that neither groups nor clones or master/slave +names are ever logged. The resource command is going to expand +all of these appropriately, so that clone instances or resources +which are part of a group are shown. + +Usage: +............... +resource <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +resource bigdb public_ip +resource my_.*_db2 +resource ping_clone +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_session,manage history sessions]] +==== `session` + +Sometimes you may want to get back to examining a particular +history period or bug report. In order to make that easier, the +current settings can be saved and later retrieved. + +If the current history being examined is coming from a live +cluster the logs, PE inputs, and other files are saved too, +because they may disappear from nodes. For the existing reports +coming from `hb_report`, only the directory location is saved +(not to waste space). + +A history session may also be packed into a tarball which can +then be sent to support. + +Leave out subcommand to see the current session. + +Usage: +............... +session [{save|load|delete} <name> | pack [<name>] | update | list] +............... +Examples: +............... +session save bnc966622 +session load rsclost-2 +session list +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_setnodes,set the list of cluster nodes]] +==== `setnodes` + +In case the host this program runs on is not part of the cluster, +it is necessary to set the list of nodes. + +Usage: +............... +setnodes node <node> [<node> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +setnodes node_a node_b +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_show,show status or configuration of the PE input file]] +==== `show` + +Every transition is saved as a PE file. Use this command to +render that PE file either as configuration or status. The +configuration output is the same as `crm configure show`. + +Usage: +............... +show <pe> [status] + +pe :: <number>|<index>|<file>|live +............... +Examples: +............... +show 2066 +show pe-input-2080.bz2 status +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_source,set source to be examined]] +==== `source` + +Events to be examined can come from the current cluster or from a +`hb_report` report. This command sets the source. `source live` +sets source to the running cluster and system logs. If no source +is specified, the current source information is printed. + +In case a report source is specified as a file reference, the file +is going to be unpacked in place where it resides. This directory +is not removed on exit. + +Usage: +............... +source [<dir>|<file>|live] +............... +Examples: +............... +source live +source /tmp/customer_case_22.tar.bz2 +source /tmp/customer_case_22 +source +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_transition,show transition]] +==== `transition` + +This command will print actions planned by the PE and run +graphviz (`dotty`) to display a graphical representation of the +transition. Of course, for the latter an X11 session is required. +This command invokes `ptest(8)` in background. + +The +showdot+ subcommand runs graphviz (`dotty`) to display a +graphical representation of the +.dot+ file which has been +included in the report. Essentially, it shows the calculation +produced by `pengine` which is installed on the node where the +report was produced. In optimal case this output should not +differ from the one produced by the locally installed `pengine`. + +The `log` subcommand shows the full log for the duration of the +transition. + +A transition can also be saved to a CIB shadow for further +analysis or use with `cib` or `configure` commands (use the +`save` subcommand). The shadow file name defaults to the name of +the PE input file. + +If the PE input file number is not provided, it defaults to the +last one, i.e. the last transition. The last transition can also +be referenced with number 0. If the number is negative, then the +corresponding transition relative to the last one is chosen. + +If there are warning and error PE input files or different nodes +were the DC in the observed timeframe, it may happen that PE +input file numbers collide. In that case provide some unique part +of the path to the file. + +After the `ptest` output, logs about events that happened during +the transition are printed. + +The `tags` subcommand scans the logs for the transition and return a +list of key events during that transition. For example, the tag ++error+ will be returned if there are any errors logged during the +transition. + +Usage: +............... +transition [<number>|<index>|<file>] [nograph] [v...] [scores] [actions] [utilization] +transition showdot [<number>|<index>|<file>] +transition log [<number>|<index>|<file>] +transition save [<number>|<index>|<file> [name]] +transition tags [<number>|<index>|<file>] +............... +Examples: +............... +transition +transition 444 +transition -1 +transition pe-error-3.bz2 +transition node-a/pengine/pe-input-2.bz2 +transition showdot 444 +transition log +transition save 0 enigma-22 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_transitions,List transitions]] +==== `transitions` + +A transition represents a change in cluster configuration or +state. This command lists the transitions in the current timeframe. + +Usage: +............... +transitions +............... +Example: +............... +transitions +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_history_wdiff,cluster states/transitions difference]] +==== `wdiff` + +A transition represents a change in cluster configuration or +state. Use `wdiff` to see what has changed between two +transitions as word differences on a line-by-line basis. + +If you want to specify the current cluster configuration and +status, use the string +live+. + +Normally, the first transition specified should be the one which +is older, but we are not going to enforce that. + +Note that a single configuration update may result in more than +one transition. + +Usage: +............... +wdiff <pe> <pe> [status] + +pe :: <number>|<index>|<file>|live +............... +Examples: +............... +wdiff 2066 2067 +wdiff pe-input-2080.bz2 live status +............... + +[[cmdhelp_root_report,Create cluster status report]] +=== `report` + +Interface to a tool for creating a cluster report. A report is an +archive containing log files, configuration files, system information +and other relevant data for a given time period. This is a useful tool +for collecting data to attach to bug reports, or for detecting the +root cause of errors resulting in resource failover, for example. + +See `crmsh_hb_report(8)` for more details on arguments, +or call `crm report -h` + +Usage: +............... +report -f {time|"cts:"testnum} [-t time] [-u user] [-l file] + [-n nodes] [-E files] [-p patt] [-L patt] [-e prog] + [-MSDZAVsvhd] [dest] +............... + +Examples: +............... +report -f 2pm report_1 +report -f "2007/9/5 12:30" -t "2007/9/5 14:00" report_2 +report -f 1:00 -t 3:00 -l /var/log/cluster/ha-debug report_3 +report -f "09sep07 2:00" -u hbadmin report_4 +report -f 18:00 -p "usern.*" -p "admin.*" report_5 +report -f cts:133 ctstest_133 +............... + +=== `end` (`cd`, `up`) + +The `end` command ends the current level and the user moves to +the parent level. This command is available everywhere. + +Usage: +............... +end +............... + +=== `help` + +The `help` command prints help for the current level or for the +specified topic (command). This command is available everywhere. + +Usage: +............... +help [<topic>] +............... + +=== `quit` (`exit`, `bye`) + +Leave the program. + +BUGS +---- +Even though all sensible configurations (and most of those that +are not) are going to be supported by the crm shell, I suspect +that it may still happen that certain XML constructs may confuse +the tool. When that happens, please file a bug report. + +The crm shell will not try to update the objects it does not +understand. Of course, it is always possible to edit such objects +in the XML format. + +AUTHORS +------- +Dejan Muhamedagic, <dejan@suse.de> +Kristoffer Gronlund <kgronlund@suse.com> +and many OTHERS + +SEE ALSO +-------- +crm_resource(8), crm_attribute(8), crm_mon(8), cib_shadow(8), +ptest(8), dotty(1), crm_simulate(8), cibadmin(8) + + +COPYING +------- +Copyright \(C) 2008-2013 Dejan Muhamedagic. +Copyright \(C) 2013 Kristoffer Gronlund. + +Free use of this software is granted under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL). + +////////////////////// + vim:ts=4:sw=4:expandtab: +////////////////////// diff --git a/doc/website-v1/man-4.3.adoc b/doc/website-v1/man-4.3.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2b82298 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/man-4.3.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,5160 @@ +:man source: crm +:man version: 4.0.0 +:man manual: crmsh documentation + +crm(8) +====== + +NAME +---- +crm - Pacemaker command line interface for configuration and management + + +SYNOPSIS +-------- +*crm* [OPTIONS] [SUBCOMMAND ARGS...] + + +[[topics_Description,Program description]] +DESCRIPTION +----------- +The `crm` shell is a command-line based cluster configuration and +management tool. Its goal is to assist as much as possible with the +configuration and maintenance of Pacemaker-based High Availability +clusters. + +For more information on Pacemaker itself, see http://clusterlabs.org/. + +`crm` works both as a command-line tool to be called directly from the +system shell, and as an interactive shell with extensive tab +completion and help. + +The primary focus of the `crm` shell is to provide a simplified and +consistent interface to Pacemaker, but it also provides tools for +managing the creation and configuration of High Availability clusters +from scratch. To learn more about this aspect of `crm`, see the +`cluster` section below. + +The `crm` shell can be used to manage every aspect of configuring and +maintaining a cluster. It provides a simplified line-based syntax on +top of the XML configuration format used by Pacemaker, commands for +starting and stopping resources, tools for exploring the history of a +cluster including log scraping and a set of cluster scripts useful for +automating the setup and installation of services on the cluster +nodes. + +The `crm` shell is line oriented: every command must start and finish +on the same line. It is possible to use a continuation character (+\+) +to write one command in two or more lines. The continuation character +is commonly used when displaying configurations. + +[[topics_CommandLine,Command line options]] +OPTIONS +------- +*-f, --file*='FILE':: + Load commands from the given file. If a dash +-+ is used in place + of a file name, `crm` will read commands from the shell standard + input (`stdin`). + +*-c, --cib*='CIB':: + Start the session using the given shadow CIB file. + Equivalent to +cib use <CIB>+. + +*-D, --display=*'OUTPUT_TYPE':: + Choose one of the output options: +plain+, +color-always+, +color+, + or +uppercase+. The default is +color+ if the terminal emulation + supports colors. Otherwise, +plain+ is used. + +*-F, --force*:: + Make `crm` proceed with applying changes where it would normally + ask the user to confirm before proceeding. This option is mainly + useful in scripts, and should be used with care. + +*-w, --wait*:: + Make `crm` wait for the cluster transition to finish (for the + changes to take effect) after each processed line. + +*-H, --history*='DIR|FILE|SESSION':: + A directory or file containing a cluster report to load + into the `history` commands, or the name of a previously + saved history session. + +*-h, --help*:: + Print help page. + +*--version*:: + Print crmsh version and build information (Mercurial Hg changeset + hash). + +*-d, --debug*:: + Print verbose debugging information. + +*-R, --regression-tests*:: + Enables extra verbose trace logging used by the regression + tests. Logs all external calls made by crmsh. + +*--scriptdir*='DIR':: + Extra directory where crm looks for cluster scripts, or a list of + directories separated by semi-colons (e.g. +/dir1;/dir2;etc.+). + +*-o, --opt*='OPTION=VALUE':: + Set crmsh option temporarily. If the options are saved using + +options save+ then the value passed here will also be saved. + Multiple options can be set by using +-o+ multiple times. + +[[topics_Introduction,Introduction]] +== Introduction + +This section of the user guide covers general topics about the user +interface and describes some of the features of `crmsh` in detail. + +[[topics_Introduction_Interface,User interface]] +=== User interface + +The main purpose of `crmsh` is to provide a simple yet powerful +interface to the cluster stack. There are two main modes of operation +with the user interface of `crmsh`: + +* Command line (single-shot) use - Use `crm` as a regular UNIX command + from your usual shell. `crm` has full bash completion built in, so + using it in this manner should be as comfortable and familiar as + using any other command-line tool. + +* Interactive mode - By calling `crm` without arguments, or by calling + it with only a sublevel as argument, `crm` enters the interactive + mode. In this mode, it acts as its own command shell, which + remembers which sublevel you are currently in and allows for rapid + and convenient execution of multiple commands within the same + sublevel. This mode also has full tab completion, as well as + built-in interactive help and syntax highlighting. + +Here are a few examples of using `crm` both as a command-line tool and +as an interactive shell: + +.Command line (one-shot) use: +........ +# crm resource stop www_app +........ + +.Interactive use: +........ +# crm +crm(live)# resource +crm(live)resource# unmanage tetris_1 +crm(live)resource# up +crm(live)# node standby node4 +........ + +.Cluster configuration: +........ +# crm configure<<EOF + # + # resources + # + primitive disk0 iscsi \ + params portal=192.168.2.108:3260 target=iqn.2008-07.com.suse:disk0 + primitive fs0 Filesystem \ + params device=/dev/disk/by-label/disk0 directory=/disk0 fstype=ext3 + primitive internal_ip IPaddr params ip=192.168.1.101 + primitive apache apache \ + params configfile=/disk0/etc/apache2/site0.conf + primitive apcfence stonith:apcsmart \ + params ttydev=/dev/ttyS0 hostlist="node1 node2" \ + op start timeout=60s + primitive pingd pingd \ + params name=pingd dampen=5s multiplier=100 host_list="r1 r2" + # + # monitor apache and the UPS + # + monitor apache 60s:30s + monitor apcfence 120m:60s + # + # cluster layout + # + group internal_www \ + disk0 fs0 internal_ip apache + clone fence apcfence \ + meta globally-unique=false clone-max=2 clone-node-max=1 + clone conn pingd \ + meta globally-unique=false clone-max=2 clone-node-max=1 + location node_pref internal_www \ + rule 50: #uname eq node1 \ + rule pingd: defined pingd + # + # cluster properties + # + property stonith-enabled=true + commit +EOF +........ + +The `crm` interface is hierarchical, with commands organized into +separate levels by functionality. To list the available levels and +commands, either execute +help <level>+, or, if at the top level of +the shell, simply typing `help` will provide an overview of all +available levels and commands. + +The +(live)+ string in the `crm` prompt signifies that the current CIB +in use is the cluster live configuration. It is also possible to +work with so-called <<topics_Features_Shadows,shadow CIBs>>. These are separate, inactive +configurations stored in files, that can be applied and thereby +replace the live configuration at any time. + +[[topics_Introduction_Completion,Tab completion]] +=== Tab completion + +The `crm` makes extensive use of tab completion. The completion +is both static (i.e. for `crm` commands) and dynamic. The latter +takes into account the current status of the cluster or +information from installed resource agents. Sometimes, completion +may also be used to get short help on resource parameters. Here +are a few examples: + +............... +crm(live)resource# <TAB><TAB> +ban demote maintenance param scores trace +cd failcount manage promote secret unmanage +cleanup help meta quit start untrace +clear locate move refresh status up +constraints ls operations restart stop utilization + +crm(live)configure# primitive fence-1 <TAB><TAB> +lsb: ocf: service: stonith: systemd: + +crm(live)configure# primitive fence-1 stonith:<TAB><TAB> +apcmaster external/ippower9258 fence_legacy +apcmastersnmp external/kdumpcheck ibmhmc +apcsmart external/libvirt ipmilan + +crm(live)configure# primitive fence-1 stonith:ipmilan params <TAB><TAB> +auth= hostname= ipaddr= login= password= port= priv= + +crm(live)configure# primitive fence-1 stonith:ipmilan params auth=<TAB><TAB> +auth* (string) + The authorization type of the IPMI session ("none", "straight", "md2", or "md5") +............... + +`crmsh` also comes with bash completion usable directly from the +system shell. This should be installed automatically with the command +itself. + +[[topics_Introduction_Shorthand,Shorthand syntax]] +=== Shorthand syntax + +When using the `crm` shell to manage clusters, you will end up typing +a lot of commands many times over. Clear command names like ++configure+ help in understanding and learning to use the cluster +shell, but is easy to misspell and is tedious to type repeatedly. The +interactive mode and tab completion both help with this, but the `crm` +shell also has the ability to understand a variety of shorthand +aliases for all of the commands. + +For example, instead of typing `crm status`, you can type `crm st` or +`crm stat`. Instead of `crm configure` you can type `crm cfg` or even +`crm cf`. `crm resource` can be shorted as `crm rsc`, and so on. + +The exact list of accepted aliases is too long to print in full, but +experimentation and typos should help in discovering more of them. + +[[topics_Features,Features]] +== Features + +The feature set of crmsh covers a wide range of functionality, and +understanding how and when to use the various features of the shell +can be difficult. This section of the guide describes some of the +features and use cases of `crmsh` in more depth. The intention is to +provide a deeper understanding of these features, but also to serve as +a guide to using them. + +[[topics_Features_Shadows,Shadow CIB usage]] +=== Shadow CIB usage + +A Shadow CIB is a normal cluster configuration stored in a file. +They may be manipulated in much the same way as the _live_ CIB, with +the key difference that changes to a shadow CIB have no effect on the +actual cluster resources. An administrator may choose to apply any of +them to the cluster, thus replacing the running configuration with the +one found in the shadow CIB. + +The `crm` prompt always contains the name of the configuration which +is currently in use, or the string _live_ if using the live cluster +configuration. + +When editing the configuration in the `configure` level, no changes +are actually applied until the `commit` command is executed. It is +possible to start editing a configuration as usual, but instead of +committing the changes to the active CIB, save them to a shadow CIB. + +The following example `configure` session demonstrates how this can be +done: +............... +crm(live)configure# cib new test-2 +INFO: test-2 shadow CIB created +crm(test-2)configure# commit +............... + +[[topics_Features_Checks,Configuration semantic checks]] +=== Configuration semantic checks + +Resource definitions may be checked against the meta-data +provided with the resource agents. These checks are currently +carried out: + +- are required parameters set +- existence of defined parameters +- timeout values for operations + +The parameter checks are obvious and need no further explanation. +Failures in these checks are treated as configuration errors. + +The timeouts for operations should be at least as long as those +recommended in the meta-data. Too short timeout values are a +common mistake in cluster configurations and, even worse, they +often slip through if cluster testing was not thorough. Though +operation timeouts issues are treated as warnings, make sure that +the timeouts are usable in your environment. Note also that the +values given are just _advisory minimum_---your resources may +require longer timeouts. + +User may tune the frequency of checks and the treatment of errors +by the <<cmdhelp_options_check-frequency,`check-frequency`>> and +<<cmdhelp_options_check-mode,`check-mode`>> preferences. + +Note that if the +check-frequency+ is set to +always+ and the ++check-mode+ to +strict+, errors are not tolerated and such +configuration cannot be saved. + +[[topics_Features_Templates,Configuration templates]] +=== Configuration templates + +.Deprecation note +**************************** +Configuration templates have been deprecated in favor of the more +capable `cluster scripts`. To learn how to use cluster scripts, see +the dedicated documentation on the `crmsh` website at +http://crmsh.github.io/, or in the <<cmdhelp_script,Script section>>. +**************************** + +Configuration templates are ready made configurations created by +cluster experts. They are designed in such a way so that users +may generate valid cluster configurations with minimum effort. +If you are new to Pacemaker, templates may be the best way to +start. + +We will show here how to create a simple yet functional Apache +configuration: +............... +# crm configure +crm(live)configure# template +crm(live)configure template# list templates +apache filesystem virtual-ip +crm(live)configure template# new web <TAB><TAB> +apache filesystem virtual-ip +crm(live)configure template# new web apache +INFO: pulling in template apache +INFO: pulling in template virtual-ip +crm(live)configure template# list +web2-d web2 vip2 web3 vip web +............... + +We enter the `template` level from `configure`. Use the `list` +command to show templates available on the system. The `new` +command creates a configuration from the +apache+ template. You +can use tab completion to pick templates. Note that the apache +template depends on a virtual IP address which is automatically +pulled along. The `list` command shows the just created +web+ +configuration, among other configurations (I hope that you, +unlike me, will use more sensible and descriptive names). + +The `show` command, which displays the resulting configuration, +may be used to get an idea about the minimum required changes +which have to be done. All +ERROR+ messages show the line numbers +in which the respective parameters are to be defined: +............... +crm(live)configure template# show +ERROR: 23: required parameter ip not set +ERROR: 61: required parameter id not set +ERROR: 65: required parameter configfile not set +crm(live)configure template# edit +............... + +The `edit` command invokes the preferred text editor with the ++web+ configuration. At the top of the file, the user is advised +how to make changes. A good template should require from the user +to specify only parameters. For example, the +web+ configuration +we created above has the following required and optional +parameters (all parameter lines start with +%%+): +............... +$ grep -n ^%% ~/.crmconf/web +23:%% ip +31:%% netmask +35:%% lvs_support +61:%% id +65:%% configfile +71:%% options +76:%% envfiles +............... + +These lines are the only ones that should be modified. Simply +append the parameter value at the end of the line. For instance, +after editing this template, the result could look like this (we +used tabs instead of spaces to make the values stand out): +............... +$ grep -n ^%% ~/.crmconf/web +23:%% ip 192.168.1.101 +31:%% netmask +35:%% lvs_support +61:%% id websvc +65:%% configfile /etc/apache2/httpd.conf +71:%% options +76:%% envfiles +............... + +As you can see, the parameter line format is very simple: +............... +%% <name> <value> +............... + +After editing the file, use `show` again to display the +configuration: +............... +crm(live)configure template# show +primitive virtual-ip IPaddr \ + params ip=192.168.1.101 +primitive apache apache \ + params configfile="/etc/apache2/httpd.conf" +monitor apache 120s:60s +group websvc \ + apache virtual-ip +............... + +The target resource of the apache template is a group which we +named +websvc+ in this sample session. + +This configuration looks exactly as you could type it at the +`configure` level. The point of templates is to save you some +typing. It is important, however, to understand the configuration +produced. + +Finally, the configuration may be applied to the current +crm configuration (note how the configuration changed slightly, +though it is still equivalent, after being digested at the +`configure` level): +............... +crm(live)configure template# apply +crm(live)configure template# cd .. +crm(live)configure# show +node xen-b +node xen-c +primitive apache apache \ + params configfile="/etc/apache2/httpd.conf" \ + op monitor interval=120s timeout=60s +primitive virtual-ip IPaddr \ + params ip=192.168.1.101 +group websvc apache virtual-ip +............... + +Note that this still does not commit the configuration to the CIB +which is used in the shell, either the running one (+live+) or +some shadow CIB. For that you still need to execute the `commit` +command. + +To complete our example, we should also define the preferred node +to run the service: + +............... +crm(live)configure# location websvc-pref websvc 100: xen-b +............... + +If you are not happy with some resource names which are provided +by default, you can rename them now: + +............... +crm(live)configure# rename virtual-ip intranet-ip +crm(live)configure# show +node xen-b +node xen-c +primitive apache apache \ + params configfile="/etc/apache2/httpd.conf" \ + op monitor interval=120s timeout=60s +primitive intranet-ip IPaddr \ + params ip=192.168.1.101 +group websvc apache intranet-ip +location websvc-pref websvc 100: xen-b +............... + +To summarize, working with templates typically consists of the +following steps: + +- `new`: create a new configuration from templates +- `edit`: define parameters, at least the required ones +- `show`: see if the configuration is valid +- `apply`: apply the configuration to the `configure` level + +[[topics_Features_Testing,Resource testing]] +=== Resource testing + +The amount of detail in a cluster makes all configurations prone +to errors. By far the largest number of issues in a cluster is +due to bad resource configuration. The shell can help quickly +diagnose such problems. And considerably reduce your keyboard +wear. + +Let's say that we entered the following configuration: +............... +node xen-b +node xen-c +node xen-d +primitive fencer stonith:external/libvirt \ + params hypervisor_uri="qemu+tcp://10.2.13.1/system" \ + hostlist="xen-b xen-c xen-d" \ + op monitor interval=2h +primitive svc Xinetd \ + params service=systat \ + op monitor interval=30s +primitive intranet-ip IPaddr2 \ + params ip=10.2.13.100 \ + op monitor interval=30s +primitive apache apache \ + params configfile="/etc/apache2/httpd.conf" \ + op monitor interval=120s timeout=60s +group websvc apache intranet-ip +location websvc-pref websvc 100: xen-b +............... + +Before typing `commit` to submit the configuration to the cib we +can make sure that all resources are usable on all nodes: +............... +crm(live)configure# rsctest websvc svc fencer +............... + +It is important that resources being tested are not running on +any nodes. Otherwise, the `rsctest` command will refuse to do +anything. Of course, if the current configuration resides in a +CIB shadow, then a `commit` is irrelevant. The point being that +resources are not running on any node. + +.Note on stopping all resources +**************************** +Alternatively to not committing a configuration, it is also +possible to tell Pacemaker not to start any resources: + +............... +crm(live)configure# property stop-all-resources=yes +............... +Almost none---resources of class stonith are still started. But +shell is not as strict when it comes to stonith resources. +**************************** + +Order of resources is significant insofar that a resource depends +on all resources to its left. In most configurations, it's +probably practical to test resources in several runs, based on +their dependencies. + +Apart from groups, `crm` does not interpret constraints and +therefore knows nothing about resource dependencies. It also +doesn't know if a resource can run on a node at all in case of an +asymmetric cluster. It is up to the user to specify a list of +eligible nodes if a resource is not meant to run on every node. + +[[topics_Features_Security,Access Control Lists (ACL)]] +=== Access Control Lists (ACL) + +.Note on ACLs in Pacemaker 1.1.12 +**************************** +The support for ACLs has been revised in Pacemaker version 1.1.12 and +up. Depending on which version you are using, the information in this +section may no longer be accurate. Look for the `acl_target` +configuration element for more details on the new syntax. +**************************** + +By default, the users from the +haclient+ group have full access +to the cluster (or, more precisely, to the CIB). Access control +lists allow for finer access control to the cluster. + +Access control lists consist of an ordered set of access rules. +Each rule allows read or write access or denies access +completely. Rules are typically combined to produce a specific +role. Then, users may be assigned a role. + +For instance, this is a role which defines a set of rules +allowing management of a single resource: + +............... +role bigdb_admin \ + write meta:bigdb:target-role \ + write meta:bigdb:is-managed \ + write location:bigdb \ + read ref:bigdb +............... + +The first two rules allow modifying the +target-role+ and ++is-managed+ meta attributes which effectively enables users in +this role to stop/start and manage/unmanage the resource. The +constraints write access rule allows moving the resource around. +Finally, the user is granted read access to the resource +definition. + +For proper operation of all Pacemaker programs, it is advisable +to add the following role to all users: + +............... +role read_all \ + read cib +............... + +For finer grained read access try with the rules listed in the +following role: + +............... +role basic_read \ + read node attribute:uname \ + read node attribute:type \ + read property \ + read status +............... + +It is however possible that some Pacemaker programs (e.g. +`ptest`) may not function correctly if the whole CIB is not +readable. + +Some of the ACL rules in the examples above are expanded by the +shell to XPath specifications. For instance, ++meta:bigdb:target-role+ expands to: + +........ +//primitive[@id='bigdb']/meta_attributes/nvpair[@name='target-role'] +........ + +You can see the expansion by showing XML: + +............... +crm(live) configure# show xml bigdb_admin +... +<acls> + <acl_role id="bigdb_admin"> + <write id="bigdb_admin-write" + xpath="//primitive[@id='bigdb']/meta_attributes/nvpair[@name='target-role']"/> +............... + +Many different XPath expressions can have equal meaning. For +instance, the following two are equal, but only the first one is +going to be recognized as shortcut: + +............... +//primitive[@id='bigdb']/meta_attributes/nvpair[@name='target-role'] +//resources/primitive[@id='bigdb']/meta_attributes/nvpair[@name='target-role'] +............... + +XPath is a powerful language, but you should try to keep your ACL +xpaths simple and the builtin shortcuts should be used whenever +possible. + +[[topics_Features_Resourcesets,Syntax: Resource sets]] +=== Syntax: Resource sets + +Using resource sets can be a bit confusing unless one knows the +details of the implementation in Pacemaker as well as how to interpret +the syntax provided by `crmsh`. + +Three different types of resource sets are provided by `crmsh`, and +each one implies different values for the two resource set attributes, ++sequential+ and +require-all+. + ++sequential+:: + If false, the resources in the set do not depend on each other + internally. Setting +sequential+ to +true+ implies a strict order of + dependency within the set. + ++require-all+:: + If false, only one resource in the set is required to fulfil the + requirements of the set. The set of A, B and C with +require-all+ + set to +false+ is be read as "A OR B OR C" when its dependencies + are resolved. + +The three types of resource sets modify the attributes in the +following way: + +1. Implicit sets (no brackets). +sequential=true+, +require-all=true+ +2. Parenthesis set (+(+ ... +)+). +sequential=false+, +require-all=true+ +3. Bracket set (+[+ ... +]+). +sequential=false+, +require-all=false+ + +To create a set with the properties +sequential=true+ and ++require-all=false+, explicitly set +sequential+ in a bracketed set, ++[ A B C sequential=true ]+. + +To create multiple sets with both +sequential+ and +require-all+ set to +true, explicitly set +sequential+ in a parenthesis set: ++A B ( C D sequential=true )+. + +[[topics_Features_AttributeListReferences,Syntax: Attribute list references]] +=== Syntax: Attribute list references + +Attribute lists are used to set attributes and parameters for +resources, constraints and property definitions. For example, to set +the virtual IP used by an +IPAddr2+ resource the attribute +ip+ can be +set in an attribute list for that resource. + +Attribute lists can have identifiers that name them, and other +resources can reuse the same attribute list by referring to that name +using an +$id-ref+. For example, the following statement defines a +simple dummy resource with an attribute list which sets the parameter ++state+ to the value 1 and sets the identifier for the attribute list +to +on-state+: + +.............. +primitive dummy-1 Dummy params $id=on-state state=1 +.............. + +To refer to this attribute list from a different resource, refer to +the +on-state+ name using an id-ref: + +.............. +primitive dummy-2 Dummy params $id-ref=on-state +.............. + +The resource +dummy-2+ will now also have the parameter +state+ set to the value 1. + +[[topics_Features_AttributeReferences,Syntax: Attribute references]] +=== Syntax: Attribute references + +In some cases, referencing complete attribute lists is too +coarse-grained, for example if two different parameters with different +names should have the same value set. Instead of having to copy the +value in multiple places, it is possible to create references to +individual attributes in attribute lists. + +To name an attribute in order to be able to refer to it later, prefix +the attribute name with a +$+ character (as seen above with the +special names +$id+ and +$id-ref+: + +............ +primitive dummy-1 Dummy params $state=1 +............ + +The identifier +state+ can now be used to refer to this attribute from other +primitives, using the +@<id>+ syntax: + +............ +primitive dummy-2 Dummy params @state +............ + +In some cases, using the attribute name as the identifier doesn't work +due to name clashes. In this case, the syntax +$<id>:<name>=<value>+ +can be used to give the attribute a different identifier: + +............ +primitive dummy-1 params $dummy-state-on:state=1 +primitive dummy-2 params @dummy-state-on +............ + +There is also the possibility that two resources both use the same +attribute value but with different names. For example, a web server +may have a parameter +server_ip+ for setting the IP address where it +listens for incoming requests, and a virtual IP resource may have a +parameter called +ip+ which sets the IP address it creates. To +configure these two resources with an IP without repeating the value, +the reference can be given a name using the syntax +@<id>:<name>+. + +Example: +............ +primitive virtual-ip IPaddr2 params $vip:ip=192.168.1.100 +primitive webserver apache params @vip:server_ip +............ + +[[topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions]] +=== Syntax: Rule expressions + +Many of the configuration commands in `crmsh` now support the use of +_rule expressions_, which can influence what attributes apply to a +resource or under which conditions a constraint is applied, depending +on changing conditions like date, time, the value of attributes and +more. + +Here is an example of a simple rule expression used to apply a +a different resource parameter on the node named `node1`: + +.............. +primitive my_resource Special \ + params 2: rule #uname eq node1 interface=eth1 \ + params 1: interface=eth0 +.............. + +This primitive resource has two lists of parameters with descending +priority. The parameter list with the highest priority is applied +first, but only if the rule expressions for that parameter list all +apply. In this case, the rule `#uname eq node1` limits the parameter +list so that it is only applied on `node1`. + +Note that rule expressions are not terminated and are immediately +followed by the data to which the rule is applied. In this case, the +name-value pair `interface=eth1`. + +Rule expressions can contain multiple expressions connected using the +boolean operator `or` and `and`. The full syntax for rule expressions +is listed below. + +.............. +rules :: + rule [id_spec] [$role=<role>] <score>: <expression> + [rule [id_spec] [$role=<role>] <score>: <expression> ...] + +id_spec :: $id=<id> | $id-ref=<id> +score :: <number> | <attribute> | [-]inf +expression :: <simple_exp> [<bool_op> <simple_exp> ...] +bool_op :: or | and +simple_exp :: <attribute> [type:]<binary_op> <value> + | <unary_op> <attribute> + | date <date_expr> +type :: <string> | <version> | <number> +binary_op :: lt | gt | lte | gte | eq | ne +unary_op :: defined | not_defined + +date_expr :: lt <end> + | gt <start> + | in start=<start> end=<end> + | in start=<start> <duration> + | spec <date_spec> +duration|date_spec :: + hours=<value> + | monthdays=<value> + | weekdays=<value> + | yearsdays=<value> + | months=<value> + | weeks=<value> + | years=<value> + | weekyears=<value> + | moon=<value> +.............. + +[[topics_Lifetime,Lifetime parameter format]] +== Lifetime parameter format + +Lifetimes can be specified in the ISO 8601 time format or the ISO 8601 +duration format. To distinguish between months and minutes, use the PT +prefix before specifying minutes. The duration format is one of ++PnYnMnDTnHnMnS+, +PnW+, +P<date>T<time>+. + +P = duration. Y = year. M = month. W = week. D = day. T = time. H = +hour. M = minute. S = second. + +Examples: +................. +PT5M = 5 minutes later. +3D = 3 days later. +PT1H = 1 hour later. +................. + +The cluster checks lifetimes at an interval defined by the +cluster-recheck-interval property (default 15 minutes). + + +[[topics_Reference,Command reference]] +== Command reference + +The commands are structured to be compatible with the shell command +line. Sometimes, the underlying Pacemaker grammar uses characters that +have special meaning in bash, that will need to be quoted. This +includes the hash or pound sign (`#`), single and double quotes, and +any significant whitespace. + +Whitespace is also significant when assigning values, meaning that ++key=value+ is different from +key = value+. + +Commands can be referenced using short-hand as long as the short-hand +is unique. This can be either a prefix of the command name or a prefix +string of characters found in the name. + +For example, +status+ can be abbreviated as +st+ or +su+, and ++configure+ as +conf+ or +cfg+. + +The syntax for the commands is given below in an informal, BNF-like +grammar. + +* `<value>` denotes a string. +* `[value]` means that the construct is optional. +* The ellipsis (`...`) signifies that the previous construct may be + repeated. +* `first|second` means either first or second. +* The rest are literals (strings, `:`, `=`). + +[[cmdhelp_root_status,Cluster status]] +=== `status` + +Show cluster status. The status is displayed by `crm_mon`. Supply +additional arguments for more information or different format. +See `crm_mon(8)` for more details. + +Example: +............... +status +status simple +status full +............... + +Usage: +............... +status [<option> ...] + +option :: full + | bynode + | inactive + | ops + | timing + | failcounts + | verbose + | quiet + | html + | xml + | simple + | tickets + | noheaders + | detail + | brief +............... + +[[cmdhelp_root_verify,Verify cluster status]] +=== `verify` + +Performs basic checks for the cluster configuration and +current status, reporting potential issues. + +See `crm_verify(8)` and `crm_simulate(8)` for more details. + +Example: +............... +verify +verify scores +............... + +Usage: +............... +verify [scores] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster,Cluster setup and management]] +=== `cluster` - Cluster setup and management + +Whole-cluster configuration management with High Availability +awareness. + +The commands on the cluster level allows configuration and +modification of the underlying cluster infrastructure, and also +supplies tools to do whole-cluster systems management. + +These commands enable easy installation and maintenance of a HA +cluster, by providing support for package installation, configuration +of the cluster messaging layer, file system setup and more. + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_add,Add a new node to the cluster,From Code]] +==== `add` +See "crm cluster help add" or "crm cluster add --help" + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_copy,Copy file to other cluster nodes]] +==== `copy` + +Copy file to other cluster nodes. + +Copies the given file to all other nodes unless given a +list of nodes to copy to as argument. + +Usage: +............... +copy <filename> [nodes ...] +............... + +Example: +............... +copy /etc/motd +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_diff,Diff file across cluster]] +==== `diff` + +Displays the difference, if any, between a given file +on different nodes. If the second argument is `--checksum`, +a checksum of the file will be calculated and displayed for +each node. + +Usage: +............... +diff <file> [--checksum] [nodes...] +............... + +Example: +............... +diff /etc/crm/crm.conf node2 +diff /etc/resolv.conf --checksum +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_disable,Disable cluster services]] +==== `disable` + +Disable the cluster-related system services on this node. + +Usage: +............... +disable +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_enable,Enable cluster services]] +==== `enable` + +Enable the cluster-related system services on this node. + +Usage: +............... +enable +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_geo_init,Configure cluster as geo cluster,From Code]] +==== `geo-init` +See "crm cluster help geo_init" or "crm cluster geo_init --help" + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_geo_init_arbitrator,Initialize node as geo cluster arbitrator,From Code]] +==== `geo-init-arbitrator` +See "crm cluster help geo_init_arbitrator" or "crm cluster geo_init_arbitrator --help" + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_geo_join,Join cluster to existing geo cluster,From Code]] +==== `geo-join` +See "crm cluster help geo_join" or "crm cluster geo_join --help" + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_health,Cluster health check]] +==== `health` + +Runs a larger set of tests and queries on all nodes in the cluster to +verify the general system health and detect potential problems. + +Usage: +............... +health +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_init,Initializes a new HA cluster,From Code]] +==== `init` +See "crm cluster help init" or "crm cluster init --help" + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_join,Join existing cluster,From Code]] +==== `join` +See "crm cluster help join" or "crm cluster join --help" + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_remove,Remove node(s) from the cluster,From Code]] +==== `remove` +See "crm cluster help remove" or "crm cluster remove --help" + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_crash_test,Cluster crash test tool set,From Code]] +==== `crash_test` +See "crm cluster help crash_test" or "crm cluster crash_test --help" + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_restart,Restart cluster services]] +==== `restart` + +Restarts the cluster-related system services on this node. + +Usage: +......... +restart +......... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_rename,Rename the cluster]] +==== `rename` + +Rename the cluster name + +Usage: +............... +rename <new_cluster_name> +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_run,Execute an arbitrary command on all nodes/specific node]] +==== `run` + +This command takes a shell statement as argument, executes that +statement on all nodes in the cluster or a specific node, +and reports the result. + +Usage: +............... +run <command> [node ...] +............... + +Example: +............... +run "cat /proc/uptime" +run "ls" node1 node2 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_start,Start cluster services]] +==== `start` + +Starts the cluster-related system services on this node. + +Usage: +......... +start +......... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_status,Cluster status check]] +==== `status` + +Reports the status for the cluster messaging layer on the local +node. + +Usage: +............... +status +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_stop,Stop cluster services]] +==== `stop` + +Stops the cluster-related system services on this node. + +Usage: +......... +stop +......... + +[[cmdhelp_cluster_wait_for_startup,Wait for cluster to start]] +==== `wait_for_startup` + +Mostly useful in scripts or automated workflows, this command will +attempt to connect to the local cluster node repeatedly. The command +will keep trying until the cluster node responds, or the `timeout` +elapses. The timeout can be changed by supplying a value in seconds as +an argument. + +Usage: +........ +wait_for_startup +........ + +[[cmdhelp_script,Cluster script management]] +=== `script` - Cluster script management + +A big part of the configuration and management of a cluster is +collecting information about all cluster nodes and deploying changes +to those nodes. Often, just performing the same procedure on all nodes +will encounter problems, due to subtle differences in the +configuration. + +For example, when configuring a cluster for the first time, the +software needs to be installed and configured on all nodes before the +cluster software can be launched and configured using `crmsh`. This +process is cumbersome and error-prone, and the goal is for scripts to +make this process easier. + +Scripts are implemented using the python `parallax` package which +provides a thin wrapper on top of SSH. This allows the scripts to +function through the usual SSH channels used for system maintenance, +requiring no additional software to be installed or maintained. + +[[cmdhelp_script_json,JSON API for cluster scripts]] +==== `json` + +This command provides a JSON API for the cluster scripts, intended for +use in user interface tools that want to interact with the cluster via +scripts. + +The command takes a single argument, which should be a JSON array with +the first member identifying the command to perform. + +The output is line-based: Commands that return multiple results will +return them line-by-line, ending with a terminator value: "end". + +When providing parameter values to this command, they should be +provided as nested objects, so +virtual-ip:ip=192.168.0.5+ on the +command line becomes the JSON object ++{"virtual-ip":{"ip":"192.168.0.5"}}+. + +API: +........ +["list"] +=> [{name, shortdesc, category}] + +["show", <name>] +=> [{name, shortdesc, longdesc, category, <<steps>>}] + +<<steps>> := [{name, shortdesc], longdesc, required, parameters, steps}] + +<<params>> := [{name, shortdesc, longdesc, required, unique, advanced, + type, value, example}] + +["verify", <name>, <<values>>] +=> [{shortdesc, longdesc, text, nodes}] + +["run", <name>, <<values>>] +=> [{shortdesc, rc, output|error}] +........ + + +[[cmdhelp_script_list,List available scripts]] +==== `list` + +Lists the available scripts, sorted by category. Scripts that have the +special `Script` category are hidden by default, since they are mainly +used by other scripts or commands. To also show these, pass `all` as +argument. + +To get a flat list of script names, not sorted by category, pass +`names` as an extra argument. + +Usage: +............ +list [all] [names] +............ + +Example: +............ +list +list all names +............ + +[[cmdhelp_script_run,Run the script]] +==== `run` + +Given a list of parameter values, this command will execute the +actions specified by the cluster script. The format for the parameter +values is the same as for the `verify` command. + +Can optionally take at least two parameters: +* `nodes=<nodes>`: List of nodes that the script runs over +* `dry_run=yes|no`: If set, the script will not perform any modifications. + +Additional parameters may be available depending on the script. + +Use the `show` command to see what parameters are available. + +Usage: +............. +run <script> [args...] +............. + +Example: +............. +run apache install=true +run sbd id=sbd-1 node=node1 sbd_device=/dev/disk/by-uuid/F00D-CAFE +............. + +[[cmdhelp_script_show,Describe the script]] +==== `show` + +Prints a description and short summary of the script, with +descriptions of the accepted parameters. + +Advanced parameters are hidden by default. To show the complete list +of parameters accepted by the script, pass `all` as argument. + +Usage: +............ +show <script> [all] +............ + +Example: +............ +show virtual-ip +............ + +[[cmdhelp_script_verify,Verify the script]] +==== `verify` + +Checks the given parameter values, and returns a list +of actions that will be executed when running the script +if provided the same list of parameter values. + +Usage: +............ +verify <script> [args...] +............ + +Example: +............ +verify sbd id=sbd-1 node=node1 sbd_device=/dev/disk/by-uuid/F00D-CAFE +............ + +[[cmdhelp_corosync,Corosync management]] +=== `corosync` - Corosync management + +Corosync is the underlying messaging layer for most HA clusters. +This level provides commands for editing and managing the corosync +configuration. + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_add-node,Add a corosync node]] +==== `add-node` + +Adds a node to the corosync configuration. This is used with the `udpu` +type configuration in corosync. + +A nodeid for the added node is generated automatically. + +Note that this command assumes that only a single ring is used, and +sets only the address for ring0. + +Usage: +......... +add-node <addr> [name] +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_del-node,Remove a corosync node]] +==== `del-node` + +Removes a node from the corosync configuration. The argument given is +the `ring0_addr` address set in the configuration file. + +Usage: +......... +del-node <addr> +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_diff,Diffs the corosync configuration]] +==== `diff` + +Diffs the corosync configurations on different nodes. If no nodes are +given as arguments, the corosync configurations on all nodes in the +cluster are compared. + +`diff` takes an option argument `--checksum`, to display a checksum +for each file instead of calculating a diff. + +Usage: +......... +diff [--checksum] [node...] +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_edit,Edit the corosync configuration]] +==== `edit` + +Opens the Corosync configuration file in an editor. + +Usage: +......... +edit +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_get,Get a corosync configuration value]] +==== `get` + +Returns the value configured in `corosync.conf`, which is not +necessarily the value used in the running configuration. See `reload` +for telling corosync about configuration changes. + +The argument is the complete dot-separated path to the value. + +If there are multiple values configured with the same path, the +command returns all values for that path. For example, to get all +configured `ring0_addr` values, use this command: + +Example: +........ +get nodelist.node.ring0_addr +........ + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_log,Show the corosync log file]] +==== `log` + +Opens the log file specified in the corosync configuration file. If no +log file is configured, this command returns an error. + +The pager used can be configured either using the PAGER +environment variable or in `crm.conf`. + +Usage: +......... +log +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_pull,Pulls the corosync configuration]] +==== `pull` + +Gets the corosync configuration from another node and copies +it to this node. + +Usage: +......... +pull <node> +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_push,Push the corosync configuration]] +==== `push` + +Pushes the corosync configuration file on this node to +the list of nodes provided. If no target nodes are given, +the configuration is pushed to all other nodes in the cluster. + +It is recommended to use `csync2` to distribute the cluster +configuration files rather than relying on this command. + +Usage: +......... +push [node] ... +......... + +Example: +......... +push node-2 node-3 +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_reload,Reload the corosync configuration]] +==== `reload` + +Tells all instances of corosync in this cluster to reload +`corosync.conf`. + +After pushing a new configuration to all cluster nodes, call this +command to make corosync use the new configuration. + +Usage: +......... +reload +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_set,Set a corosync configuration value]] +==== `set` + +Sets the value identified by the given path. If the value does not +exist in the configuration file, it will be added. However, if the +section containing the value does not exist, the command will fail. + +Usage: +......... +set quorum.expected_votes 2 +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_show,Display the corosync configuration]] +==== `show` + +Displays the corosync configuration on the current node. + +......... +show +......... + +[[cmdhelp_corosync_status,Display the corosync status]] +==== `status` + +Displays the corosync ring status(default), also can display quorum/qdevice/qnetd status. + +Usage: +......... +status [ring|quorum|qdevice|qnetd] +......... + +[[cmdhelp_cib,CIB shadow management]] +=== `cib` - CIB shadow management + +This level is for management of shadow CIBs. It is available both +at the top level and the `configure` level. + +All the commands are implemented using `cib_shadow(8)` and the +`CIB_shadow` environment variable. The user prompt always +includes the name of the currently active shadow or the live CIB. + +[[cmdhelp_cib_cibstatus,CIB status management and editing]] +==== `cibstatus` + +Enter edit and manage the CIB status section level. See the +<<cmdhelp_cibstatus,CIB status management section>>. + +[[cmdhelp_cib_commit,copy a shadow CIB to the cluster]] +==== `commit` + +Apply a shadow CIB to the cluster. If the shadow name is omitted +then the current shadow CIB is applied. + +Temporary shadow CIBs are removed automatically on commit. + +Usage: +............... +commit [<cib>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_delete,delete a shadow CIB]] +==== `delete` + +Delete an existing shadow CIB. + +Usage: +............... +delete <cib> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_diff,diff between the shadow CIB and the live CIB]] +==== `diff` + +Print differences between the current cluster configuration and +the active shadow CIB. + +Usage: +............... +diff +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_import,import a CIB or PE input file to a shadow]] +==== `import` + +At times it may be useful to create a shadow file from the +existing CIB. The CIB may be specified as file or as a PE input +file number. The shell will look up files in the local directory +first and then in the PE directory (typically `/var/lib/pengine`). +Once the CIB file is found, it is copied to a shadow and this +shadow is immediately available for use at both `configure` and +`cibstatus` levels. + +If the shadow name is omitted then the target shadow is named +after the input CIB file. + +Note that there are often more than one PE input file, so you may +need to specify the full name. + +Usage: +............... +import {<file>|<number>} [<shadow>] +............... +Examples: +............... +import pe-warn-2222 +import 2289 issue2 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_list,list all shadow CIBs]] +==== `list` + +List existing shadow CIBs. + +Usage: +............... +list +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_new,create a new shadow CIB]] +==== `new` + +Create a new shadow CIB. The live cluster configuration and +status is copied to the shadow CIB. + +If the name of the shadow is omitted, we create a temporary CIB +shadow. It is useful if multiple level sessions are desired +without affecting the cluster. A temporary CIB shadow is short +lived and will be removed either on `commit` or on program exit. +Note that if the temporary shadow is not committed all changes in +the temporary shadow are lost. + +Specify `withstatus` if you want to edit the status section of +the shadow CIB (see the <<cmdhelp_cibstatus,cibstatus section>>). +Add `force` to force overwriting the existing shadow CIB. + +To start with an empty configuration that is not copied from the live +CIB, specify the `empty` keyword. (This also allows a shadow CIB to be +created in case no cluster is running.) + +Usage: +............... +new [<cib>] [withstatus] [force] [empty] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_reset,copy live cib to a shadow CIB]] +==== `reset` + +Copy the current cluster configuration into the shadow CIB. + +Usage: +............... +reset <cib> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cib_use,change working CIB]] +==== `use` + +Choose a CIB source. If you want to edit the status from the +shadow CIB specify `withstatus` (see <<cmdhelp_cibstatus,`cibstatus`>>). +Leave out the CIB name to switch to the running CIB. + +Usage: +............... +use [<cib>] [withstatus] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_ra,Resource Agents (RA) lists and documentation]] +=== `ra` - Resource Agents (RA) lists and documentation + +This level contains commands which show various information about +the installed resource agents. It is available both at the top +level and at the `configure` level. + +[[cmdhelp_ra_classes,list classes and providers]] +==== `classes` + +Print all resource agents' classes and, where appropriate, a list +of available providers. + +Usage: +............... +classes +............... + +[[cmdhelp_ra_info,show meta data for a RA]] +==== `info` (`meta`) + +Show the meta-data of a resource agent type. This is where users +can find information on how to use a resource agent. It is also +possible to get information from some programs: `pengine`, +`crmd`, `cib`, and `stonithd`. Just specify the program name +instead of an RA. + +Usage: +............... +info [<class>:[<provider>:]]<type> +info <type> <class> [<provider>] (obsolete) +............... +Example: +............... +info apache +info ocf:pacemaker:Dummy +info stonith:ipmilan +info pengine +............... + +[[cmdhelp_ra_list,list RA for a class (and provider)]] +==== `list` + +List available resource agents for the given class. If the class +is `ocf`, supply a provider to get agents which are available +only from that provider. + +Usage: +............... +list <class> [<provider>] +............... +Example: +............... +list ocf pacemaker +............... + +[[cmdhelp_ra_providers,show providers for a RA and a class]] +==== `providers` + +List providers for a resource agent type. The class parameter +defaults to `ocf`. + +Usage: +............... +providers <type> [<class>] +............... +Example: +............... +providers apache +............... + +[[cmdhelp_ra_validate,validate parameters for RA]] +==== `validate` + +If the resource agent supports the `validate-all` action, this calls +the action with the given parameters, printing any warnings or errors +reported by the agent. + +Usage: +................ +validate <agent> [<key>=<value> ...] +................ + +[[cmdhelp_resource,Resource management]] +=== `resource` - Resource management + +At this level resources may be managed. + +All (or almost all) commands are implemented with the CRM tools +such as `crm_resource(8)`. + +[[cmdhelp_resource_ban,ban a resource from a node]] +==== `ban` + +Ban a resource from running on a certain node. If no node is given +as argument, the resource is banned from the current location. + +See `move` for details on other arguments. + +Usage: +............... +ban <rsc> [<node>] [<lifetime>] [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_cleanup,cleanup resource status]] +==== `cleanup` + +If resource has any past failures, clear its history and fail +count. Typically done after the resource has temporarily +failed. + +If a node is omitted, cleanup on all nodes. + ++(Pacemaker 1.1.14)+ Pass force to cleanup the resource itself, +otherwise the cleanup command will apply to the parent resource (if +any). + +Usage: +............... +cleanup [<rsc>] [<node>] [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_clear,Clear any relocation constraint]] +==== `clear` (`unmove`, `unmigrate`, `unban`) + +Remove any relocation constraint created by +the `move`, `migrate` or `ban` command. + +Usage: +............... +clear <rsc> +unmigrate <rsc> +unban <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_constraints,Show constraints affecting a resource]] +==== `constraints` + +Display the location and colocation constraints affecting the +resource. + +Usage: +................ +constraints <rsc> +................ + +[[cmdhelp_resource_demote,demote a master-slave resource]] +==== `demote` + +Demote a master-slave resource using the `target-role` +attribute. + +Usage: +............... +demote <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_failcount,manage failcounts]] +==== `failcount` + +Show/edit/delete the failcount of a resource. +When `set` a non-zero value, `operation` and `interval` should be +provided when multiple operation failcount entries exist. +`interval` is a value in seconds. + +Usage: +............... +failcount <rsc> set <node> <value> [operation] [interval] +failcount <rsc> delete <node> +failcount <rsc> show <node> +............... +Example: +............... +failcount fs_0 delete node2 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_locate,show the location of resources]] +==== `locate` + +Show the current location of one or more resources. + +Usage: +............... +locate [<rsc> ...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_maintenance,Enable/disable per-resource maintenance mode]] +==== `maintenance` + +Enables or disables the per-resource maintenance mode. When this mode +is enabled, no monitor operations will be triggered for the resource. +`maintenance` attribute conflicts with the `is-managed`. When setting +the `maintenance` attribute, the user is proposed to remove the +`is-managed` attribute if it exists. + +Usage: +.................. +maintenance <resource> [on|off|true|false] +.................. + +Example: +.................. +maintenance rsc1 +maintenance rsc2 off +.................. + +[[cmdhelp_resource_manage,put a resource into managed mode]] +==== `manage` + +Manage a resource using the `is-managed` attribute. If there +are multiple meta attributes sets, the attribute is set in all of +them. If the resource is a clone, all `is-managed` attributes are +removed from the children resources. +`is-managed` attribute conflicts with the `maintenance`. When setting +the `is-managed` attribute, the user is proposed to remove the +`maintenance` attribute if it exists. + +For details on group management see <<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... +manage <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_meta,manage a meta attribute]] +==== `meta` + +Show/edit/delete a meta attribute of a resource. Currently, all +meta attributes of a resource may be managed with other commands +such as `resource stop`. + +Usage: +............... +meta <rsc> set <attr> <value> +meta <rsc> delete <attr> +meta <rsc> show <attr> +............... +Example: +............... +meta ip_0 set target-role stopped +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_move,Move a resource to another node]] +==== `move` (`migrate`) + +Move a resource away from its current location. + +If the destination node is left out, the resource is migrated by +creating a constraint which prevents it from running on the current +node. For this type of constraint to be created, the +force+ argument +is required. + +A lifetime may be given for the constraint. Once it expires, the +location constraint will no longer be active. + +Usage: +............... +move <rsc> [<node>] [<lifetime>] [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_operations,Show active resource operations]] +==== `operations` + +Show active operations, optionally filtered by resource and node. + +Usage: +................ +operations [<rsc>] [<node>] +................ + +[[cmdhelp_resource_param,manage a parameter of a resource]] +==== `param` + +Show/edit/delete a parameter of a resource. + +Usage: +............... +param <rsc> set <param> <value> +param <rsc> delete <param> +param <rsc> show <param> +............... +Example: +............... +param ip_0 show ip +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_promote,promote a master-slave resource]] +==== `promote` + +Promote a master-slave resource using the `target-role` +attribute. + +Usage: +............... +promote <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_refresh,Recheck current resource status and drop failure history]] +==== `refresh` + +Delete resource's history (including failures) so its current state is rechecked. + +Usage: +............... +refresh [<rsc>] [<node>] [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_restart,restart resources]] +==== `restart` + +Restart one or more resources. This is essentially a shortcut for +resource stop followed by a start. The shell is first going to wait +for the stop to finish, that is for all resources to really stop, and +only then to order the start action. Due to this command +entailing a whole set of operations, informational messages are +printed to let the user see some progress. + +For details on group management see +<<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... +restart <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +# crm resource restart g_webserver +INFO: ordering g_webserver to stop +waiting for stop to finish .... done +INFO: ordering g_webserver to start +# +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_scores,Display resource scores]] +==== `scores` + +Display the allocation scores for all resources. + +Usage: +................ +scores +................ + +[[cmdhelp_resource_secret,manage sensitive parameters]] +==== `secret` + +Sensitive parameters can be kept in local files rather than CIB +in order to prevent accidental data exposure. Use the `secret` +command to manage such parameters. `stash` and `unstash` move the +value from the CIB and back to the CIB respectively. The `set` +subcommand sets the parameter to the provided value. `delete` +removes the parameter completely. `show` displays the value of +the parameter from the local file. Use `check` to verify if the +local file content is valid. + +Usage: +............... +secret <rsc> set <param> <value> +secret <rsc> stash <param> +secret <rsc> unstash <param> +secret <rsc> delete <param> +secret <rsc> show <param> +secret <rsc> check <param> +............... +Example: +............... +secret fence_1 show password +secret fence_1 stash password +secret fence_1 set password secret_value +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_start,start resources]] +==== `start` + +Start one or more resources by setting the `target-role` attribute. If +there are multiple meta attributes sets, the attribute is set in all +of them. If the resource is a clone, all `target-role` attributes are +removed from the children resources. + +For details on group management see +<<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... +start <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_status,show status of resources]] +==== `status` (`show`, `list`) + +Print resource status. More than one resource can be shown at once. If +the resource parameter is left out, the status of all resources is +printed. + +Usage: +............... +status [<rsc> ...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_stop,stop resources]] +==== `stop` + +Stop one or more resources using the `target-role` attribute. If there +are multiple meta attributes sets, the attribute is set in all of +them. If the resource is a clone, all `target-role` attributes are +removed from the children resources. + +For details on group management see +<<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... +stop <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_trace,start RA tracing]] +==== `trace` + +Start tracing RA for the given operation. The trace files are +stored in `$HA_VARLIB/trace_ra`. If the operation to be traced is +monitor, note that the number of trace files can grow very +quickly. + +If no operation name is given, crmsh will attempt to trace all +operations for the RA. This includes any configured operations, start +and stop as well as promote/demote for multistate resources. + +To trace the probe operation which exists for all resources, either +set a trace for `monitor` with interval `0`, or use `probe` as the +operation name. + +Note: RA tracing is only supported by OCF resource agents; +The pacemaker-execd daemon does not log recurring monitor operations +unless an error occurred. + +Usage: +............... +trace <rsc> [<op> [<interval>] ] +............... +Example: +............... +trace fs start +trace webserver +trace webserver probe +trace fs monitor 0 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_unmanage,put a resource into unmanaged mode]] +==== `unmanage` + +Unmanage a resource using the `is-managed` attribute. If there +are multiple meta attributes sets, the attribute is set in all of +them. If the resource is a clone, all `is-managed` attributes are +removed from the children resources. + +For details on group management see <<cmdhelp_options_manage-children,`options manage-children`>>. + +Usage: +............... +unmanage <rsc> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_untrace,stop RA tracing]] +==== `untrace` + +Stop tracing RA for the given operation. If no operation name is +given, crmsh will attempt to stop tracing all operations in resource. + +Usage: +............... +untrace <rsc> [<op> [<interval>] ] +............... +Example: +............... +untrace fs start +untrace webserver +............... + +[[cmdhelp_resource_utilization,manage a utilization attribute]] +==== `utilization` + +Show/edit/delete a utilization attribute of a resource. These +attributes describe hardware requirements. By setting the +`placement-strategy` cluster property appropriately, it is +possible then to distribute resources based on resource +requirements and node size. See also <<cmdhelp_node_utilization,node utilization attributes>>. + +Usage: +............... +utilization <rsc> set <attr> <value> +utilization <rsc> delete <attr> +utilization <rsc> show <attr> +............... +Example: +............... +utilization xen1 set memory 4096 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node,Node management]] +=== `node` - Node management + +Node management and status commands. + +[[cmdhelp_node_attribute,manage attributes]] +==== `attribute` + +Edit node attributes. This kind of attribute should refer to +relatively static properties, such as memory size. + +Usage: +............... +attribute <node> set <attr> <value> +attribute <node> delete <attr> +attribute <node> show <attr> +............... +Example: +............... +attribute node_1 set memory_size 4096 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_clearstate,Clear node state]] +==== `clearstate` + +Resets and clears the state of the specified node. This node is +afterwards assumed clean and offline. This command can be used to +manually confirm that a node has been fenced (e.g., powered off). + +Be careful! This can cause data corruption if you confirm that a node is +down that is, in fact, not cleanly down - the cluster will proceed as if +the fence had succeeded, possibly starting resources multiple times. + +Usage: +............... +clearstate <node> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_delete,delete node]] +==== `delete` + +Delete a node. This command will remove the node from the CIB +and, in case the cluster stack is running, use the appropriate +program (`crm_node` or `hb_delnode`) to remove the node from the +membership. + +If the node is still listed as active and a member of our +partition we refuse to remove it. With the global force option +(`-F`) we will try to delete the node anyway. + +Usage: +............... +delete <node> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_fence,fence node]] +==== `fence` + +Make CRM fence a node. This functionality depends on stonith +resources capable of fencing the specified node. No such stonith +resources, no fencing will happen. + +Usage: +............... +fence <node> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_maintenance,put node into maintenance mode]] +==== `maintenance` + +Set the node status to maintenance. This is equivalent to the +cluster-wide `maintenance-mode` property but puts just one node +into the maintenance mode. If there are maintenaned resources on +the node, the user will be proposed to remove the maintenance +property from them. + +The node parameter defaults to the node where the command is run. + +Usage: +............... +maintenance [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_online,set node online]] +==== `online` + +Set a node to online status. + +The node parameter defaults to the node where the command is run. + +Usage: +............... +online [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_ready,put node into ready mode]] +==== `ready` + +Set the node's maintenance status to `off`. The node should be +now again fully operational and capable of running resource +operations. + +The node parameter defaults to the node where the command is run. + +Usage: +............... +ready [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_server,show node hostname or server address]] +==== `server` + +Remote nodes may have a configured server address which should +be used when contacting the node. This command prints the +server address if configured, else the node name. + +If no parameter is given, the addresses or names for all nodes +are printed. + +Usage: +............... +server [<node> ...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_show,show node]] +==== `show` + +Show a node definition. If the node parameter is omitted then all +nodes are shown. + +Usage: +............... +show [<node>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_standby,put node into standby]] +==== `standby` + +Set a node to standby status. The node parameter defaults to the +node where the command is run. + +Additionally, you may specify a lifetime for the standby---if set to +`reboot`, the node will be back online once it reboots. `forever` will +keep the node in standby after reboot. The life time defaults to +`forever`. + +Usage: +............... +standby [<node>] [<lifetime>] + +lifetime :: reboot | forever +............... + +Example: +............... +standby bob reboot +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_status-attr,manage status attributes]] +==== `status-attr` + +Edit node attributes which are in the CIB status section, i.e. +attributes which hold properties of a more volatile nature. One +typical example is attribute generated by the `pingd` utility. + +Usage: +............... +status-attr <node> set <attr> <value> +status-attr <node> delete <attr> +status-attr <node> show <attr> +............... +Example: +............... +status-attr node_1 show pingd +............... + +[[cmdhelp_node_utilization,manage utilization attributes]] +==== `utilization` + +Edit node utilization attributes. These attributes describe +hardware characteristics as integer numbers such as memory size +or the number of CPUs. By setting the `placement-strategy` +cluster property appropriately, it is possible then to distribute +resources based on resource requirements and node size. See also +<<cmdhelp_resource_utilization,resource utilization attributes>>. + +Usage: +............... +utilization <node> set <attr> <value> +utilization <node> delete <attr> +utilization <node> show <attr> +............... +Examples: +............... +utilization node_1 set memory 16384 +utilization node_1 show cpu +............... + +[[cmdhelp_site,GEO clustering site support]] +=== `site` - GEO clustering site support + +A cluster may consist of two or more subclusters in different and +distant locations. This set of commands supports such setups. + +[[cmdhelp_site_ticket,manage site tickets]] +==== `ticket` + +Tickets are cluster-wide attributes. They can be managed at the +site where this command is executed. + +It is then possible to constrain resources depending on the +ticket availability (see the <<cmdhelp_configure_rsc_ticket,`rsc_ticket`>> command +for more details). + +Usage: +............... +ticket {grant|revoke|standby|activate|show|time|delete} <ticket> +............... +Example: +............... +ticket grant ticket1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options,User preferences]] +=== `options` - User preferences + +The user may set various options for the crm shell itself. + +[[cmdhelp_options_add-quotes,add quotes around parameters containing spaces]] +==== `add-quotes` + +The shell (as in `/bin/sh`) parser strips quotes from the command +line. This may sometimes make it really difficult to type values +which contain white space. One typical example is the configure +filter command. The crm shell will supply extra quotes around +arguments which contain white space. The default is `yes`. + +.Note on quotes use +**************************** +Adding quotes around arguments automatically has been introduced +with version 1.2.2 and it is technically a regression. Being a +regression is the only reason the `add-quotes` option exists. If +you have custom shell scripts which would break, just set the +`add-quotes` option to `no`. + +For instance, with adding quotes enabled, it is possible to do +the following: +............... +# crm configure primitive d1 Dummy \ + meta description="some description here" +# crm configure filter 'sed "s/hostlist=./&node-c /"' fencing +............... +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_options_check-frequency,when to perform semantic check]] +==== `check-frequency` + +Semantic check of the CIB or elements modified or created may be +done on every configuration change (`always`), when verifying +(`on-verify`) or `never`. It is by default set to `always`. +Experts may want to change the setting to `on-verify`. + +The checks require that resource agents are present. If they are +not installed at the configuration time set this preference to +`never`. + +See <<topics_Features_Checks,Configuration semantic checks>> for more details. + +[[cmdhelp_options_check-mode,how to treat semantic errors]] +==== `check-mode` + +Semantic check of the CIB or elements modified or created may be +done in the `strict` mode or in the `relaxed` mode. In the former +certain problems are treated as configuration errors. In the +`relaxed` mode all are treated as warnings. The default is `strict`. + +See <<topics_Features_Checks,Configuration semantic checks>> for more details. + +[[cmdhelp_options_colorscheme,set colors for output]] +==== `colorscheme` + +With `output` set to `color`, a comma separated list of colors +from this option are used to emphasize: + +- keywords +- object ids +- attribute names +- attribute values +- scores +- resource references + +`crm` can show colors only if there is curses support for python +installed (usually provided by the `python-curses` package). The +colors are whatever is available in your terminal. Use `normal` +if you want to keep the default foreground color. + +This user preference defaults to +`yellow,normal,cyan,red,green,magenta` which is good for +terminals with dark background. You may want to change the color +scheme and save it in the preferences file for other color +setups. + +Example: +............... +colorscheme yellow,normal,blue,red,green,magenta +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options_editor,set preferred editor program]] +==== `editor` + +The `edit` command invokes an editor. Use this to specify your +preferred editor program. If not set, it will default to either +the value of the `EDITOR` environment variable or to one of the +standard UNIX editors (`vi`,`emacs`,`nano`). + +Usage: +............... +editor program +............... +Example: +............... +editor vim +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options_manage-children,how to handle children resource attributes]] +==== `manage-children` + +Some resource management commands, such as `resource stop`, when +the target resource is a group, may not always produce desired +result. Each element, group and the primitive members, can have a +meta attribute and those attributes may end up with conflicting +values. Consider the following construct: +............... +crm(live)# configure show svc fs virtual-ip +primitive fs Filesystem \ + params device="/dev/drbd0" directory="/srv/nfs" fstype=ext3 \ + op monitor interval=10s \ + meta target-role=Started +primitive virtual-ip IPaddr2 \ + params ip=10.2.13.110 iflabel=1 \ + op monitor interval=10s \ + op start interval=0 \ + meta target-role=Started +group svc fs virtual-ip \ + meta target-role=Stopped +............... + +Even though the element +svc+ should be stopped, the group is +actually running because all its members have the +target-role+ +set to +Started+: +............... +crm(live)# resource show svc +resource svc is running on: xen-f +............... + +Hence, if the user invokes +resource stop svc+ the intention is +not clear. This preference gives the user an opportunity to +better control what happens if attributes of group members have +values which are in conflict with the same attribute of the group +itself. + +Possible values are +ask+ (the default), +always+, and +never+. +If set to +always+, the crm shell removes all children attributes +which have values different from the parent. If set to +never+, +all children attributes are left intact. Finally, if set to ++ask+, the user will be asked for each member what is to be done. + +[[cmdhelp_options_output,set output type]] +==== `output` + +`crm` can adorn configurations in two ways: in color (similar to +for instance the `ls --color` command) and by showing keywords in +upper case. Possible values are `plain`, `color-always`, `color`, +and 'uppercase'. It is possible to combine `uppercase` with one +of the color values in order to get an upper case xmass tree. Just +set this option to `color,uppercase` or `color-always,uppercase`. +In case you need color codes in pipes, `color-always` forces color +codes even in case the terminal is not a tty (just like `ls +--color=always`). + +[[cmdhelp_options_pager,set preferred pager program]] +==== `pager` + +The `view` command displays text through a pager. Use this to +specify your preferred pager program. If not set, it will default +to either the value of the `PAGER` environment variable or to one +of the standard UNIX system pagers (`less`,`more`,`pg`). + +[[cmdhelp_options_reset,reset user preferences to factory defaults]] +==== `reset` + +This command resets all user options to the defaults. If used as +a single-shot command, the rc file (+$HOME/.config/crm/rc+) is +reset to the defaults too. + +[[cmdhelp_options_save,save the user preferences to the rc file]] +==== `save` + +Save current settings to the rc file (+$HOME/.config/crm/rc+). On +further `crm` runs, the rc file is automatically read and parsed. + +[[cmdhelp_options_set,Set the value of a given option]] +==== `set` + +Sets the value of an option. Takes the fully qualified +name of the option as argument, as displayed by +show all+. + +The modified option value is stored in the user-local +configuration file, usually found in +~/.config/crm/crm.conf+. + +Usage: +........ +set <option> <value> +........ + +Example: +........ +set color.warn "magenta bold" +set editor nano +........ + +[[cmdhelp_options_show,show current user preference]] +==== `show` + +Display all current settings. + +Given an option name as argument, `show` will display only the value +of that argument. + +Given +all+ as argument, `show` displays all available user options. + +Usage: +........ +show [all|<option>] +........ + +Example: +........ +show +show skill-level +show all +........ + +[[cmdhelp_options_skill-level,set skill level]] +==== `skill-level` + +Based on the skill-level setting, the user is allowed to use only +a subset of commands. There are three levels: operator, +administrator, and expert. The operator level allows only +commands at the `resource` and `node` levels, but not editing +or deleting resources. The administrator may do that and may also +configure the cluster at the `configure` level and manage the +shadow CIBs. The expert may do all. + +Usage: +............... +skill-level <level> + +level :: operator | administrator | expert +............... + +.Note on security +**************************** +The `skill-level` option is advisory only. There is nothing +stopping any users change their skill level (see +<<topics_Features_Security,Access Control Lists (ACL)>> on how to enforce +access control). +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_options_sort-elements,sort CIB elements]] +==== `sort-elements` + +`crm` by default sorts CIB elements. If you want them appear in +the order they were created, set this option to `no`. + +Usage: +............... +sort-elements {yes|no} +............... +Example: +............... +sort-elements no +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options_user,set the cluster user]] +==== `user` + +Sufficient privileges are necessary in order to manage a +cluster: programs such as `crm_verify` or `crm_resource` and, +ultimately, `cibadmin` have to be run either as `root` or as the +CRM owner user (typically `hacluster`). You don't have to worry +about that if you run `crm` as `root`. A more secure way is to +run the program with your usual privileges, set this option to +the appropriate user (such as `hacluster`), and setup the +`sudoers` file. + +Usage: +............... +user system-user +............... +Example: +............... +user hacluster +............... + +[[cmdhelp_options_wait,synchronous operation]] +==== `wait` + +In normal operation, `crm` runs a command and gets back +immediately to process other commands or get input from the user. +With this option set to `yes` it will wait for the started +transition to finish. In interactive mode dots are printed to +indicate progress. + +Usage: +............... +wait {yes|no} +............... +Example: +............... +wait yes +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure,CIB configuration]] +=== `configure` - CIB configuration + +This level enables all CIB object definition commands. + +The configuration may be logically divided into four parts: +nodes, resources, constraints, and (cluster) properties and +attributes. Each of these commands support one or more basic CIB +objects. + +Nodes and attributes describing nodes are managed using the +`node` command. + +Commands for resources are: + +- `primitive` +- `monitor` +- `group` +- `clone` +- `ms`/`master` (master-slave) + +In order to streamline large configurations, it is possible to +define a template which can later be referenced in primitives: + +- `rsc_template` + +In that case the primitive inherits all attributes defined in the +template. + +There are three types of constraints: + +- `location` +- `colocation` +- `order` + +It is possible to define fencing order (stonith resource +priorities): + +- `fencing_topology` + +Finally, there are the cluster properties, resource meta +attributes defaults, and operations defaults. All are just a set +of attributes. These attributes are managed by the following +commands: + +- `property` +- `rsc_defaults` +- `op_defaults` + +In addition to the cluster configuration, the Access Control +Lists (ACL) can be setup to allow access to parts of the CIB for +users other than +root+ and +hacluster+. The following commands +manage ACL: + +- `user` +- `role` + +In Pacemaker 1.1.12 and up, this command replaces the `user` command +for handling ACLs: + +- `acl_target` + +The changes are applied to the current CIB only on ending the +configuration session or using the `commit` command. + +Comments start with +#+ in the first line. The comments are tied +to the element which follows. If the element moves, its comments +will follow. + +[[cmdhelp_configure_acl_target,Define target access rights]] +==== `acl_target` + +Defines an ACL target. + +Usage: +................ +acl_target <tid> [<role> ...] +................ +Example: +................ +acl_target joe resource_admin constraint_editor +................ + +[[cmdhelp_configure_alert,Event-driven alerts]] +==== `alert` + +.Version note +**************************** +This feature is only available +in Pacemaker 1.1.15+. +**************************** + +Event-driven alerts enables calling scripts whenever interesting +events occur in the cluster (nodes joining or leaving, resources +starting or stopping, etc.). + +The +path+ is an arbitrary file path to an alert script. Existing +external scripts used with ClusterMon resources can be used as alert +scripts, since the interface is compatible. + +Each alert may have a number of receipients configured. These will be +passed to the script as arguments. The first recipient will also be +passed as the +CRM_alert_recipient+ environment variable, for +compatibility with existing scripts that only support one recipient. + +The available meta attributes are +timeout+ (default 30s) and ++timestamp-format+ (default `"%H:%M:%S.%06N"`). + +Some configurations may require each recipient to be delimited by +brackets, to avoid ambiguity. In the example +alert-2+ below, the meta +attribute for `timeout` is defined after the recipient, so the +brackets are used to ensure that the meta attribute is set for the +alert and not just the recipient. This can be avoided by setting any +alert attributes before defining the recipients. + +Usage: +............... +alert <id> <path> \ + [attributes <nvpair> ...] \ + [meta <nvpair> ...] \ + [select [nodes | fencing | resources | attributes '{' <attribute> ... '}' ] ...] \ + [to [{] <recipient> + [attributes <nvpair> ...] \ + [meta <nvpair> ...] [}] \ + ...] +............... + +Example: +............... +alert alert-1 /srv/pacemaker/pcmk_alert_sample.sh \ + to /var/log/cluster-alerts.log + +alert alert-2 /srv/pacemaker/example_alert.sh \ + meta timeout=60s \ + to { /var/log/cluster-alerts.log } + +alert alert-3 /srv/pacemaker/example_alert.sh \ + select fencing \ + to { /var/log/fencing-alerts.log } + +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_bundle,Container bundle]] +==== `bundle` + +A bundle is a single resource specifying the settings, networking +requirements, and storage requirements for any number of containers +generated from the same container image. + +Pacemaker bundles support Docker (since version 1.1.17) and rkt (since +version 1.1.18) container technologies. + +A bundle must contain exactly one +docker+ or +rkt+ element. + +The bundle definition may contain a reference to a primitive +resource which defining the resource running inside the +container. + +Example: +............... + +primitive httpd-apache ocf:heartbeat:apache + +bundle httpd \ + docker image=pcmk:httpd replicas=3 \ + network ip-range-start=10.10.10.123 host-netmask=24 \ + port-mapping port=80 \ + storage \ + storage-mapping target-dir=/var/www/html source-dir=/srv/www options=rw \ + primitive httpd-apache + +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_cib,CIB shadow management]] +==== `cib` + +This level is for management of shadow CIBs. It is available at +the `configure` level to enable saving intermediate changes to a +shadow CIB instead of to the live cluster. This short excerpt +shows how: +............... +crm(live)configure# cib new test-2 +INFO: test-2 shadow CIB created +crm(test-2)configure# commit +............... +Note how the current CIB in the prompt changed from +live+ to ++test-2+ after issuing the `cib new` command. See also the +<<cmdhelp_cib,CIB shadow management>> for more information. + +[[cmdhelp_configure_cibstatus,CIB status management and editing]] +==== `cibstatus` + +Enter edit and manage the CIB status section level. See the +<<cmdhelp_cibstatus,CIB status management section>>. + +[[cmdhelp_configure_clone,define a clone]] +==== `clone` + +The `clone` command creates a resource clone. It may contain a +single primitive resource or one group of resources. + +Usage: +............... +clone <name> <rsc> + [description=<description>] + [meta <attr_list>] + [params <attr_list>] + +attr_list :: [$id=<id>] <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...] | $id-ref=<id> +............... +Example: +............... +clone cl_fence apc_1 \ + meta clone-node-max=1 globally-unique=false + +clone disk1 drbd1 \ + meta promotable=true notify=true globally-unique=false +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_colocation,colocate resources]] +==== `colocation` (`collocation`) + +This constraint expresses the placement relation between two +or more resources. If there are more than two resources, then the +constraint is called a resource set. + +The score is used to indicate the priority of the constraint. A +positive score indicates that the resources should run on the same +node. A negative score that they should not run on the same +node. Values of positive or negative +infinity+ indicate a mandatory +constraint. + +In the two resource form, the cluster will place +<with-rsc>+ first, +and then decide where to put the +<rsc>+ resource. + +Collocation resource sets have an extra attribute (+sequential+) +to allow for sets of resources which don't depend on each other +in terms of state. The shell syntax for such sets is to put +resources in parentheses. + +Sets cannot be nested. + +The optional +node-attribute+ can be used to colocate resources on a +set of nodes and not necessarily on the same node. For example, by +setting a node attribute +color+ on all nodes and setting the ++node-attribute+ value to +color+ as well, the colocated resources +will be placed on any node that has the same color. + +For more details on how to configure resource sets, see +<<topics_Features_Resourcesets,`Syntax: Resource sets`>>. + +Usage: +............... +colocation <id> <score>: <rsc>[:<role>] <with-rsc>[:<role>] + [node-attribute=<node_attr>] + +colocation <id> <score>: <resource_sets> + [node-attribute=<node_attr>] + +resource_sets :: <resource_set> [<resource_set> ...] + +resource_set :: ["("|"["] <rsc>[:<role>] [<rsc>[:<role>] ...] \ + [<attributes>] [")"|"]"] + +attributes :: [require-all=(true|false)] [sequential=(true|false)] + +............... +Example: +............... +colocation never_put_apache_with_dummy -inf: apache dummy +colocation c1 inf: A ( B C ) +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_commit,commit the changes to the CIB]] +==== `commit` + +Commit the current configuration to the CIB in use. As noted +elsewhere, commands in a configure session don't have immediate +effect on the CIB. All changes are applied at one point in time, +either using `commit` or when the user leaves the configure +level. In case the CIB in use changed in the meantime, presumably +by somebody else, the crm shell will refuse to apply the changes. + +If you know that it's fine to still apply them, add +force+ to the +command line. + +To disable CIB patching and apply the changes by replacing the CIB +completely, add +replace+ to the command line. Note that this can lead +to previous changes being overwritten if some other process +concurrently modifies the CIB. + +Usage: +............... +commit [force] [replace] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_default-timeouts,set timeouts for operations to minimums from the meta-data]] +==== `default-timeouts` + +This command takes the timeouts from the actions section of the +resource agent meta-data and sets them for the operations of the +primitive. + +Usage: +............... +default-timeouts <id> [<id>...] +............... + +.Note on `default-timeouts` +**************************** +The use of this command is discouraged in favor of manually +determining the best timeouts required for the particular +configuration. Relying on the resource agent to supply appropriate +timeouts can cause the resource to fail at the worst possible moment. + +Appropriate timeouts for resource actions are context-sensitive, and +should be carefully considered with the whole configuration in mind. +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_configure_delete,delete CIB objects]] +==== `delete` + +Delete one or more objects. If an object to be deleted belongs to +a container object, such as a group, and it is the only resource +in that container, then the container is deleted as well. Any +related constraints are removed as well. + +If the object is a started resource, it will not be deleted unless the ++--force+ flag is passed to the command, or the +force+ option is set. + +Usage: +............... +delete [--force] <id> [<id>...] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_edit,edit CIB objects]] +==== `edit` + +This command invokes the editor with the object description. As +with the `show` command, the user may choose to edit all objects +or a set of objects. + +If the user insists, he or she may edit the XML edition of the +object. If you do that, don't modify any id attributes. + +Usage: +............... +edit [xml] [<id> ...] +edit [xml] changed +............... + +.Note on renaming element ids +**************************** +The edit command sometimes cannot properly handle modifying +element ids. In particular for elements which belong to group or +ms resources. Group and ms resources themselves also cannot be +renamed. Please use the `rename` command instead. +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_configure_erase,erase the CIB]] +==== `erase` + +The `erase` clears all configuration. Apart from nodes. To remove +nodes, you have to specify an additional keyword `nodes`. + +Note that removing nodes from the live cluster may have some +strange/interesting/unwelcome effects. + +Usage: +............... +erase [nodes] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_fencing_topology,node fencing order]] +==== `fencing_topology` + +If multiple fencing (stonith) devices are available capable of +fencing a node, their order may be specified by +fencing_topology+. +The order is specified per node. + +Stonith resources can be separated by +,+ in which case all of +them need to succeed. If they fail, the next stonith resource (or +set of resources) is used. In other words, use comma to separate +resources which all need to succeed and whitespace for serial +order. It is not allowed to use whitespace around comma. + +If the node is left out, the order is used for all nodes. +That should reduce the configuration size in some stonith setups. + +From Pacemaker version 1.1.14, it is possible to use a node attribute +as the +target+ in a fencing topology. The syntax for this usage is +described below. + +From Pacemaker version 1.1.14, it is also possible to use regular +expression patterns as the +target+ in a fencing topology. The configured +fencing sequence then applies to all devices matching the pattern. + +Usage: +............... +fencing_topology <stonith_resources> [<stonith_resources> ...] +fencing_topology <fencing_order> [<fencing_order> ...] + +fencing_order :: <target> <stonith_resources> [<stonith_resources> ...] + +stonith_resources :: <rsc>[,<rsc>...] +target :: <node>: | attr:<node-attribute>=<value> | pattern:<pattern> +............... +Example: +............... +# Only kill the power if poison-pill fails +fencing_topology poison-pill power + +# As above for node-a, but a different strategy for node-b +fencing_topology \ + node-a: poison-pill power \ + node-b: ipmi serial + +# Fencing anything on rack 1 requires fencing via both APC 1 and 2, +# to defeat the redundancy provided by two separate UPS units. +fencing_topology attr:rack=1 apc01,apc02 + +# Fencing for all machines named green.* is done using the pear +# fencing device first, while all machines named red.* are fenced +# using the apple fencing device first. +fencing_topology \ + pattern:green.* pear apple \ + pattern:red.* apple pear +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_filter,filter CIB objects]] +==== `filter` + +This command filters the given CIB elements through an external +program. The program should accept input on `stdin` and send +output to `stdout` (the standard UNIX filter conventions). As +with the `show` command, the user may choose to filter all or +just a subset of elements. + +It is possible to filter the XML representation of objects, but +probably not as useful as the configuration language. The +presentation is somewhat different from what would be displayed +by the `show` command---each element is shown on a single line, +i.e. there are no backslashes and no other embelishments. + +Don't forget to put quotes around the filter if it contains +spaces. + +Usage: +............... +filter <prog> [xml] [<id> ...] +filter <prog> [xml] changed +............... +Examples: +............... +filter "sed '/^primitive/s/target-role=[^ ]*//'" +# crm configure filter "sed '/^primitive/s/target-role=[^ ]*//'" +crm configure <<END + filter "sed '/threshold=\"1\"/s/=\"1\"/=\"0\"/g'" +END +............... + +.Note on quotation marks +************************** +Filter commands which feature a blend of quotation marks can be +difficult to get right, especially when used directly from bash, since +bash does its own quotation parsing. In these cases, it can be easier +to supply the filter command as standard input. See the last example +above. +************************** + +[[cmdhelp_configure_get_property,Get property value]] +==== `get-property` + +Show the value of the given property. If the value is not set, the +command will print the default value for the property, if known. + +If no property name is passed to the command, the list of known +cluster properties is printed. + +If the property is set multiple times, for example using multiple +property sets with different rule expressions, the output of this +command is undefined. + +Pass the argument +-t+ or +--true+ to `get-property` to translate +the argument value into +true+ or +false+. If the value is not +set, the command will print +false+. + +Usage: +............... +get-property [-t|--true] [<name>] +............... + +Example: +............... +get-property stonith-enabled +get-property -t maintenance-mode +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_graph,generate a directed graph]] +==== `graph` + +Create a graphviz graphical layout from the current cluster +configuration. + +Currently, only `dot` (directed graph) is supported. It is +essentially a visualization of resource ordering. + +The graph may be saved to a file which can be used as source for +various graphviz tools (by default it is displayed in the user's +X11 session). Optionally, by specifying the format, one can also +produce an image instead. + +For more or different graphviz attributes, it is possible to save +the default set of attributes to an ini file. If this file exists +it will always override the builtin settings. The +exportsettings+ +subcommand also prints the location of the ini file. + +Usage: +............... +graph [<gtype> [<file> [<img_format>]]] +graph exportsettings + +gtype :: dot +img_format :: `dot` output format (see the +-T+ option) +............... +Example: +............... +graph dot +graph dot clu1.conf.dot +graph dot clu1.conf.svg svg +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_group,define a group]] +==== `group` + +The `group` command creates a group of resources. This can be useful +when resources depend on other resources and require that those +resources start in order on the same node. A common use of resource +groups is to ensure that a server and a virtual IP are located +together, and that the virtual IP is started before the server. + +Grouped resources are started in the order they appear in the group, +and stopped in the reverse order. If a resource in the group cannot +run anywhere, resources following it in the group will not start. + +`group` can be passed the "container" meta attribute, to indicate that +it is to be used to group VM resources monitored using Nagios. The +resource referred to by the container attribute must be of type +`ocf:heartbeat:Xen`, `ocf:heartbeat:VirtualDomain` or `ocf:heartbeat:lxc`. + +Usage: +............... +group <name> <rsc> [<rsc>...] + [description=<description>] + [meta attr_list] + [params attr_list] + +attr_list :: [$id=<id>] <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...] | $id-ref=<id> +............... +Example: +............... +group internal_www disk0 fs0 internal_ip apache \ + meta target_role=stopped + +group vm-and-services vm vm-sshd meta container="vm" +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_load,import the CIB from a file]] +==== `load` + +Load a part of configuration (or all of it) from a local file or +a network URL. The +replace+ method replaces the current +configuration with the one from the source. The +update+ method +tries to import the contents into the current configuration. The ++push+ method imports the contents into the current configuration +and removes any lines that are not present in the given +configuration. +The file may be a CLI file or an XML file. + +If the URL is `-`, the configuration is read from standard input. + +Usage: +............... +load [xml] <method> URL + +method :: replace | update | push +............... +Example: +............... +load xml update myfirstcib.xml +load xml replace http://storage.big.com/cibs/bigcib.xml +load xml push smallcib.xml +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_location,a location preference]] +==== `location` + +`location` defines the preference of nodes for the given +resource. The location constraints consist of one or more rules +which specify a score to be awarded if the rule matches. + +The resource referenced by the location constraint can be one of the +following: + +* Plain resource reference: +location loc1 webserver 100: node1+ +* Resource set in curly brackets: +location loc1 { virtual-ip webserver } 100: node1+ +* Tag containing resource ids: +location loc1 tag1 100: node1+ +* Resource pattern: +location loc1 /web.*/ 100: node1+ + +The +resource-discovery+ attribute allows probes to be selectively +enabled or disabled per resource and node. + +The syntax for resource sets is described in detail for +<<cmdhelp_configure_colocation,`colocation`>>. + +For more details on how to configure resource sets, see +<<topics_Features_Resourcesets,`Syntax: Resource sets`>>. + +For more information on rule expressions, see +<<topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions>>. + +Usage: +............... +location <id> <rsc> [<attributes>] {<node_pref>|<rules>} + +rsc :: /<rsc-pattern>/ + | { resource_sets } + | <rsc> + +attributes :: role=<role> | resource-discovery=always|never|exclusive + +node_pref :: <score>: <node> + +rules :: + rule [id_spec] [$role=<role>] <score>: <expression> + [rule [id_spec] [$role=<role>] <score>: <expression> ...] + +id_spec :: $id=<id> | $id-ref=<id> +score :: <number> | <attribute> | [-]inf +expression :: <simple_exp> [<bool_op> <simple_exp> ...] +bool_op :: or | and +simple_exp :: <attribute> [type:]<binary_op> <value> + | <unary_op> <attribute> + | date <date_expr> +type :: string | version | number +binary_op :: lt | gt | lte | gte | eq | ne +unary_op :: defined | not_defined + +date_expr :: lt <end> + | gt <start> + | in start=<start> end=<end> + | in start=<start> <duration> + | spec <date_spec> +duration|date_spec :: + hours=<value> + | monthdays=<value> + | weekdays=<value> + | yearsdays=<value> + | months=<value> + | weeks=<value> + | years=<value> + | weekyears=<value> + | moon=<value> +............... +Examples: +............... +location conn_1 internal_www 100: node1 + +location conn_1 internal_www \ + rule 50: #uname eq node1 \ + rule pingd: defined pingd + +location conn_2 dummy_float \ + rule -inf: not_defined pingd or pingd number:lte 0 + +# never probe for rsc1 on node1 +location no-probe rsc1 resource-discovery=never -inf: node1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_modgroup,modify group]] +==== `modgroup` + +Add or remove primitives in a group. The `add` subcommand appends +the new group member by default. Should it go elsewhere, there +are `after` and `before` clauses. + +Usage: +............... +modgroup <id> add <id> [after <id>|before <id>] +modgroup <id> remove <id> +............... +Examples: +............... +modgroup share1 add storage2 before share1-fs +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_monitor,add monitor operation to a primitive]] +==== `monitor` + +Monitor is by far the most common operation. It is possible to +add it without editing the whole resource. Also, long primitive +definitions may be a bit uncluttered. In order to make this +command as concise as possible, less common operation attributes +are not available. If you need them, then use the `op` part of +the `primitive` command. + +Usage: +............... +monitor <rsc>[:<role>] <interval>[:<timeout>] +............... +Example: +............... +monitor apcfence 60m:60s +............... + +Note that after executing the command, the monitor operation may +be shown as part of the primitive definition. + +[[cmdhelp_configure_ms,define a master-slave resource]] +==== `ms` (`master`) + +The `ms` command creates a master/slave resource type. It may contain a +single primitive resource or one group of resources. + +Usage: +............... +ms <name> <rsc> + [description=<description>] + [meta attr_list] + [params attr_list] + +attr_list :: [$id=<id>] <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...] | $id-ref=<id> +............... +Example: +............... +ms disk1 drbd1 \ + meta notify=true globally-unique=false +............... + +.Note on `ms` deprecated +**************************** +From Pacemaker-2.0, the resource type referred to as "master/slave", +"stateful", or "multi-state" is no longer a separate resource type, +but a variation of clone now referred to as a "promotable clone". +For backward compatibility, above configurations are also accepted. +............... +clone disk1 drbd1 \ + meta promotable=true notify=true globally-unique=false +............... +**************************** + +.Note on `id-ref` usage +**************************** +Instance or meta attributes (`params` and `meta`) may contain +a reference to another set of attributes. In that case, no other +attributes are allowed. Since attribute sets' ids, though they do +exist, are not shown in the `crm`, it is also possible to +reference an object instead of an attribute set. `crm` will +automatically replace such a reference with the right id: + +............... +crm(live)configure# primitive a2 www-2 meta $id-ref=a1 +crm(live)configure# show a2 +primitive a2 apache \ + meta $id-ref=a1-meta_attributes + [...] +............... +It is advisable to give meaningful names to attribute sets which +are going to be referenced. +**************************** + +[[cmdhelp_configure_node,define a cluster node]] +==== `node` + +The node command describes a cluster node. Nodes in the CIB are +commonly created automatically by the CRM. Hence, you should not +need to deal with nodes unless you also want to define node +attributes. Note that it is also possible to manage node +attributes at the `node` level. + +Usage: +............... +node [$id=<id>] <uname>[:<type>] + [description=<description>] + [attributes [$id=<id>] [<score>:] [rule...] + <param>=<value> [<param>=<value>...]] | $id-ref=<ref> + [utilization [$id=<id>] [<score>:] [rule...] + <param>=<value> [<param>=<value>...]] | $id-ref=<ref> + +type :: normal | member | ping | remote +............... +Example: +............... +node node1 +node big_node attributes memory=64 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_op_defaults,set resource operations defaults]] +==== `op_defaults` + +Set defaults for the operations meta attributes. + +For more information on rule expressions, see +<<topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions>>. + +Usage: +............... +op_defaults [$id=<set_id>] [rule ...] <option>=<value> [<option>=<value> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +op_defaults record-pending=true +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_order,order resources]] +==== `order` + +This constraint expresses the order of actions on two resources +or more resources. If there are more than two resources, then the +constraint is called a resource set. + +Ordered resource sets have an extra attribute to allow for sets +of resources whose actions may run in parallel. The shell syntax +for such sets is to put resources in parentheses. + +If the subsequent resource can start or promote after any one of the +resources in a set has done, enclose the set in brackets (+[+ and +]+). + +Sets cannot be nested. + +Three strings are reserved to specify a kind of order constraint: ++Mandatory+, +Optional+, and +Serialize+. It is preferred to use +one of these settings instead of score. Previous versions mapped +scores +0+ and +inf+ to keywords +advisory+ and +mandatory+. +That is still valid but deprecated. + +For more details on how to configure resource sets, see +<<topics_Features_Resourcesets,`Syntax: Resource sets`>>. + +Usage: +............... +order <id> [kind:] first then [symmetrical=<bool>] + +order <id> [kind:] resource_sets [symmetrical=<bool>] + +kind :: Mandatory | Optional | Serialize + +first :: <rsc>[:<action>] + +then :: <rsc>[:<action>] + +resource_sets :: resource_set [resource_set ...] + +resource_set :: ["["|"("] <rsc>[:<action>] [<rsc>[:<action>] ...] \ + [attributes] ["]"|")"] + +attributes :: [require-all=(true|false)] [sequential=(true|false)] + +............... +Example: +............... +order o-1 Mandatory: apache:start ip_1 +order o-2 Serialize: A ( B C ) +order o-4 first-resource then-resource +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_primitive,define a resource]] +==== `primitive` + +The primitive command describes a resource. It may be referenced +only once in group, clone, or master-slave objects. If it's not +referenced, then it is placed as a single resource in the CIB. + +Operations may be specified anonymously, as a group or by reference: + +* "Anonymous", as a list of +op+ specifications. Use this + method if you don't need to reference the set of operations + elsewhere. This is the most common way to define operations. + +* If reusing operation sets is desired, use the +operations+ keyword + along with an id to give the operations set a name. Use the + +operations+ keyword and an id-ref value set to the id of another + operations set, to apply the same set of operations to this + primitive. + +Operation attributes which are not recognized are saved as +instance attributes of that operation. A typical example is ++OCF_CHECK_LEVEL+. + +For multistate resources, roles are specified as +role=<role>+. + +A template may be defined for resources which are of the same +type and which share most of the configuration. See +<<cmdhelp_configure_rsc_template,`rsc_template`>> for more information. + +Attributes containing time values, such as the +interval+ attribute on +operations, are configured either as a plain number, which is +interpreted as a time in seconds, or using one of the following +suffixes: + +* +s+, +sec+ - time in seconds (same as no suffix) +* +ms+, +msec+ - time in milliseconds +* +us+, +usec+ - time in microseconds +* +m+, +min+ - time in minutes +* +h+, +hr+ - time in hours + +Usage: +............... +primitive <rsc> {[<class>:[<provider>:]]<type>|@<template>} + [description=<description>] + [[params] attr_list] + [meta attr_list] + [utilization attr_list] + [operations id_spec] + [op op_type [<attribute>=<value>...] + [[op_params] attr_list] + [op_meta attr_list] ...] + +attr_list :: [$id=<id>] [<score>:] [rule...] + <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...]] | $id-ref=<id> +id_spec :: $id=<id> | $id-ref=<id> +op_type :: start | stop | monitor +............... +Example: +............... +primitive apcfence stonith:apcsmart \ + params ttydev=/dev/ttyS0 hostlist="node1 node2" \ + op start timeout=60s \ + op monitor interval=30m timeout=60s + +primitive www8 apache \ + configfile=/etc/apache/www8.conf \ + operations $id-ref=apache_ops + +primitive db0 mysql \ + params config=/etc/mysql/db0.conf \ + op monitor interval=60s \ + op monitor interval=300s OCF_CHECK_LEVEL=10 + +primitive r0 ocf:linbit:drbd \ + params drbd_resource=r0 \ + op monitor role=Master interval=60s \ + op monitor role=Slave interval=300s + +primitive xen0 @vm_scheme1 xmfile=/etc/xen/vm/xen0 + +primitive mySpecialRsc Special \ + params 3: rule #uname eq node1 interface=eth1 \ + params 2: rule #uname eq node2 interface=eth2 port=8888 \ + params 1: interface=eth0 port=9999 + +primitive A ocf:pacemaker:Dummy \ + op start \ + op_meta 2: rule #ra-version version:gt 1.0 timeout=120s \ + op_meta 1: timeout=60s +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_property,set a cluster property]] +==== `property` + +Set cluster configuration properties. To list the +available cluster configuration properties, use the +<<cmdhelp_ra_info,`ra info`>> command with +pengine+, +crmd+, ++cib+ and +stonithd+ as arguments. +When setting the +maintenance-mode+ property, it will +inform the user if there are nodes or resources that +have the +maintenance+ property. + +For more information on rule expressions, see +<<topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions>>. + +Usage: +............... +property [<set_id>:] [rule ...] <option>=<value> [<option>=<value> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +property stonith-enabled=true +property rule date spec years=2014 stonith-enabled=false +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_ptest,show cluster actions if changes were committed]] +==== `ptest` (`simulate`) + +Show PE (Policy Engine) motions using `ptest(8)` or +`crm_simulate(8)`. + +A CIB is constructed using the current user edited configuration +and the status from the running CIB. The resulting CIB is run +through `ptest` (or `crm_simulate`) to show changes which would +happen if the configuration is committed. + +The status section may be loaded from another source and modified +using the <<cmdhelp_cibstatus,`cibstatus`>> level commands. In that case, the +`ptest` command will issue a message informing the user that the +Policy Engine graph is not calculated based on the current status +section and therefore won't show what would happen to the +running but some imaginary cluster. + +If you have graphviz installed and X11 session, `dotty(1)` is run +to display the changes graphically. + +Add a string of +v+ characters to increase verbosity. `ptest` +can also show allocation scores. +utilization+ turns on +information about the remaining capacity of nodes. With the ++actions+ option, `ptest` will print all resource actions. + +The `ptest` program has been replaced by `crm_simulate` in newer +Pacemaker versions. In some installations both could be +installed. Use `simulate` to enfore using `crm_simulate`. + +Usage: +............... +ptest [nograph] [v...] [scores] [actions] [utilization] +............... +Examples: +............... +ptest scores +ptest vvvvv +simulate actions +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_refresh,refresh from CIB]] +==== `refresh` + +Refresh the internal structures from the CIB. All changes made +during this session are lost. + +Usage: +............... +refresh +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rename,rename a CIB object]] +==== `rename` + +Rename an object. It is recommended to use this command to rename +a resource, because it will take care of updating all related +constraints and a parent resource. Changing ids with the edit +command won't have the same effect. + +If you want to rename a resource, it must be in the stopped state. + +Usage: +............... +rename <old_id> <new_id> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_role,define role access rights]] +==== `role` + +An ACL role is a set of rules which describe access rights to +CIB. Rules consist of an access right +read+, +write+, or +deny+ +and a specification denoting part of the configuration to which +the access right applies. The specification can be an XPath or a +combination of tag and id references. If an attribute is +appended, then the specification applies only to that attribute +of the matching element. + +There is a number of shortcuts for XPath specifications. The ++meta+, +params+, and +utilization+ shortcuts reference resource +meta attributes, parameters, and utilization respectively. The +`location` may be used to specify location constraints most of +the time to allow resource `move` and `unmove` commands. The +`property` references cluster properties. The `node` allows +reading node attributes. +nodeattr+ and +nodeutil+ reference node +attributes and node capacity (utilization). The `status` shortcut +references the whole status section of the CIB. Read access to +status is necessary for various monitoring tools such as +`crm_mon(8)` (aka `crm status`). + +For more information on rule expressions, see +<<topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions>>. + +Usage: +............... +role <role-id> rule [rule ...] + +rule :: acl-right cib-spec [attribute:<attribute>] + +acl-right :: read | write | deny + +cib-spec :: xpath-spec | tag-ref-spec +xpath-spec :: xpath:<xpath> | shortcut +tag-ref-spec :: tag:<tag> | ref:<id> | tag:<tag> ref:<id> + +shortcut :: meta:<rsc>[:<attr>] + params:<rsc>[:<attr>] + utilization:<rsc> + location:<rsc> + property[:<attr>] + node[:<node>] + nodeattr[:<attr>] + nodeutil[:<node>] + status +............... +Example: +............... +role app1_admin \ + write meta:app1:target-role \ + write meta:app1:is-managed \ + write location:app1 \ + read ref:app1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rsc_defaults,set resource defaults]] +==== `rsc_defaults` + +Set defaults for the resource meta attributes. + +For more information on rule expressions, see +<<topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions>>. + +Usage: +............... +rsc_defaults [<set_id>:] [rule ...] <option>=<value> [<option>=<value> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +rsc_defaults failure-timeout=3m +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rsc_template,define a resource template]] +==== `rsc_template` + +The `rsc_template` command creates a resource template. It may be +referenced in primitives. It is used to reduce large +configurations with many similar resources. + +Usage: +............... +rsc_template <name> [<class>:[<provider>:]]<type> + [description=<description>] + [params attr_list] + [meta attr_list] + [utilization attr_list] + [operations id_spec] + [op op_type [<attribute>=<value>...] ...] + +attr_list :: [$id=<id>] <attr>=<val> [<attr>=<val>...] | $id-ref=<id> +id_spec :: $id=<id> | $id-ref=<id> +op_type :: start | stop | monitor +............... +Example: +............... +rsc_template public_vm Xen \ + op start timeout=300s \ + op stop timeout=300s \ + op monitor interval=30s timeout=60s \ + op migrate_from timeout=600s \ + op migrate_to timeout=600s +primitive xen0 @public_vm \ + params xmfile=/etc/xen/xen0 +primitive xen1 @public_vm \ + params xmfile=/etc/xen/xen1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rsc_ticket,resources ticket dependency]] +==== `rsc_ticket` + +This constraint expresses dependency of resources on cluster-wide +attributes, also known as tickets. Tickets are mainly used in +geo-clusters, which consist of multiple sites. A ticket may be +granted to a site, thus allowing resources to run there. + +The +loss-policy+ attribute specifies what happens to the +resource (or resources) if the ticket is revoked. The default is +either +stop+ or +demote+ depending on whether a resource is +multi-state. + +See also the <<cmdhelp_site_ticket,`site`>> set of commands. + +Usage: +............... +rsc_ticket <id> <ticket_id>: <rsc>[:<role>] [<rsc>[:<role>] ...] + [loss-policy=<loss_policy_action>] + +loss_policy_action :: stop | demote | fence | freeze +............... +Example: +............... +rsc_ticket ticket-A_public-ip ticket-A: public-ip +rsc_ticket ticket-A_bigdb ticket-A: bigdb loss-policy=fence +rsc_ticket ticket-B_storage ticket-B: drbd-a:Master drbd-b:Master +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_configure_rsctest,test resources as currently configured]] +==== `rsctest` + +Test resources with current resource configuration. If no nodes +are specified, tests are run on all known nodes. + +The order of resources is significant: it is assumed that later +resources depend on earlier ones. + +If a resource is multi-state, it is assumed that the role on +which later resources depend is master. + +Tests are run sequentially to prevent running the same resource +on two or more nodes. Tests are carried out only if none of the +specified nodes currently run any of the specified resources. +However, it won't verify whether resources run on the other +nodes. + +Superuser privileges are obviously required: either run this as +root or setup the `sudoers` file appropriately. + +Note that resource testing may take some time. + +Usage: +............... +rsctest <rsc_id> [<rsc_id> ...] [<node_id> ...] +............... +Examples: +............... +rsctest my_ip websvc +rsctest websvc nodeB +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_save,save the CIB to a file]] +==== `save` + +Save the current configuration to a file. Optionally, as XML. Use ++-+ instead of file name to write the output to `stdout`. + +The `save` command accepts the same selection arguments as the `show` +command. See the <<cmdhelp_configure_show,help section>> for `show` +for more details. + +Usage: +............... +save [xml] [<id> | type:<type | tag:<tag> | + related:<obj> | changed ...] <file> +............... +Example: +............... +save myfirstcib.txt +save web-server server-config.txt +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_schema,set or display current CIB RNG schema]] +==== `schema` + +CIB's content is validated by a RNG schema. Pacemaker supports +several, depending on version. At least the following schemas are +accepted by `crmsh`: + +* +pacemaker-1.0+ +* +pacemaker-1.1+ +* +pacemaker-1.2+ +* +pacemaker-1.3+ +* +pacemaker-2.0+ + +Use this command to display or switch to another RNG schema. + +Usage: +............... +schema [<schema>] +............... +Example: +............... +schema pacemaker-1.1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_set,set an attribute value]] +==== `set` + +Set the value of a configured attribute. The attribute must +configured previously, and can be an agent parameter, meta attribute, +utilization value or operation value. + +The first argument to the command is a path to an attribute. +This is a dot-separated sequence beginning with the name of +the resource or object, and ending with the name of the attribute to +set. To set operation value, `op_type` should be specified; when multi +operations exist like multi monitors, `interval` should be specified. + +Usage: +............... +set <path> <value> + +path:: id.[op_type.][interval.]name +............... +Examples: +............... +set vip1.ip 192.168.20.5 +set vm-a.force_stop 1 +set vip1.monitor.on-fail ignore +set drbd.monitor.10s.interval 20s +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_show,display CIB objects]] +==== `show` + +The `show` command displays CIB objects. Without any argument, it +displays all objects in the CIB, but the set of objects displayed by +`show` can be limited to only objects with the given IDs or by using +one or more of the special prefixes described below. + +The XML representation for the objects can be displayed by passing ++xml+ as the first argument. + +To show one or more specific objects, pass the object IDs as +arguments. + +To show all objects of a certain type, use the +type:+ prefix. + +To show all objects in a tag, use the +tag:+ prefix. + +To show all constraints related to a primitive, use the +related:+ prefix. + +To show all modified objects, pass the argument +changed+. + +The prefixes can be used together on a single command line. For +example, to show both the tag itself and the objects tagged by it the +following combination can be used: +show tag:my-tag my-tag+. + +To refine a selection of objects using multiple modifiers, the keywords ++and+ and +or+ can be used. For example, to select all primitives tagged ++foo+, the following combination can be used: ++show type:primitive and tag:foo+. + +To hide values when displaying the configuration, use the ++obscure:<glob>+ argument. This can be useful when sending the +configuration over a public channel, to avoid exposing potentially +sensitive information. The +<glob>+ argument is a bash-style pattern +matching attribute keys. + +In +/etc/crm/crm.conf+, +obscure_pattern+ option is the persisent configuration of CLI. +Example, for the high security concern, +............... +[core] +obscure_pattern = passw* | ip +............... +Which makes +crm configure show+ is equal to +............... +node-1:~ # crm configure show obscure:passw* obscure:ip +node 1084783297: node1 +primitive fence_device stonith:fence_ilo5 \ + params password="******" +primitive ip IPaddr2 \ + params ip="******" +............... +The default suggestion is +passw*+ +If you don't want to obscure, change the value to blank. + +Usage: +............... +show [xml] [<id> + | changed + | type:<type> + | tag:<id> + | related:<obj> + | obscure:<glob> + ...] + +type :: node | primitive | group | clone | ms | rsc_template + | location | colocation | order + | rsc_ticket + | property | rsc_defaults | op_defaults + | fencing_topology + | role | user | acl_target + | tag +............... + +Example: +............... +show webapp +show type:primitive +show xml tag:db tag:fs +show related:webapp +show type:primitive obscure:passwd +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_tag,Define resource tags]] +==== `tag` + +Define a resource tag. A tag is an id referring to one or more +resources, without implying any constraints between the tagged +resources. This can be useful for grouping conceptually related +resources. + +Usage: +............... +tag <tag-name>: <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +tag <tag-name> <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +tag web: p-webserver p-vip +tag ips server-vip admin-vip +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_template,edit and import a configuration from a template]] +==== `template` + +The specified template is loaded into the editor. It's up to the +user to make a good CRM configuration out of it. See also the +<<cmdhelp_template,template section>>. + +Usage: +............... +template [xml] url +............... +Example: +............... +template two-apaches.txt +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_upgrade,upgrade the CIB]] +==== `upgrade` + +Attempts to upgrade the CIB to validate with the current +version. Commonly, this is required if the error +`CIB not supported` occurs. It typically means that the +active CIB version is coming from an older release. + +As a safety precaution, the force argument is required if the ++validation-with+ attribute is set to anything other than ++0.6+. Thus in most cases, it is required. + +Usage: +............... +upgrade [force] +............... + +Example: +............... +upgrade force +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_user,define user access rights]] +==== `user` + +Users which normally cannot view or manage cluster configuration +can be allowed access to parts of the CIB. The access is defined +by a set of +read+, +write+, and +deny+ rules as in role +definitions or by referencing roles. The latter is considered +best practice. + +For more information on rule expressions, see +<<topics_Syntax_RuleExpressions,Syntax: Rule expressions>>. + +Usage: +............... +user <uid> {roles|rules} + +roles :: role:<role-ref> [role:<role-ref> ...] +rules :: rule [rule ...] +............... +Example: +............... +user joe \ + role:app1_admin \ + role:read_all +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_validate_all,call agent validate-all for resource]] +==== `validate-all` + +Call the `validate-all` action for the resource, if possible. + +Limitations: + +* The resource agent must implement the `validate-all` action. +* The current user must be root. +* The primitive resource must not use nvpair references. + +Usage: +............... +validate-all <rsc> +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_configure_verify,verify the CIB with crm_verify]] +==== `verify` + +Verify the contents of the CIB which would be committed. + +Usage: +............... +verify +............... + +[[cmdhelp_configure_xml,raw xml]] +==== `xml` + +Even though we promissed no xml, it may happen, but hopefully +very very seldom, that an element from the CIB cannot be rendered +in the configuration language. In that case, the element will be +shown as raw xml, prefixed by this command. That element can then +be edited like any other. If the shell finds out that after the +change it can digest it, then it is going to be converted into +the normal configuration language. Otherwise, there is no need to +use `xml` for configuration. + +Usage: +............... +xml <xml> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template,edit and import a configuration from a template]] +=== `template` - Import configuration from templates + +User may be assisted in the cluster configuration by templates +prepared in advance. Templates consist of a typical ready +configuration which may be edited to suit particular user needs. + +This command enters a template level where additional commands +for configuration/template management are available. + +[[cmdhelp_template_apply,process and apply the current configuration to the current CIB]] +==== `apply` + +Copy the current or given configuration to the current CIB. By +default, the CIB is replaced, unless the method is set to +"update". + +Usage: +............... +apply [<method>] [<config>] + +method :: replace | update +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_delete,delete a configuration]] +==== `delete` + +Remove a configuration. The loaded (active) configuration may be +removed by force. + +Usage: +............... +delete <config> [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_edit,edit a configuration]] +==== `edit` + +Edit current or given configuration using your favourite editor. + +Usage: +............... +edit [<config>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_list,list configurations/templates]] +==== `list` + +When called with no argument, lists existing templates and +configurations. + +Given the argument +templates+, lists the available templates. + +Given the argument +configs+, lists the available configurations. + +Usage: +............... +list [templates|configs] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_load,load a configuration]] +==== `load` + +Load an existing configuration. Further `edit`, `show`, and +`apply` commands will refer to this configuration. + +Usage: +............... +load <config> +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_new,create a new configuration from templates]] +==== `new` + +Create a new configuration from one or more templates. Note that +configurations and templates are kept in different places, so it +is possible to have a configuration name equal a template name. + +If you already know which parameters are required, you can set +them directly on the command line. + +The parameter name +id+ is set by default to the name of the +configuration. + +If no parameters are being set and you don't want a particular name +for your configuration, you can call this command with a template name +as the only parameter. A unique configuration name based on the +template name will be generated. + +Usage: +............... +new [<config>] <template> [<template> ...] [params name=value ...] +............... + +Example: +............... +new vip virtual-ip +new bigfs ocfs2 params device=/dev/sdx8 directory=/bigfs +new apache +............... + +[[cmdhelp_template_show,show the processed configuration]] +==== `show` + +Process the current or given configuration and display the result. + +Usage: +............... +show [<config>] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus,CIB status management and editing]] +=== `cibstatus` - CIB status management and editing + +The `status` section of the CIB keeps the current status of nodes +and resources. It is modified _only_ on events, i.e. when some +resource operation is run or node status changes. For obvious +reasons, the CRM has no user interface with which it is possible +to affect the status section. From the user's point of view, the +status section is essentially a read-only part of the CIB. The +current status is never even written to disk, though it is +available in the PE (Policy Engine) input files which represent +the history of cluster motions. The current status may be read +using the +cibadmin -Q+ command. + +It may sometimes be of interest to see how status changes would +affect the Policy Engine. The set of `cibstatus` level commands +allow the user to load status sections from various sources and +then insert or modify resource operations or change nodes' state. + +The effect of those changes may then be observed by running the +<<cmdhelp_configure_ptest,`ptest`>> command at the `configure` level +or `simulate` and `run` commands at this level. The `ptest` +runs with the user edited CIB whereas the latter two commands +run with the CIB which was loaded along with the status section. + +The `simulate` and `run` commands as well as all status +modification commands are implemented using `crm_simulate(8)`. + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_load,load the CIB status section]] +==== `load` + +Load a status section from a file, a shadow CIB, or the running +cluster. By default, the current (+live+) status section is +modified. Note that if the +live+ status section is modified it +is not going to be updated if the cluster status changes, because +that would overwrite the user changes. To make `crm` drop changes +and resume use of the running cluster status, run +load live+. + +All CIB shadow configurations contain the status section which is +a snapshot of the status section taken at the time the shadow was +created. Obviously, this status section doesn't have much to do +with the running cluster status, unless the shadow CIB has just +been created. Therefore, the `ptest` command by default uses the +running cluster status section. + +Usage: +............... +load {<file>|shadow:<cib>|live} +............... +Example: +............... +load bug-12299.xml +load shadow:test1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_node,change node status]] +==== `node` + +Change the node status. It is possible to throw a node out of +the cluster, make it a member, or set its state to unclean. + ++online+:: Set the +node_state+ `crmd` attribute to +online+ +and the +expected+ and +join+ attributes to +member+. The effect +is that the node becomes a cluster member. + ++offline+:: Set the +node_state+ `crmd` attribute to +offline+ +and the +expected+ attribute to empty. This makes the node +cleanly removed from the cluster. + ++unclean+:: Set the +node_state+ `crmd` attribute to +offline+ +and the +expected+ attribute to +member+. In this case the node +has unexpectedly disappeared. + +Usage: +............... +node <node> {online|offline|unclean} +............... +Example: +............... +node xen-b unclean +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_op,edit outcome of a resource operation]] +==== `op` + +Edit the outcome of a resource operation. This way you can +tell CRM that it ran an operation and that the resource agent +returned certain exit code. It is also possible to change the +operation's status. In case the operation status is set to +something other than +done+, the exit code is effectively +ignored. + +Usage: +............... +op <operation> <resource> <exit_code> [<op_status>] [<node>] + +operation :: probe | monitor[:<n>] | start | stop | + promote | demote | notify | migrate_to | migrate_from +exit_code :: <rc> | success | generic | args | + unimplemented | perm | installed | configured | not_running | + master | failed_master +op_status :: pending | done | cancelled | timeout | notsupported | error + +n :: the monitor interval in seconds; if omitted, the first + recurring operation is referenced +rc :: numeric exit code in range 0..9 +............... +Example: +............... +op start d1 xen-b generic +op start d1 xen-b 1 +op monitor d1 xen-b not_running +op stop d1 xen-b 0 timeout +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_origin,display origin of the CIB status section]] +==== `origin` + +Show the origin of the status section currently in use. This +essentially shows the latest `load` argument. + +Usage: +............... +origin +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_quorum,set the quorum]] +==== `quorum` + +Set the quorum value. + +Usage: +............... +quorum <bool> +............... +Example: +............... +quorum false +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_run,run policy engine]] +==== `run` + +Run the policy engine with the edited status section. + +Add a string of +v+ characters to increase verbosity. Specify ++scores+ to see allocation scores also. +utilization+ turns on +information about the remaining capacity of nodes. + +If you have graphviz installed and X11 session, `dotty(1)` is run +to display the changes graphically. + +Usage: +............... +run [nograph] [v...] [scores] [utilization] +............... +Example: +............... +run +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_save,save the CIB status section]] +==== `save` + +The current internal status section with whatever modifications +were performed can be saved to a file or shadow CIB. + +If the file exists and contains a complete CIB, only the status +section is going to be replaced and the rest of the CIB will +remain intact. Otherwise, the current user edited configuration +is saved along with the status section. + +Note that all modifications are saved in the source file as soon +as they are run. + +Usage: +............... +save [<file>|shadow:<cib>] +............... +Example: +............... +save bug-12299.xml +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_show,show CIB status section]] +==== `show` + +Show the current status section in the XML format. Brace yourself +for some unreadable output. Add +changed+ option to get a human +readable output of all changes. + +Usage: +............... +show [changed] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_simulate,simulate cluster transition]] +==== `simulate` + +Run the policy engine with the edited status section and simulate +the transition. + +Add a string of +v+ characters to increase verbosity. Specify ++scores+ to see allocation scores also. +utilization+ turns on +information about the remaining capacity of nodes. + +If you have graphviz installed and X11 session, `dotty(1)` is run +to display the changes graphically. + +Usage: +............... +simulate [nograph] [v...] [scores] [utilization] +............... +Example: +............... +simulate +............... + +[[cmdhelp_cibstatus_ticket,manage tickets]] +==== `ticket` + +Modify the ticket status. Tickets can be granted and revoked. +Granted tickets could be activated or put in standby. + +Usage: +............... +ticket <ticket> {grant|revoke|activate|standby} +............... +Example: +............... +ticket ticketA grant +............... + +[[cmdhelp_assist,Configuration assistant]] +=== `assist` - Configuration assistant + +The `assist` sublevel is a collection of helper +commands that create or modify resources and +constraints, to simplify the creation of certain +configurations. + +For more information on individual commands, see +the help text for those commands. + +[[cmdhelp_assist_template,Create template for primitives]] +==== `template` + +This command takes a list of primitives as argument, and creates a new +`rsc_template` for these primitives. It can only do this if the +primitives do not already share a template and are of the same type. + +Usage: +........ +template primitive-1 primitive-2 primitive-3 +........ + +[[cmdhelp_assist_weak-bond,Create a weak bond between resources]] +==== `weak-bond` + +A colocation between a group of resources says that the resources +should be located together, but it also means that those resources are +dependent on each other. If one of the resources fails, the others +will be restarted. + +If this is not desired, it is possible to circumvent: By placing the +resources in a non-sequential set and colocating the set with a dummy +resource which is not monitored, the resources will be placed together +but will have no further dependency on each other. + +This command creates both the constraint and the dummy resource needed +for such a colocation. + +Usage: +........ +weak-bond resource-1 resource-2 +........ + +[[cmdhelp_maintenance,Maintenance mode commands]] +=== `maintenance` - Maintenance mode commands + +Maintenance mode commands are commands that manipulate resources +directly without going through the cluster infrastructure. Therefore, +it is essential to ensure that the cluster does not attempt to monitor +or manipulate the resources while these commands are being executed. + +To ensure this, these commands require that maintenance mode is set +either for the particular resource, or for the whole cluster. + +[[cmdhelp_maintenance_action,Invoke a resource action]] +==== `action` + +Invokes the given action for the resource. This is +done directly via the resource agent, so the command must +be issued while the cluster or the resource is in +maintenance mode. + +Unless the action is `start` or `monitor`, the action must be invoked +on the same node as where the resource is running. If the resource is +running on multiple nodes, the command will fail. + +To use SSH for executing resource actions on multiple nodes, append +`ssh` after the action name. This requires SSH access to be configured +between the nodes and the parallax python package to be installed. + +Usage: +............... +action <rsc> <action> +action <rsc> <action> ssh +............... +Example: +............... +action webserver reload +action webserver monitor ssh +............... + +[[cmdhelp_maintenance_off,Disable maintenance mode]] +==== `off` + +Disables maintenances mode, either for the whole cluster +or for the given resource. + +Usage: +............... +off +off <rsc> +............... +Example: +............... +off rsc1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_maintenance_on,Enable maintenance mode]] +==== `on` + +Enables maintenances mode, either for the whole cluster +or for the given resource. + +Usage: +............... +on +on <rsc> +............... +Example: +............... +on rsc1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history,Cluster history]] +=== `history` - Cluster history + +Examining Pacemaker's history is a particularly involved task. The +number of subsystems to be considered, the complexity of the +configuration, and the set of various information sources, most of +which are not exactly human readable, keep analyzing resource or node +problems accessible to only the most knowledgeable. Or, depending on +the point of view, to the most persistent. The following set of +commands has been devised in hope to make cluster history more +accessible. + +Of course, looking at _all_ history could be time consuming regardless +of how good the tools at hand are. Therefore, one should first say +which period he or she wants to analyze. If not otherwise specified, +the last hour is considered. Logs and other relevant information is +collected using `crm report`. Since this process takes some time and +we always need fresh logs, information is refreshed in a much faster +way using the python parallax module. If +python-parallax+ is not +found on the system, examining a live cluster is still possible -- +though not as comfortable. + +Apart from examining a live cluster, events may be retrieved from a +report generated by `crm report` (see also the +-H+ option). In that +case we assume that the period stretching the whole report needs to be +investigated. Of course, it is still possible to further reduce the +time range. + +If you have discovered an issue that you want to show someone else, +you can use the `session pack` command to save the current session as +a tarball, similar to those generated by `crm report`. + +In order to minimize the size of the tarball, and to make it easier +for others to find the interesting events, it is recommended to limit +the time frame which the saved session covers. This can be done using +the `timeframe` command (example below). + +It is also possible to name the saved session using the `session save` +command. + +Example: +............... +crm(live)history# limit "Jul 18 12:00" "Jul 18 12:30" +crm(live)history# session save strange_restart +crm(live)history# session pack +Report saved in .../strange_restart.tar.bz2 +crm(live)history# +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_detail,set the level of detail shown]] +==== `detail` + +How much detail to show from the logs. Valid detail levels are either +`0` or `1`, where `1` is the highest detail level. The default detail +level is `0`. + +Usage: +............... +detail <detail_level> + +detail_level :: small integer (defaults to 0) +............... +Example: +............... +detail 1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_diff,cluster states/transitions difference]] +==== `diff` + +A transition represents a change in cluster configuration or +state. Use `diff` to see what has changed between two +transitions. + +If you want to specify the current cluster configuration and +status, use the string +live+. + +Normally, the first transition specified should be the one which +is older, but we are not going to enforce that. + +Note that a single configuration update may result in more than +one transition. + +Usage: +............... +diff <pe> <pe> [status] [html] + +pe :: <number>|<index>|<file>|live +............... +Examples: +............... +diff 2066 2067 +diff pe-input-2080.bz2 live status +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_events,Show events in log]] +==== `events` + +By analysing the log output and looking for particular +patterns, the `events` command helps sifting through +the logs to find when particular events like resources +changing state or node failure may have occurred. + +This can be used to generate a combined list of events +from all nodes. + +Usage: +............... +events +............... + +Example: +............... +events +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_exclude,exclude log messages]] +==== `exclude` + +If a log is infested with irrelevant messages, those messages may +be excluded by specifying a regular expression. The regular +expressions used are Python extended. This command is additive. +To drop all regular expressions, use +exclude clear+. Run +`exclude` only to see the current list of regular expressions. +Excludes are saved along with the history sessions. + +Usage: +............... +exclude [<regex>|clear] +............... +Example: +............... +exclude kernel.*ocfs2 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_graph,generate a directed graph from the PE file]] +==== `graph` + +Create a graphviz graphical layout from the PE file (the +transition). Every transition contains the cluster configuration +which was active at the time. See also <<cmdhelp_configure_graph,generate a directed graph +from configuration>>. + +Usage: +............... +graph <pe> [<gtype> [<file> [<img_format>]]] + +gtype :: dot +img_format :: `dot` output format (see the +-T+ option) +............... +Example: +............... +graph -1 +graph 322 dot clu1.conf.dot +graph 322 dot clu1.conf.svg svg +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_info,Cluster information summary]] +==== `info` + +The `info` command provides a summary of the information source, which +can be either a live cluster snapshot or a previously generated +report. + +Usage: +............... +info +............... +Example: +............... +info +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_latest,show latest news from the cluster]] +==== `latest` + +The `latest` command shows a bit of recent history, more +precisely whatever happened since the last cluster change (the +latest transition). If the transition is running, the shell will +first wait until it finishes. + +Usage: +............... +latest +............... +Example: +............... +latest +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_limit,limit timeframe to be examined]] +==== `limit` (`timeframe`) + +This command can be used to modify the time span to examine. All +history commands look at events within a certain time span. + +For the `live` source, the default time span is the _last hour_. + +There is no time span limit for the `hb_report` source. + +The time period is parsed by the `dateutil` python module. It +covers a wide range of date formats. For instance: + +- 3:00 (today at 3am) +- 15:00 (today at 3pm) +- 2010/9/1 2pm (September 1st 2010 at 2pm) + +For more examples of valid time/date statements, please refer to the +`python-dateutil` documentation: + +- https://dateutil.readthedocs.org/[dateutil.readthedocs.org] + +If the dateutil module is not available, then the time is parsed using +strptime and only the kind as printed by `date(1)` is allowed: + +- Tue Sep 15 20:46:27 CEST 2010 + +Usage: +............... +limit [<from_time>] [<to_time>] +............... +Examples: +............... +limit 10:15 +limit 15h22m 16h +limit "Sun 5 20:46" "Sun 5 22:00" +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_log,log content]] +==== `log` + +Show messages logged on one or more nodes. Leaving out a node +name produces combined logs of all nodes. Messages are sorted by +time and, if the terminal emulations supports it, displayed in +different colours depending on the node to allow for easier +reading. + +The sorting key is the timestamp as written by syslog which +normally has the maximum resolution of one second. Obviously, +messages generated by events which share the same timestamp may +not be sorted in the same way as they happened. Such close events +may actually happen fairly often. + +Usage: +............... +log [<node> [<node> ...] ] +............... +Example: +............... +log node-a +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_node,node events]] +==== `node` + +Show important events that happened on a node. Important events +are node lost and join, standby and online, and fence. Use either +node names or extended regular expressions. + +Usage: +............... +node <node> [<node> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +node node1 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_peinputs,list or get PE input files]] +==== `peinputs` + +Every event in the cluster results in generating one or more +Policy Engine (PE) files. These files describe future motions of +resources. The files are listed as full paths in the current +report directory. Add +v+ to also see the creation time stamps. + +Usage: +............... +peinputs [{<range>|<number>} ...] [v] + +range :: <n1>:<n2> +............... +Example: +............... +peinputs +peinputs 440:444 446 +peinputs v +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_refresh,refresh live report]] +==== `refresh` + +This command makes sense only for the +live+ source and makes +`crm` collect the latest logs and other relevant information from +the logs. If you want to make a completely new report, specify ++force+. + +Usage: +............... +refresh [force] +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_resource,resource events]] +==== `resource` + +Show actions and any failures that happened on all specified +resources on all nodes. Normally, one gives resource names as +arguments, but it is also possible to use extended regular +expressions. Note that neither groups nor clones or master/slave +names are ever logged. The resource command is going to expand +all of these appropriately, so that clone instances or resources +which are part of a group are shown. + +Usage: +............... +resource <rsc> [<rsc> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +resource bigdb public_ip +resource my_.*_db2 +resource ping_clone +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_session,manage history sessions]] +==== `session` + +Sometimes you may want to get back to examining a particular +history period or bug report. In order to make that easier, the +current settings can be saved and later retrieved. + +If the current history being examined is coming from a live +cluster the logs, PE inputs, and other files are saved too, +because they may disappear from nodes. For the existing reports +coming from `hb_report`, only the directory location is saved +(not to waste space). + +A history session may also be packed into a tarball which can +then be sent to support. + +Leave out subcommand to see the current session. + +Usage: +............... +session [{save|load|delete} <name> | pack [<name>] | update | list] +............... +Examples: +............... +session save bnc966622 +session load rsclost-2 +session list +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_setnodes,set the list of cluster nodes]] +==== `setnodes` + +In case the host this program runs on is not part of the cluster, +it is necessary to set the list of nodes. + +Usage: +............... +setnodes node <node> [<node> ...] +............... +Example: +............... +setnodes node_a node_b +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_show,show status or configuration of the PE input file]] +==== `show` + +Every transition is saved as a PE file. Use this command to +render that PE file either as configuration or status. The +configuration output is the same as `crm configure show`. + +Usage: +............... +show <pe> [status] + +pe :: <number>|<index>|<file>|live +............... +Examples: +............... +show 2066 +show pe-input-2080.bz2 status +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_source,set source to be examined]] +==== `source` + +Events to be examined can come from the current cluster or from a +`hb_report` report. This command sets the source. `source live` +sets source to the running cluster and system logs. If no source +is specified, the current source information is printed. + +In case a report source is specified as a file reference, the file +is going to be unpacked in place where it resides. This directory +is not removed on exit. + +Usage: +............... +source [<dir>|<file>|live] +............... +Examples: +............... +source live +source /tmp/customer_case_22.tar.bz2 +source /tmp/customer_case_22 +source +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_transition,show transition]] +==== `transition` + +This command will print actions planned by the PE and run +graphviz (`dotty`) to display a graphical representation of the +transition. Of course, for the latter an X11 session is required. +This command invokes `ptest(8)` in background. + +The +showdot+ subcommand runs graphviz (`dotty`) to display a +graphical representation of the +.dot+ file which has been +included in the report. Essentially, it shows the calculation +produced by `pengine` which is installed on the node where the +report was produced. In optimal case this output should not +differ from the one produced by the locally installed `pengine`. + +The `log` subcommand shows the full log for the duration of the +transition. + +A transition can also be saved to a CIB shadow for further +analysis or use with `cib` or `configure` commands (use the +`save` subcommand). The shadow file name defaults to the name of +the PE input file. + +If the PE input file number is not provided, it defaults to the +last one, i.e. the last transition. The last transition can also +be referenced with number 0. If the number is negative, then the +corresponding transition relative to the last one is chosen. + +If there are warning and error PE input files or different nodes +were the DC in the observed timeframe, it may happen that PE +input file numbers collide. In that case provide some unique part +of the path to the file. + +After the `ptest` output, logs about events that happened during +the transition are printed. + +The `tags` subcommand scans the logs for the transition and return a +list of key events during that transition. For example, the tag ++error+ will be returned if there are any errors logged during the +transition. + +Usage: +............... +transition [<number>|<index>|<file>] [nograph] [v...] [scores] [actions] [utilization] +transition showdot [<number>|<index>|<file>] +transition log [<number>|<index>|<file>] +transition save [<number>|<index>|<file> [name]] +transition tags [<number>|<index>|<file>] +............... +Examples: +............... +transition +transition 444 +transition -1 +transition pe-error-3.bz2 +transition node-a/pengine/pe-input-2.bz2 +transition showdot 444 +transition log +transition save 0 enigma-22 +............... + +[[cmdhelp_history_transitions,List transitions]] +==== `transitions` + +A transition represents a change in cluster configuration or +state. This command lists the transitions in the current timeframe. + +Usage: +............... +transitions +............... +Example: +............... +transitions +............... + + +[[cmdhelp_history_wdiff,cluster states/transitions difference]] +==== `wdiff` + +A transition represents a change in cluster configuration or +state. Use `wdiff` to see what has changed between two +transitions as word differences on a line-by-line basis. + +If you want to specify the current cluster configuration and +status, use the string +live+. + +Normally, the first transition specified should be the one which +is older, but we are not going to enforce that. + +Note that a single configuration update may result in more than +one transition. + +Usage: +............... +wdiff <pe> <pe> [status] + +pe :: <number>|<index>|<file>|live +............... +Examples: +............... +wdiff 2066 2067 +wdiff pe-input-2080.bz2 live status +............... + +[[cmdhelp_root_report,Create cluster status report]] +=== `report` + +Interface to a tool for creating a cluster report. A report is an +archive containing log files, configuration files, system information +and other relevant data for a given time period. This is a useful tool +for collecting data to attach to bug reports, or for detecting the +root cause of errors resulting in resource failover, for example. + +See `crmsh_hb_report(8)` for more details on arguments, +or call `crm report -h` + +Usage: +............... +report -f {time|"cts:"testnum} [-t time] [-u user] [-l file] + [-n nodes] [-E files] [-p patt] [-L patt] [-e prog] + [-MSDZAVsvhd] [dest] +............... + +Examples: +............... +report -f 2pm report_1 +report -f "2007/9/5 12:30" -t "2007/9/5 14:00" report_2 +report -f 1:00 -t 3:00 -l /var/log/cluster/ha-debug report_3 +report -f "09sep07 2:00" -u hbadmin report_4 +report -f 18:00 -p "usern.*" -p "admin.*" report_5 +report -f cts:133 ctstest_133 +............... + +=== `end` (`cd`, `up`) + +The `end` command ends the current level and the user moves to +the parent level. This command is available everywhere. + +Usage: +............... +end +............... + +=== `help` + +The `help` command prints help for the current level or for the +specified topic (command). This command is available everywhere. + +Usage: +............... +help [<topic>] +............... + +=== `quit` (`exit`, `bye`) + +Leave the program. + +BUGS +---- +Even though all sensible configurations (and most of those that +are not) are going to be supported by the crm shell, I suspect +that it may still happen that certain XML constructs may confuse +the tool. When that happens, please file a bug report. + +The crm shell will not try to update the objects it does not +understand. Of course, it is always possible to edit such objects +in the XML format. + +AUTHORS +------- +Dejan Muhamedagic, <dejan@suse.de> +Kristoffer Gronlund <kgronlund@suse.com> +and many OTHERS + +SEE ALSO +-------- +crm_resource(8), crm_attribute(8), crm_mon(8), cib_shadow(8), +ptest(8), dotty(1), crm_simulate(8), cibadmin(8) + + +COPYING +------- +Copyright \(C) 2008-2013 Dejan Muhamedagic. +Copyright \(C) 2013 Kristoffer Gronlund. + +Free use of this software is granted under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL). + +////////////////////// + vim:ts=4:sw=4:expandtab: +////////////////////// diff --git a/doc/website-v1/news.adoc b/doc/website-v1/news.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..9cd0d6d --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/news.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,26 @@ += News + +link:/news/2017-01-31-release-3_0_0[2017-01-31 10:00] + +:leveloffset: 1 + +include::news/2017-01-31-release-3_0_0.adoc[] + +:leveloffset: 0 + +'''' +* link:/news/2016-09-05-release-2_2_2[2016-09-05 19:00 Releasing crmsh version 2.2.2] +* link:/news/2016-09-02-release-2_3_1[2016-09-02 10:00 Releasing crmsh version 2.3.1] +* link:/news/2016-09-01-release-2_1_7[2016-09-01 09:00 Announcing crmsh stable release 2.1.7] +* link:/news/2016-08-12-release-2_3_0[2016-08-12 10:30 Releasing crmsh version 2.3.0] +* link:/news/2016-04-28-release-2_2_1[2016-04-28 01:00 crmsh 2.2.1 and 2.1.6 are released] +* link:/news/2016-01-15-release-2_2_0[2016-01-15 15:00 crmsh 2.2.0 is released] +* link:/news/2016-01-12-release-2_1_5[2016-01-12 10:00 Announcing crmsh stable release 2.1.5] +* link:/news/2015-05-25-getting-started-jp[2015-05-25 13:30 Getting Started translated to Japanese] +* link:/news/2015-05-13-release-2_1_4[2015-05-13 15:30 Announcing crmsh stable release 2.1.4] +* link:/news/2015-04-10-release-2_1_3[2015-04-10 12:30 Announcing crmsh stable release 2.1.3] +* link:/news/2015-01-26-release-2_1_2[2015-01-26 11:05 Announcing crmsh release 2.1.2] +* link:/news/2014-10-28-release-2_1_1[2014-10-29 00:20 Announcing crmsh release 2.1.1] +* link:/news/2014-06-30-release-2_1[2014-06-30 09:00 Announcing crmsh release 2.1] + +link:https://savannah.nongnu.org/news/?group_id=10890[Old News Archive] diff --git a/doc/website-v1/news/2014-06-30-release-2_1.adoc b/doc/website-v1/news/2014-06-30-release-2_1.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4c59a90 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/news/2014-06-30-release-2_1.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,93 @@ +Announcing crmsh release 2.1 +============================ +:Author: Kristoffer Gronlund +:Email: kgronlund@suse.com +:Date: 2014-06-30 09:00 + +Today we are proud to announce the release of `crmsh` version 2.1! +This version primarily fixes all known issues found since the release +of `crmsh` 2.0 in April, but also has some major new features. + +A massive thank you to everyone who has helped out with bug fixes, +comments and contributions for this release! + +For a complete list of changes since the previous version, please +refer to the changelog: + +* https://github.com/crmsh/crmsh/blob/2.1.0/ChangeLog + +Packages for several popular Linux distributions can be downloaded +from the Stable repository at the OBS: + +* http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/network:/ha-clustering:/Stable/ + +Archives of the tagged release: + +* https://github.com/crmsh/crmsh/archive/2.1.0.tar.gz +* https://github.com/crmsh/crmsh/archive/2.1.0.zip + +Here are some of the highlights of this release: + +== Rule expressions in attribute lists + +One of the biggest features in this release is full support for rule +expressions wherever the XML syntax allows them. + +Here is an example of using rule expressions in an attribute list in +order to set the virtual IP of an IPAddr2 resource to a different +value on a specific node. + +---- +primitive vip-on-node1 IPAddr2 \ + rule 10: #uname eq node1 ip=10.0.0.5 \ + rule 1: ip=10.0.0.6 +---- + +== Tags in the CIB + +A new feature added to Pacemaker recently is tags. This is a way +to refer to multiple resources at once without creating any +colocation or ordering relationship between them. For example, you +could add all resources related to the database to a db tag, and +then stop or start them all with a single command. + +---- +tag db drbd:Master fs sql-db +---- + +It is also possible to refer to tags in constraints. + +== Wildcards in show/edit + +The configure show and edit commands can now use glob-style +wildcards to refer to multiple resources: + +---- +configure edit db-* +---- + +== Nvpair references + +Sometimes, different resources name the same parameters with different +names. For example, an IPAddr2 may have an ip parameter that should be +the same as a web servers server_ip parameter. By using nvpair +references, it is possible to configure the ip in a single location. + +Note that this is a new feature in Pacemaker 1.1.12 and up. + +---- +primitive vip IPAddr2 params $my-ip:ip=192.168.0.1 +primitive www apache params @my-ip:server_ip +---- + +== New ACL syntax + +The support for Access Control Lists has been revised in Pacemaker +1.1.12, and this release of crmsh supports the new syntax. Two new +commands have been added: `acl_target` and `acl_group`. For more details, +see the documentation. + +Thank you, + +Kristoffer and Dejan + diff --git a/doc/website-v1/news/2014-10-28-release-2_1_1.adoc b/doc/website-v1/news/2014-10-28-release-2_1_1.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6b67f4f --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/news/2014-10-28-release-2_1_1.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,58 @@ +Announcing crmsh release 2.1.1 +============================== +:Author: Kristoffer Gronlund +:Email: kgronlund@suse.com +:Date: 2014-10-29 00:20 + +Today we are proud to announce the release of `crmsh` version 2.1.1! +This version primarily fixes all known issues found since the release +of `crmsh` 2.1 in June. We recommend that all users of crmsh upgrade +to this version, especially if using Pacemaker 1.1.12 or newer. + +A massive thank you to everyone who has helped out with bug fixes, +comments and contributions for this release! + +For a complete list of changes since the previous version, please +refer to the changelog: + +* https://github.com/crmsh/crmsh/blob/2.1.1/ChangeLog + +Packages for several popular Linux distributions can be downloaded +from the Stable repository at the OBS: + +* http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/network:/ha-clustering:/Stable/ + +Archives of the tagged release: + +* https://github.com/crmsh/crmsh/archive/2.1.1.tar.gz +* https://github.com/crmsh/crmsh/archive/2.1.1.zip + +Changes since the previous release: + + - cibconfig: Clean up output from crm_verify (bnc#893138) + - high: constants: Add acl_target and acl_group to cib_cli_map (bnc#894041) + - high: parse: split shortcuts into valid rules + - medium: Handle broken CIB in find_objects + - high: scripts: Handle corosync.conf without nodelist in add-node (bnc#862577) + - medium: config: Assign default path in all cases + - high: cibconfig: Generate valid CLI syntax for attribute lists (bnc#897462) + - high: cibconfig: Add tag:<tag> to get all resources in tag + - doc: Documentation for show tag:<tag> + - low: report: Sort list of nodes + - high: parse: Allow empty attribute values in nvpairs (bnc#898625) + - high: cibconfig: Delay reinitialization after commit + - low: cibconfig: Improve wording of commit prompt + - low: cibconfig: Fix vim modeline + - high: report: Find nodes for any log type (boo#900654) + - high: hb_report: Collect logs from journald (boo#900654) + - high: cibconfig: Don't crash if given an invalid pattern (bnc#901714) + - high: xmlutil: Filter list of referenced resources (bnc#901714) + - medium: ui_resource: Only act on resources (#64) + - medium: ui_resource: Flatten, then filter (#64) + - high: ui_resource: Use correct name for error function (bnc#901453) + - high: ui_resource: resource trace failed if operation existed (bnc#901453) + - Improved test suite + +Thank you, + +Kristoffer and Dejan diff --git a/doc/website-v1/news/2015-01-26-release-2_1_2.adoc b/doc/website-v1/news/2015-01-26-release-2_1_2.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..081bf1b --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/news/2015-01-26-release-2_1_2.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,69 @@ +Announcing crmsh release 2.1.2 +============================== +:Author: Kristoffer Gronlund +:Email: kgronlund@suse.com +:Date: 2015-01-26 11:05 + +Today we are proud to announce the release of `crmsh` version 2.1.2! +This version primarily fixes all known issues found since the release +of `crmsh` 2.1.1 in October. We recommend that all users of crmsh upgrade +to this version, especially if using Pacemaker 1.1.12 or newer. + +A massive thank you to everyone who has helped out with bug fixes, +comments and contributions for this release! + +For a complete list of changes since the previous version, please +refer to the changelog: + +* https://github.com/crmsh/crmsh/blob/2.1.2/ChangeLog + +Packages for several popular Linux distributions can be downloaded +from the Stable repository at the OBS: + +* http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/network:/ha-clustering:/Stable/ + +Archives of the tagged release: + +* https://github.com/crmsh/crmsh/archive/2.1.2.tar.gz +* https://github.com/crmsh/crmsh/archive/2.1.2.zip + +Changes since the previous release: + + - medium: ui_resource: Set probe interval 0 if not set (bnc#905050) + - doc: Document probe op in resource trace (bnc#905050) + - high: config: Fix path to system-wide crm.conf (#67) + - medium: config: Fall back to /etc/crm/crmsh.conf (#67) + - low: cliformat: Colorize id: as identifier (boo#905338) + - medium: cibconfig: Don't bump epoch if stripping version + - medium: ui_context: Lazily import readline + - medium: config: Add core.ignore_missing_metadata (#68) (boo#905910) + - medium: cibconfig: Strip digest from v1 diffs (bnc#914098) + - medium: cibconfig: Detect v1 format and don't patch container changes (bnc#914098) + - high: xmlutil: Treat node type=member as normal (boo#904698) + - medium: xmlutil: Use idmgmt when creating new elements (bnc#901543) + - low: ui_resource: --reprobe and --refresh are deprecated (bnc#905092) + - doc: Document deprecation of refresh and reprobe (bnc#905092) + - medium: parse: Support resource-discovery in location constraints + - medium: Allow removing groups even if is_running (boo#905271) + - medium: cibconfig: Delete containers first in edits (boo#905268) + - medium: ui_history: Fix crash using empty object set + - Low: term: get rid of annying ^O in piped-to-less-R output + - medium: parse: Allow nvpair with no value using name= syntax (#71) + - medium: parse: Enable name[=value] for nvpair (#71) + - medium: utils: Check if path basename is less (#74) + - medium: utils: crm_daemon_dir is added to PATH in envsetup (#67) + - medium: cmd_status: Show pending if available, enable extra options + - high: utils: Locate binaries across sudo boundary (bnc#912483) + - Medium: history: match error/crit messages of pcmk 1.1.12 + - low: ui_options: Add underscore aliases for legacy options + - medium: constants: Fix transition start detection + - medium: constants: Update transition regex (#77) + - medium: orderedset: Add OrderedSet type + - medium: cibconfig: Use orderedset to avoid reordering bugs (#79) + - low: xmlutil: logic bug in sanity_check_nvpairs + - medium: util: Don't fall back to current time + - medium: report: Fall back to end_ts = start_ts + +Thank you, + +Kristoffer and Dejan diff --git a/doc/website-v1/news/2015-04-10-release-2_1_3.adoc b/doc/website-v1/news/2015-04-10-release-2_1_3.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c186ff0 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/news/2015-04-10-release-2_1_3.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,68 @@ +Announcing crmsh stable release 2.1.3 +===================================== +:Author: Kristoffer Gronlund +:Email: kgronlund@suse.com +:Date: 2015-04-10 12:30 + +Today we are proud to announce the release of `crmsh` version 2.1.3! +This version fixes all known issues found since the release of `crmsh` +2.1.2 in January. We recommend that all users of crmsh upgrade +to this version, especially if using Pacemaker 1.1.12 or newer. + +A massive thank you to everyone who has helped out with bug fixes, +comments and contributions for this release! + +For a complete list of changes since the previous version, please +refer to the changelog: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/blob/2.1.3/ChangeLog + +Packages for several popular Linux distributions can be downloaded +from the Stable repository at the OBS: + +* http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/network:/ha-clustering:/Stable/ + +Archives of the tagged release: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.1.3.tar.gz +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.1.3.zip + +Changes since the previous release: + + - medium: parse: nvpair attributes with no value = <nvpair name=".."/> (#71) + - doc: Add link to clusterlabs.org + - medium: report: Convert RE exception to simpler UI output + - medium: report: Include transitions with configuration changes (bnc#917131) + - medium: config: Fix case-sensitivity for booleans + - medium: ra: Handle non-OCF agent meta-data better + - Medium: cibconf: preserve cib user attributes + - low: cibconfig: Improved debug output when schema change fails + - medium: parse: Treat pacemaker-next schema as 2.0+ + - medium: schema: Test if node type is optional via schema + - medium: schema: Remove extra debug output + - low: pacemaker: Remove debug output + - medium: cibconfig: If a change results in no diff, exit silently + - medium: cibconfig: Allow delete of objects that don't exist without returning error code + - medium: cibconfig: Allow removal of non-existing elements if --force is set + - low: allow (0,1) as option booleans + - low: allow pacemaker 1.0 version detection + - Low: hb_report: add -Q to usage + - Low: hb_report: add -X option for extra ssh options + - doc: Move the main crmsh repository to the ClusterLabs organization on github + - high: ui_configure: Remove acl_group command (bnc#921056) + - high: cibconfig: Don't delete valid tickets when removing referenced objects (bnc#922039) + - high: ui_context: Wait for DC after commit, not before (#85) + - medium: templates: Clearer descriptions for editing templates (boo#921028) + - high: cibconfig: Derive id for ops from referenced resource name (boo#921028) + - medium: ui_template: Always generate id unless explicitly defined (boo#921028) + - low: template: Add 'new <template>' shortcut + - medium: ui_template: Make new command more robust (bnc#924641) + - medium: parse: Disallow location rules without resources + - high: parse: Don't allow constraints without applicants + - medium: cliformat: Escape double-quotes in nvpair values + - low: hb_report: Use crmsh config to find pengine/cib dirs (bsc#926377) + - low: main: Catch any ValueErrors that may leak through + +Thank you, + +Kristoffer and Dejan diff --git a/doc/website-v1/news/2015-05-13-release-2_1_4.adoc b/doc/website-v1/news/2015-05-13-release-2_1_4.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..31297cf --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/news/2015-05-13-release-2_1_4.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,126 @@ +Announcing crmsh stable release 2.1.4 +===================================== +:Author: Kristoffer Gronlund +:Email: kgronlund@suse.com +:Date: 2015-05-13 15:30 + +Today we are proud to announce the release of `crmsh` version 2.1.4! +2.1.4 is a minor bug fix release with no major issues, so users +already running 2.1.3 are mostly fine. Instead, the main reason +for releasing 2.1.4 is as an excuse to talk about some other things +that are happening with crmsh! + +The details for this release are available below. + +History Guide +~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Dejan has written a guide to using the crmsh history +command. For those who are unfamiliar with the history explorer or +want to know more about how to use it, this guide is a great +introduction to what it does and how to use it. + +History is not a new crmsh feature, but, as we failed to +advertise it and nothing works without proper marketing, it +probably hasn't seen a very wide use. That's surely a pity and we +hope that this gentle history guide is going to help. + +So, if you use crmsh and if you need help troubleshooting +clusters (I surely do!), take a look here: + +http://crmsh.github.io/history-guide/ + +FYI, the comprehensive crmsh help also has a short description of +the feature: + +........ +crm history help +........ + +Goes without saying: all commands are described too. + +If you don't use crmsh, you'll still find a lot of useful +information in the guide, so don't skip it. + +Hawk Presentation +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +I presented Hawk [1] and the History Explorer interface which +builds upon the crmsh history feature at openSUSE conf in The Hague +earlier this month. The video of that presentation is online here: + +++++++++++++ +<iframe width="420" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/mngfxzXkFLw" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> +++++++++++++ + +https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mngfxzXkFLw + +[1]: https://github.com/ClusterLabs/hawk + + +2.2.0 Development News +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +While 2.1.4 is the latest stable release, I am also working on releasing +2.2.0 which will come with a bunch of new features. I'm still working +on some of these and not everything is in the repository yet, so +2.2.0 is probably at least a month or so away still. I was perhaps +a bit optimistic when I tagged RC1 back in October last year. ;) + +However, right now I'd like to focus on one thing that is already in +2.2.0 and which is available if you use the development packages from +OBS: command shorthands. This makes crmsh a lot more convenient to use +from the command line. Basically, you can use any unambiguous subset +of a command name to refer to that command, and crmsh will figure out +what you mean. This may sound confusing, so an example will help with +explaining what I mean: + +This is one way of showing the current cluster configuration: + +........ +crm configure show +........ + +However, now you can shorten this to the following: + +........ +crm cfg show +........ + +Other examples of shorthand are `crm rsc stop r1` or `crm st` +for status. And of course, tab completion in bash still works for +the shorthand variants. + +The examples used here are not comprehensive. crmsh is pretty clever +at figuring out which command was intended. Download the development +release and try it out! + +2.1.4 Details +~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +For a complete list of changes since the previous version, please +refer to the changelog: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/blob/2.1.4/ChangeLog + +Packages for several popular Linux distributions can be downloaded +from the Stable repository at the OBS: + +* http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/network:/ha-clustering:/Stable/ + +Archives of the tagged release: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.1.4.tar.gz +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.1.4.zip + +Changes since the previous release: + +- Medium: hb_report: use faster zypper interface if available +- medium: ui_configure: Wait for DC when removing running resource +- low: schema: Don't leak PacemakerError exceptions (#93) +- parse: Don't require trailing colon in tag definitions +- medium: utils: Allow 1/0 as boolean values for parameters + +Thank you, + +Kristoffer and Dejan diff --git a/doc/website-v1/news/2015-05-25-getting-started-jp.adoc b/doc/website-v1/news/2015-05-25-getting-started-jp.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c5c6759 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/news/2015-05-25-getting-started-jp.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,17 @@ +Getting Started translated to Japanese +====================================== +:Author: Kristoffer Gronlund +:Email: kgronlund@suse.com +:Date: 2015-05-25 13:30 + +Many thanks to Motoharu Kubo at 3ware for offering to translate the +`crmsh` documentation to Japanese! + +The first document to be translated is the link:/start-guide/[Getting Started] guide, +now available in Japanese at the following location: + +* https://blog.3ware.co.jp/2015/05/crmsh-getting-started/ + +Thank you, +Kristoffer and Dejan + diff --git a/doc/website-v1/news/2016-01-12-release-2_1_5.adoc b/doc/website-v1/news/2016-01-12-release-2_1_5.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..93a3242 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/news/2016-01-12-release-2_1_5.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,56 @@ +Announcing crmsh stable release 2.1.5 +===================================== +:Author: Kristoffer Gronlund +:Email: kgronlund@suse.com +:Date: 2016-01-12 10:00 + +Today we are proud to announce the release of `crmsh` version 2.1.5! +This release mainly consists of bug fixes, as well as compatibility +with Pacemaker 1.1.14. + +For a complete list of changes since the previous version, please +refer to the changelog: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/blob/2.1.5/ChangeLog + +Packages for several popular Linux distributions can be downloaded +from the Stable repository at the OBS: + +* http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/network:/ha-clustering:/Stable/ + +Archives of the tagged release: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.1.5.tar.gz +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.1.5.zip + +Changes since the previous release: + +- medium: report: Try to load source as session if possible (bsc#927407) +- medium: crm_gv: Wrap non-identifier names in quotes (bsc#931837) +- medium: crm_gv: Improved quoting of non-identifier node names (bsc#931837) +- medium: crm_pkg: Fix cluster init bug on RH-based systems +- medium: hb_report: Collect logs from pacemaker.log +- medium: constants: Add 'provides' meta attribute (bsc#936587) +- high: parse: Add attributes to terminator set (bsc#940920) +- Medium: cibconfig: skip sanity check for properties other than cib-bootstrap-options +- medium: config: Add report_tool_options (bsc#917638) +- low: main: Bash completion didn't handle sudo correctly +- high: report: New detection to fix missing transitions (bnc#917131) +- medium: report: Add pacemaker.log to find_node_log list (bsc#941734) +- high: hb_report: Prefer pacemaker.log if it exists (bsc#941681) +- high: report: Output format from pacemaker has changed (bsc#941681) +- high: report: Update transition edge regexes (bsc#942906) +- medium: report: Reintroduce empty transition pruning (bsc#943291) +- medium: log_patterns: Remove reference to function name in log patterns (bsc#942906) +- low: hb_report: Collect libqb version (bsc#943327) +- high: parse: Fix crash when referencing score types by name (bsc#940194) +- low: constants: Add meta attributes for remote nodes +- low: ui_history: Swap from and to times if to < from +- high: cibconfig: Do not fail on unknown pacemaker schemas (bsc#946893) +- high: log_patterns_118: Update the correct set of log patterns (bsc#942906) +- high: xmlutil: Order is significant in resource_set (bsc#955434) +- high: cibconfig: Fix XML import bug for cloned groups (bsc#959895) + +Thank you, + +Kristoffer and Dejan diff --git a/doc/website-v1/news/2016-01-15-release-2_2_0.adoc b/doc/website-v1/news/2016-01-15-release-2_2_0.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..664526e --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/news/2016-01-15-release-2_2_0.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,210 @@ +crmsh 2.2.0 is released +======================= +:Author: Kristoffer Gronlund +:Email: kgronlund@suse.com +:Date: 2016-01-15 15:00 + +In June of last year, I released Release Candidate 3 of crmsh 2.2.0, +and I honestly expected to have the final version ready no more than a +few weeks later. Well, it took around 6 months, but now it is finally +here! + +The source code can be downloaded from Github: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/releases/tag/2.2.0 + +Packages for several popular Linux distributions can be downloaded +from the Stable repository at the OBS: + +* http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/network:/ha-clustering:/Stable/ + +Archives of the tagged release: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.2.0.tar.gz +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.2.0.zip + +There are many new features and quite a few bug fixes, but I'll try to +describe some of the major changes below. For the full list of changes +since version 2.1, see the ChangeLog. I am also including the list +of changes since RC3 in the release notes below. + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/blob/2.2.0/ChangeLog + +New features introduced in this version: + +* Support for many of the new features introduced in Pacemaker + 1.1.14, including improved support for Pacemaker Remote and + pattern-based fencing topology configurations. + +* The cluster scripts have been greatly improved and are now used as + the wizards backend for hawk. Together with the improvements in the + cluster scripts, the crmsh template sublevel has been deprecated, + and all of the templates are now available as cluster scripts. The + template sublevel will be removed in a future version. + +* The history explorer now replaces the combined log and event files + from hb_report using the commands crm history log and crm history + events. Additionally, the info summary now highlights transitions + that contain error logs or other potentially interesting events. + +* Improved verification before committing new changes, for example + crmsh now warns if colocation constraints are applied to group + children. + +* resource start / stop / restart now take multiple resource arguments. + +* Added a maintenance sublevel with commands intended to simplify the + use of maintenance mode. + +* Switched to using the python parallax library instead of pssh for + remote node communication. Parallax is a fork of pssh with + additional features added specifically for using it as a python + library rather than a command line tool. Packages for + python-parallax can be downloaded from the OBS, or it can be + installed from PyPI. + +Full list of changes since 2.2.0-rc3: + +- medium: history: Fix live report refresh (bsc#950422) (bsc#927414) +- medium: history: Ignore central log +- medium: cibconfig: Detect false container children +- low: clidisplay: Avoid crash when colorizing None +- medium: scripts: Load single file yml scripts +- medium: scripts: Reformat scripts to simplified form +- medium: ui_history: Add events command (bsc#952449) +- low: hb_report: Drop function from event patterns +- high: cibconfig: Preserve failure through edit (bsc#959965) +- high: cibconfig: fail if new object already exists (bsc#959965) +- medium: ui_cib: Call crm_shadow in batch mode to avoid spawning subshell (bsc#961392) +- high: cibconfig: Fix XML import bug for cloned groups (bsc#959895) +- high: ui_configure: Move validate-all validation to a separate command (bsc#956442) +- high: scripts: Don't require scripts to be an array of one element +- medium: scripts: Enable setting category in legacy wizards (bnc#957926) +- high: scripts: Don't delete steps from upgraded wizards (bnc#957925) +- high: ra: Only run validate-all if current user is root +- high: cibconfig: Call validate-all action on agent in verify (bsc#956442) +- high: script: Fix issues found in cluster scripts +- high: ui_ra: Add ra validate command (bsc#956442) +- low: resource: Fix unban alias for unmigrate +- high: ui_resource: Add constraints and operations commands +- high: ui_resource: Enable start/stop/status for multiple resources at once (bsc#952775) +- high: scripts: Conservatively verify scripts that modify the CIB (bsc#951954) +- high: xmlutil: Order is significant in resource_set (bsc#955434) +- medium: scripts: Lower copy target to string +- doc: configure load can read from stdin +- medium: script: (filesystem) create stopped (bsc#952670) +- medium: scripts: Check required parameters for optional sub-steps +- high: scripts: Eval CIB text in correct scope (bsc#952600) +- medium: utils: Fix python 2.6 compatibility +- medium: ui_script: Tag legacy wizards as legacy in show (bsc#952226) +- medium: scripts: No optional steps in legacy wizards (bsc#952226) +- high: utils: Revised time zone handling (bsc#951759) +- high: report: Fix syslog parser regexps (bsc#951759) +- low: constants: Tweaked graph colours +- high: scripts: Fix DRBD script resource reference (bsc#951028) +- low: constants: Tweaked graph colors +- medium: report: Make transitions without end stretch to 2525 +- high: utils: Handle time zones in parse_time (bsc#949511) +- medium: hb_report: Remove reference to function name in event patterns (bsc#942906) +- medium: ui_script: Optionally print common params +- medium: cibconfig: Fix sanity check for attribute-based fencing topology (#110) +- high: cibconfig: Fix bug with node/resource collision +- high: scripts: Determine output format of script correctly (bsc#949980) +- doc: add explanatory comments to fencing_topology +- doc: add missing backslash in fencing_topology example +- doc: add missing <> to fencing_topology syntax +- low: don't use deprecated crm_attribute -U option +- doc: resource-discovery for location constraints +- high: utils: Fix cluster_copy_file error when nodes provided +- low: xmlutil: More informative message when updating resource references after rename +- doc: fix some command syntax grammar in the man page +- high: cibconfig: Delete constraints before resources +- high: cibconfig: Fix bug in is_edit_valid (bsc#948547) +- medium: hb_report: Don't cat binary logs +- high: cibconfig: Allow node/rsc id collision in _set_update (bsc#948547) +- low: report: Silence tar warning on early stream close +- high: cibconfig: Allow nodes and resources with the same ID (bsc#948547) +- high: log_patterns_118: Update the correct set of log patterns (bsc#942906) +- low: ui_resource: Silence spurious migration non-warning from pacemaker +- medium: config: Always fall back to /usr/bin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/sbin for programs (bsc#947818) +- medium: report: Enable opening .xz-compressed report tarballs +- medium: cibconfig: Only warn for grouped children in colocations (bsc#927423) +- medium: cibconfig: Allow order constraints on group children (bsc#927423) +- medium: cibconfig: Warn if configuring constraint on child resource (bsc#927423) (#101) +- high: ui_node: Show remote nodes in crm node list (bsc#877962) +- high: config: Remove config.core.supported_schemas (bsc#946893) +- medium: report: Mark transitions with errors with a star in info output (bsc#943470) +- low: report: Remove first transition tag regex +- medium: report: Add transition tags command (bsc#943470) +- low: ui_history: Better error handling and documentation for the detail command +- low: ui_history: Swap from and to times if to < from +- medium: cibconfig: XML parser support for node-attr fencing topology +- medium: parse: Updated syntax for fencing-topology target attribute +- medium: parse: Add support for node attribute as fencing topology target +- high: scripts: Add enum type to script values +- low: scripts: [MailTo] install mailx package +- low: scripts: Fix typo in email type verifier +- high: script: Fix subscript agent reference bug +- low: constants: Add meta attributes for remote nodes +- medium: scripts: Fix typo in lvm script +- high: scripts: Generate actions for includes if none are defined +- low: scripts: [virtual-ip] make lvs_support an advanced parameter +- medium: crm_pssh: Timeout is an int (bsc#943820) +- medium: scripts: Add MailTo script +- low: scripts: Improved script parameter validation +- high: parse: Fix crash when referencing score types by name (bsc#940194) +- doc: Clarify documentation for colocations using node-attribute +- high: ui_script: Print cached errors in json run +- medium: scripts: Use --no option over --force unless force: true is set in the script +- medium: options: Add --no option +- high: scripts: Default to passing --force to crm after all +- high: scripts: Add force parameter to cib and crm actions, and don't pass --force by default +- low: scripts: Make virtual IP optional [nfsserver] +- medium: scripts: Ensure that the Filesystem resource exists [nfsserver] (bsc#898658) +- medium: report: Reintroduce empty transition pruning (bsc#943291) +- low: hb_report: Collect libqb version (bsc#943327) +- medium: log_patterns: Remove reference to function name in log patterns (bsc#942906) +- low: hb_report: Increase time to wait for the logmark +- high: hb_report: Always prefer syslog if available (bsc#942906) +- high: report: Update transition edge regexes (bsc#942906) +- medium: scripts: Switch install default to false +- low: scripts: Catch attempt to pass dict as parameter value +- high: report: Output format from pacemaker has changed (bsc#941681) +- high: hb_report: Prefer pacemaker.log if it exists (bsc#941681) +- medium: report: Add pacemaker.log to find_node_log list (bsc#941734) +- high: hb_report: Correct path to hb_report after move to subdirectory (bsc#936026) +- low: main: Bash completion didn't handle sudo correctly +- medium: config: Add report_tool_options (bsc#917638) +- high: parse: Add attributes to terminator set (bsc#940920) +- Medium: cibconfig: skip sanity check for properties other than cib-bootstrap-options +- medium: ui_script: Fix bug in verify json encoding +- low: ui_script: Check JSON command syntax +- medium: ui_script: Add name to action output (fate#318211) +- low: scripts: Preserve formatting of longdescs +- low: scripts: Clearer shortdesc for filesystem +- low: scripts: Fix formatting for SAP scripts +- low: scripts: add missing type annotations to libvirt script +- low: scripts: make overridden parameters non-advanced by default +- low: scripts: Tweak description for libvirt +- low: scripts: Strip shortdesc for scripts and params +- low: scripts: Title and category for exportfs +- high: ui_script: drop end sentinel from API output (fate#318211) +- low: scripts: Fix possible reference error in agent include +- low: scripts: Clearer error message +- low: Remove build revision from version +- low: Add HAProxy script to data manifest +- medium: constants: Add 'provides' meta attribute (bsc#936587) +- medium: scripts: Add HAProxy script +- high: hb_report: find utility scripts after move (bsc#936026) +- high: ui_report: Move hb_report to subdirectory (bsc#936026) +- high: Makefile: Don't unstall hb_report using data-manifest (bsc#936026) +- medium: report: Fall back to cluster-glue hb_report if necessary (bsc#936026) +- medium: scripts: stop inserting comments as values +- high: scripts: subscript values not required if subscript has no parameters / all defaults (fate#318211) +- medium: scripts: Fix name override for subscripts (fate#318211) +- low: scripts: Clean up generated CIB (fate#318211) + +As usual, a huge thank you to all contributors and users of crmsh! + +Cheers, +Kristoffer diff --git a/doc/website-v1/news/2016-04-28-release-2_2_1.adoc b/doc/website-v1/news/2016-04-28-release-2_2_1.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e162b2f --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/news/2016-04-28-release-2_2_1.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,73 @@ +crmsh 2.2.1 and 2.1.6 are released +================================== +:Author: Kristoffer Gronlund +:Email: kgronlund@suse.com +:Date: 2016-04-28 01:00 + +Today I'm announcing two new releases of crmsh: 2.2.1 and 2.1.6. + +Both are stable releases, and I would recommend all users to +upgrade to crmsh 2.2.1 if they can. + +== crmsh 2.2.1 + +Here is a brief list of the most significant changes in this release: + +* Rewritten history explorer internally to improve performance significantly +* Allow configuring reload operation +* Fix fencing for remote nodes +* Recycle corosync node IDs when possible +* Several bug fixes in crm report +* Warn if generated report is empty +* Improved SBD cluster script +* Add push method for configure load +* Fixed cluster init + +The source code can be downloaded from Github: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/releases/tag/2.2.1 + +Packages for several popular Linux distributions can be downloaded +from the Stable repository at the OBS: + +* http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/network:/ha-clustering:/Stable/ + +Archives of the tagged release: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.2.1.tar.gz +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.2.1.zip + +For the full list of changes since version 2.2.0, see the ChangeLog, +available at: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/blob/2.2.1/ChangeLog + +== crmsh 2.1.6 + +This is a bug fix release. +Most fixes are minor or related to time handling in reports. + +For a complete list of changes since the previous version, please +refer to the changelog: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/blob/2.1.6/ChangeLog + +Currently I'm not building binary releases for 2.1.6 as the stable +series (at OBS) is at 2.2. This release is intended for users of +the 2.1 series who have yet to migrate to 2.2. + +Archives of the tagged release: + +https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.1.6.tar.gz +https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.1.6.zip + +For the full list of changes since version 2.1.5, see the ChangeLog, +available at: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/blob/2.1.5/ChangeLog + + +As usual, a huge thank you to all contributors and users of crmsh! + +Cheers, +Kristoffer diff --git a/doc/website-v1/news/2016-08-12-release-2_3_0.adoc b/doc/website-v1/news/2016-08-12-release-2_3_0.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..bb3efa9 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/news/2016-08-12-release-2_3_0.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,76 @@ +Releasing crmsh version 2.3.0 +============================= +:Author: Kristoffer Gronlund +:Email: kgronlund@suse.com +:Date: 2016-08-12 10:30 + +Hello everyone! + +I am proud to present crmsh version 2.3.0, the latest stable +release. I would recommend all users to upgrade to 2.3.0 if they +can. + +For this release, I would like to begin by highlighting the new +contributors to crmsh since 2.2.0 was released in January: + +* Marc A. Smith added the new subcommand "configure load push", which + removes any configuration lines that aren't included in the cib + provided when pushing. + +* Andrei Maruha added an optional name parameter to the "corosync + add-node" command, and made the add-node command recycle old node + IDs if possible. + +* Kai Kang fixed a build system bug when removing generated docs, + causing issues with parallel make. + +* Daniel Hoffend contributed various fixes improving support for + building crmsh for Debian and Ubuntu. + +* Pedro Salgado fixed a bug in the graph rendering code in crmsh, + added a tox configuration file to make testing with multiple + versions of Python easy, and updated the Travis CI configuration to + use tox. + +* Nate Clark fixed a bug in the parser for fencing hierarchies. + +I would also like to thank all the other contributors, testers and +users who have helped in making this release as stable and reliable as +possible. + +Some of the other major features in 2.3.0 include: + +* Support for the new event-based alerts feature in Pacemaker 1.1.15 + +* Greatly improved timezone handling in crm report and the history + explorer + +* Improvements to the cluster scripts / wizards, as well as new + wizards for LVM on DRBD, and NFS on LVM and DRBD and VMware/vCenter + +* Better support for fencing remote nodes + +The source code can be downloaded from Github: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/releases/tag/2.3.0 + +Packages for several popular Linux distributions can be downloaded +from the Stable repository at the OBS: + +* http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/network:/ha-clustering:/Stable/ + +Archives of the tagged release: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.3.0.tar.gz +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.3.0.zip + +For the full list of changes since version 2.3.0, see the ChangeLog, +available at: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/blob/2.3.0/ChangeLog + + +As usual, a huge thank you to all contributors and users of crmsh! + +Cheers, +Kristoffer diff --git a/doc/website-v1/news/2016-09-01-release-2_1_7.adoc b/doc/website-v1/news/2016-09-01-release-2_1_7.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d1e477e --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/news/2016-09-01-release-2_1_7.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,46 @@ +Announcing crmsh stable release 2.1.7 +===================================== +:Author: Kristoffer Gronlund +:Email: kgronlund@suse.com +:Date: 2016-09-01 09:00 + +Today I are proud to announce the release of `crmsh` version 2.1.7! +The major new thing in this release is a backports of the events-based +alerts support from the 2.3 branch. + +Big thanks to Hideo Yamauchi for his patience and testing of the +alerts backport. + +This time, the list of changes is small enough that I can add it right +here: + +- high: parse: Backport of event-driven alerts parser (#150) +- high: hb_report: Don't collect logs from journalctl if -M is set (bsc#990025) +- high: hb_report: Skip lines without timestamps in log correctly (bsc#989810) +- high: constants: Add maintenance to set of known attributes (bsc#981659) +- high: utils: Avoid deadlock if DC changes during idle wait (bsc#978480) +- medium: scripts: no-quorum-policy=ignore is deprecated (bsc#981056) +- low: cibconfig: Don't mix up CLI name with XML tag + +You can also get the list of changes from the changelog: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/blob/2.1.7/ChangeLog + +Right now, I don't have a set of pre-built rpm packages for Linux +distributions ready, but I am going to make this available soon. This +is in particular for centOS 6.x which still relies on Python 2.6 +support which makes running the later releases there more +difficult. These packages will most likely appear as a subrepository +here (more details coming soon): + +* http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/network:/ha-clustering:/Stable/ + +Archives of the tagged release: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.1.7.tar.gz +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.1.7.zip + + +Thank you, + +Kristoffer diff --git a/doc/website-v1/news/2016-09-02-release-2_3_1.adoc b/doc/website-v1/news/2016-09-02-release-2_3_1.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2a90bef --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/news/2016-09-02-release-2_3_1.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,33 @@ +Releasing crmsh version 2.3.1 +============================= +:Author: Kristoffer Gronlund +:Email: kgronlund@suse.com +:Date: 2016-09-02 10:00 + +Hello everyone! + +Today I am releasing crmsh version 2.3.1. The only change this time is +to lower the Python version requirement from 2.7 to 2.6. This is so +that crmsh remains compatible with centOS 6, where there is no +standardized Python 2.7 version available. For users of other +distributions where Python 2.7 is available, there are no other +changes in this release and no need to upgrade. + +The source code can be downloaded from Github: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/releases/tag/2.3.1 + +Packages for several popular Linux distributions can be downloaded +from the Stable repository at the OBS: + +* http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/network:/ha-clustering:/Stable/ + +Archives of the tagged release: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.3.1.tar.gz +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.3.1.zip + +As usual, a huge thank you to all contributors and users of crmsh! + +Cheers, +Kristoffer diff --git a/doc/website-v1/news/2016-09-05-release-2_2_2.adoc b/doc/website-v1/news/2016-09-05-release-2_2_2.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..9816b3c --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/news/2016-09-05-release-2_2_2.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,36 @@ +Releasing crmsh version 2.2.2 +============================= +:Author: Kristoffer Gronlund +:Email: kgronlund@suse.com +:Date: 2016-09-05 19:00 + +Hello everyone! + +Today I am releasing crmsh version 2.2.2. The biggest change in this +release is the backport of the support for event-based alerts from the +2.3 branch. The full list of changes follows below: + +- high: parse: Backport of event-driven alerts parser (#150) +- high: hb_report: Don't collect logs from journalctl if -M is set (bsc#990025) +- high: hb_report: Skip lines without timestamps in log correctly (bsc#989810) +- high: constants: Add maintenance to set of known attributes (bsc#981659) +- high: utils: Avoid deadlock if DC changes during idle wait (bsc#978480) +- medium: scripts: no-quorum-policy=ignore is deprecated (bsc#981056) +- medium: tmpfiles: Create temporary directory if non-existing (bsc#981583) +- medium: xmlutil: reduce unknown attribute to warning (bsc#981659) +- medium: ui_resource: Add force argument to resource cleanup (bsc#979420) +- parse: Use original _TARGET_RE + +The source code can be downloaded from Github: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/releases/tag/2.2.2 + +Archives of the tagged release: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.2.2.tar.gz +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/2.2.2.zip + +As usual, a huge thank you to all contributors and users of crmsh! + +Cheers, +Kristoffer diff --git a/doc/website-v1/news/2017-01-31-release-3_0_0.adoc b/doc/website-v1/news/2017-01-31-release-3_0_0.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..31eacea --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/news/2017-01-31-release-3_0_0.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,48 @@ +Releasing crmsh version 3.0.0 +============================= +:Author: Kristoffer Gronlund +:Email: kgronlund@suse.com +:Date: 2017-01-31 10:00 + +Hello everyone! + +I'm happy to announce the release of crmsh version 3.0.0 today. The +main reason for the major version bump is because I have merged the +sleha-bootstrap project with crmsh, replacing the cluster +init/add/remove commands with the corresponding commands from +sleha-bootstrap. + +At the moment, these commands are highly specific to SLE and openSUSE, +unfortunately. I am working on making them as distribution agnostic as +possible, but would appreciate help from users of other distributions +in making them work as well on those platforms as they do on +SLE/openSUSE. + +Briefly, the "cluster init" command configures a complete cluster from +scratch, including optional configuration of fencing via SBD, shared +storage using OCFS2, setting up the Hawk web interface etc. + +There are some other changes in this release as well, see the +ChangeLog for the complete list of changes: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/blob/3.0.0/ChangeLog + +The source code can be downloaded from Github: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/releases/tag/3.0.0 + +This version of crmsh will be available in openSUSE Tumbleweed as soon +as possible, and packages for several popular Linux distributions are +available from the Stable repository at the OBS: + +* http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/network:/ha-clustering:/Stable/ + +Archives of the tagged release: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/3.0.0.tar.gz +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/archive/3.0.0.zip + +As usual, a huge thank you to all contributors and users of crmsh! + +Cheers, +Kristoffer diff --git a/doc/website-v1/news/2021-06-17-release-4_3_1.adoc b/doc/website-v1/news/2021-06-17-release-4_3_1.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..1b6a4a6 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/news/2021-06-17-release-4_3_1.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,55 @@ +Releasing crmsh version 4.3.1 +============================= +:Author: Xin Liang +:Email: XLiang@suse.com +:Date: 2021-06-17 11:00 + +Hello everyone! + +I'm happy to announce the release of crmsh version 4.3.1 + +Major changes since 4.3.0 + +Features: + +* Add "crm cluster crash_test" for cluster failure simulation (#825) + +* Add ocfs2.OCFS2Manager to manage ocfs2 stage process with cluster lvm2 (#798) + +* Support setup SBD via bootstrap "sbd" stage on an existing cluster (#744) + +* Enable configuring qdevice on interactive mode (#765) + +Fixes: + +* Adjust sbd watchdog timeout when using diskless SBD with qdevice (#818) + +* Not allow property setting with an empty value (#817) + +* Keep consistent for "help <sub-command>" and "<sub-command> -h" for those using argparse (#644) + +* Sync corosync.conf before finished joining (#775) + +* Adjust qdevice configure/remove process to avoid race condition due to quorum lost (#741) + +* Walk through hb_report process under hacluster (#742) + +There are some other changes in this release as well, see the +ChangeLog for the complete list of changes: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/blob/master/ChangeLog + +The source code can be downloaded from Github: + +* https://github.com/ClusterLabs/crmsh/releases/tag/4.3.1 + +Development packages for openSUSE Tumbleweed +are available from the Open Build System, here: + +* https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/network:ha-clustering:Factory/crmsh + +As usual, a huge thank you to all contributors and users of crmsh! + + +Regards, +xin diff --git a/doc/website-v1/postprocess.py b/doc/website-v1/postprocess.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000..859abaa --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/postprocess.py @@ -0,0 +1,141 @@ +#!/usr/bin/env python +# create a table of contents for pages that need it + +import sys +import re +import argparse + +TOC_PAGES = ['man/index.html', + 'man-4.3/index.html', + 'man-3/index.html', + 'man-2.0/index.html', + 'man-1.2/index.html'] +V2_PAGES = ['index.html'] +INSERT_AFTER = '<!--TOC-->' + +def read_toc_data(infile, debug): + topics_data = [] + commands_data = [] + f = open(infile) + for line in f: + if line.startswith('[['): + line = line[2:-3] # strip [[ and ]]\n + info, short_help = line.split(',', 1) + short_help = short_help.strip() + info_split = info.split('_') + if info_split[0] == 'topics': + if len(info_split) == 2: + topics_data.append((1, short_help, info)) + elif len(info_split) >= 3: + topics_data.append((2, short_help, info)) + elif info_split[0] == 'cmdhelp': + if len(info_split) == 2: + commands_data.append((2, info_split[1], info)) + elif len(info_split) >= 3: + commands_data.append((3, '_'.join(info_split[2:]), info)) + toc = '' + if len(topics_data) > 0 or len(commands_data) > 0: + toc = '<div id="toc">\n' + for depth, text, link in topics_data: + toc += '<div class="toclevel%s"><a href="#%s">%s</a></div>\n' % ( + depth, link, text) + for depth, text, link in commands_data: + toc += '<div class="toclevel%s"><a href="#%s">%s</a></div>\n' % ( + depth, link, text) + toc += '</div>\n' + return toc + +def generate_toc(infile, outfile, debug): + + if debug: + print "Infile:", infile + toc = read_toc_data(infile, debug) + ''' + toc_data = [] + section = re.compile(r"<h(?P<depth>[0-9])( id=\"(?P<id>[^\"]+)\")?>(?P<text>.*)</h[0-9]>") + for line in f: + m = section.match(line) + if m: + if debug: + print "toc_data: %s" % str(((m.group('depth'), m.group('text'), m.group('id')))) + toc_data.append((m.group('depth'), m.group('text'), m.group('id'))) + + toc = '' + if len(toc_data) > 0: + toc = '<div id="toc">\n' + for depth, text, link in toc_data: + if depth >= 2 and link is not None: + toc += '<div class="toclevel%s"><a href="#%s">%s</a></div>\n' % ( + int(depth) - 1, link, text) + toc += '</div>\n' +''' + + # Write TOC to outfile + if outfile: + if debug: + print "Writing TOC:" + print "----" + print toc + print "----" + print "Outfile:", outfile + fil = open(outfile) + f = fil.readlines() + fil.close() + f2 = open(outfile, 'w') + for line in f: + f2.write(line) + if toc and line.startswith(INSERT_AFTER): + f2.write(toc) + f2.close() + +def generate_v2(page, debug): + f = open(page).readlines() + toc_data = [] + section = re.compile(r"<h(?P<depth>[0-9])( id=\"(?P<id>[^\"]+)\")?>(?P<text>.*)</h[0-9]>") + for line in f: + m = section.match(line) + if m: + if debug: + print "toc_data: %s" % str(((m.group('depth'), m.group('text'), m.group('id')))) + toc_data.append((m.group('depth'), m.group('text'), m.group('id'))) + + toc = '' + if len(toc_data) > 0: + toc = '<div id="toc">\n' + for depth, text, link in toc_data: + if depth >= 2 and link is not None: + toc += '<div class="toclevel%s"><a href="#%s">%s</a></div>\n' % ( + int(depth) - 1, link, text) + toc += '</div>\n' + f2 = open(page, 'w') + for line in f: + f2.write(line) + if toc and line.startswith(INSERT_AFTER): + f2.write(toc) + f2.close() + +def main(): + parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="Generate table of contents") + parser.add_argument('-d', '--debug', dest='debug', action='store_true', + help="Enable debug output") + parser.add_argument('-o', '--output', metavar='output', type=str, + help="File to inject TOC into") + parser.add_argument('input', metavar='input', type=str, + help="File to read TOC metadata from") + args = parser.parse_args() + debug = args.debug + outfile = args.output + infile = args.input + print "+ %s -> %s" % (infile, outfile) + gen = False + for tocpage in TOC_PAGES: + if not gen and outfile.endswith(tocpage): + generate_toc(infile, outfile, debug) + gen = True + for tocpage in V2_PAGES: + if not gen and outfile.endswith(tocpage): + generate_v2(outfile, debug) + gen = True + +if __name__ == "__main__": + main() diff --git a/doc/website-v1/rsctest-guide.adoc b/doc/website-v1/rsctest-guide.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2dcd865 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/rsctest-guide.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,238 @@ += Resource testing = + +Never created a pacemaker cluster configuration before? Please +read on. + +Ever created a pacemaker configuration without errors? All +resources worked from the get go on all your nodes? Really? We +want a photo of you! + +Seriously, it is so error prone to get a cluster resource +definition right that I think I ever only managed to do it with +`Dummy` resources. There are many intricate details that have to be +just right, and all of them are stuffed in a single place as simple +name-value attributes. Then there are multiple nodes, each node +containing a complex system environment inevitably always in flux and +changing (entropy anybody?). + +Now, once you defined your set of resources and are about to +_commit_ the configuration (at that point it usually takes a +deep breath to do so), be ready to meet an avalanche of error +messages, not all of which are easy to understand or follow. Not +to mention that you need to read the logs too. Even though we do +have a link:history-tutorial.html[tool] to help with digging through +the logs, it is going to be an interesting experience and not quite +recommended if you're just starting with pacemaker clusters. Even the +experts can save a lot of time and headaches by following the advice +below. + +== Basic usage == + +Enter resource testing. It is a special feature designed to help +users find problems in resource configurations. + +The usage is very simple: + +---- +crm(live)configure# rsctest web-server +Probing resources .. +testing on xen-f: apache web-ip +testing on xen-g: apache web-ip +crm(live)configure# +---- + +What actually happened above and what is it good for? From the +output we can infer that the `web-server` resource is actually a +group comprising one apache web server and one IP address. +Indeed: + +---- +crm(live)configure# show web-server +group web-server apache web-ip \ + meta target-role="Stopped" +crm(live)configure# +---- + +The `rsctest` command first established that the resources are +stopped on all nodes in the cluster. Then it tests the resources +in the order defined by the resource group on all nodes. It does +this by manually starting the resources, one by one, then running +a "monitor" for each resource to make sure that the resources are +healthy, and finally stopping the resources in reverse order. + +Since there is no additional output, the test passed. It looks +like we have a properly defined web server group. + +== Reporting problems == + +Now, the above run was not very interesting so let's spoil the +idyll: + +---- +xen-f:~ # mv /etc/apache2/httpd.conf /tmp +---- + +We moved the apache configuration file away on node `xen-f`. The +`apache` resource should fail now: + +---- +crm(live)configure# rsctest web-server +Probing resources .. +testing on xen-f: apache +host xen-f (exit code 5) +xen-f stderr: +2013/10/17_16:51:26 ERROR: Configuration file /etc/apache2/httpd.conf not found! +2013/10/17_16:51:26 ERROR: environment is invalid, resource considered stopped + +testing on xen-g: apache web-ip +crm(live)configure# +---- + +As expected, `apache` failed to start on node `xen-f`. When the +cluster resource manager runs an operation on a resource, all +messages are logged (there is no terminal attached to the +cluster, anyway). All one can see in the resource status is the type +of the exit code. In this case, it is an installation problem. + +For instance, the output could look like this: + +---- +xen-f:~ # crm status +Last updated: Thu Oct 17 19:21:44 2013 +Last change: Thu Oct 17 19:21:28 2013 by root via crm_resource on xen-f +... +Failed actions: + apache_start_0 on xen-f 'not installed' (5): call=2074, status=complete, +last-rc-change='Thu Oct 17 19:21:31 2013', queued=164ms, exec=0ms +---- + +That does not look very informative. With `rsctest` we can +immediately see what the problem is. It saves us prowling the +logs looking for messages of the `apache` resource agent. + +Note that the IP address is not tested, because the resource it +depends on could not be started. + +== What is tested? == + +The start, monitor, and stop operations, in exactly that order, +are tested for every resource specified. Note that normally the +two latter operations should never fail if the resource agent is +well implemented. The RA should under normal circumstances be +able to stop or monitor a started resource. However, this is +_not_ a replacement for resource agent testing. If that is what +you are looking for, see +http://www.linux-ha.org/doc/dev-guides/_testing_resource_agents.html[the +RA testing chapter] of the RA development guide. + +== Protecting resources == + +The `rsctest` command goes to great lengths to prevent starting a +resource on more than one node at the same time. For some stuff +that would actually mean data corruption and we certainly don't +want that to happen. + +---- +xen-f:~ # (echo start web-server; echo show web-server) | crm -w resource +resource web-server is running on: xen-g +xen-f:~ # crm configure rsctest web-server +Probing resources .WARNING: apache:probe: resource running at xen-g +.WARNING: web-ip:probe: resource running at xen-g + +Stop all resources before testing! +xen-f:~ # crm configure rsctest web-server xen-f +Probing resources .WARNING: apache:probe: resource running at xen-g +.WARNING: web-ip:probe: resource running at xen-g + +Stop all resources before testing! +xen-f:~ # +---- + +As you can see, if `rsctest` finds any of the resources running +on any node it refuses to run any tests. + +== Multi-state and clone resources == + +Apart from groups, the `rsctest` can also handle the other two +special kinds of resources. Let's take a look at one `drbd`-based +configuration: + +---- +crm(live)configure# show ms_drbd_nfs drbd0-vg +primitive drbd0-vg ocf:heartbeat:LVM \ + params volgrpname="drbd0-vg" +primitive p_drbd_nfs ocf:linbit:drbd \ + meta target-role="Stopped" \ + params drbd_resource="nfs" \ + op monitor interval="15" role="Master" \ + op monitor interval="30" role="Slave" \ + op start interval="0" timeout="300" \ + op stop interval="0" timeout="120" +ms ms_drbd_nfs p_drbd_nfs \ + meta notify="true" clone-max="2" +crm(live)configure# +---- + +The `nfs` drbd resource contains a volume group `drbd0-vg`. + +---- +crm(live)configure# rsctest ms_drbd_nfs drbd0-vg +Probing resources .. +testing on xen-f: p_drbd_nfs drbd0-vg +testing on xen-g: p_drbd_nfs drbd0-vg +crm(live)configure# +---- + +For the multi-state (master-slave) resources, the involved +resource motions are somewhat more complex: the resource is first +started on both nodes and then promoted on the node where the +next resource is to be tested (in this case the volume group). +Then it gets demoted to slave and promoted on the other +node to master so that the depending resources can be tested on +that node too. + +Note that even though we asked for `ms_drbd_nfs` to be tested, +there is `p_drbd_nfs` in the output which is the primitive +encapsulated in the master-slave resource. You can specify either +one. + +== Stonith resources == + +The stonith resources are also special and need special +treatment. What is tested is just the device status. Actually +fencing nodes was deemed too drastic. Please use `node fence` to +test the fencing device effectiveness. It also does not matter +whether the stonith resource is "running" on any node: being +started is just something that happens virtually in the +`stonithd` process. + +== Summary == + +- use `rsctest` to make sure that the resources can be started + correctly on all nodes + +- `rsctest` protects resources by making sure beforehand that + none of them is currently running on any of the cluster nodes + +- `rsctest` understands groups, master-slave (multi-state), and + clone resources, but nothing else of the configuration + (constraints or any other placement/order cluster configuration + elements) + +- it is up to the user to test resources only on nodes which are + really supposed to run them and in a proper order (if that + order is expressed via constraints) + +- `rsctest` cannot protect resources if they are running on + nodes which are not present in the cluster or from bad RA + implementations (but neither would a cluster resource manager) + +- `rsctest` was designed as a debugging and configuration aid, and is + not intended to provide full Resource Agent test coverage. + +== `crmsh` help and online resources (_sic!_) == + +- link:crm.8.html#topics_Testing[`crm help Testing`] + +- link:crm.8.html#cmdhelp_configure_rsctest[`crm configure help +rsctest`] diff --git a/doc/website-v1/scripts.adoc b/doc/website-v1/scripts.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7742729 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/scripts.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,660 @@ += Cluster Scripts = +:source-highlighter: pygments + +.Version information +NOTE: This section applies to `crmsh 2.2+` only. + +== Introduction == + +A big part of the configuration and management of a cluster is +collecting information about all cluster nodes and deploying changes +to those nodes. Often, just performing the same procedure on all nodes +will encounter problems, due to subtle differences in the +configuration. + +For example, when configuring a cluster for the first time, the +software needs to be installed and configured on all nodes before the +cluster software can be launched and configured using `crmsh`. This +process is cumbersome and error-prone, and the goal is for scripts to +make this process easier. + +Another important function of scripts is collecting information and +reporting potential issues with the cluster. For example, software +versions may differ between nodes, causing byzantine errors or random +failure. `crmsh` comes packaged with a `health` script which will +detect and warn about many of these types of problems. + +There are many tools for managing a collection of nodes, and scripts +are not intended to replace these tools. Rather, they provide an +integrated way to perform tasks across the cluster that would +otherwise be tedious, repetitive and error-prone. The scripts +functionality in the crm shell is mainly inspired by Ansible, a +light-weight and efficient configuration management tool. + +Scripts are implemented using the python `parallax` package which +provides a thin wrapper on top of SSH. This allows the scripts to +function through the usual SSH channels used for system maintenance, +requiring no additional software to be installed or maintained. + +For many scripts that only configure cluster resources or only perform +changes on the local machine, the use of SSH is not necessary. These +scripts can be used even if there is no way for `crmsh` to reach the +other nodes other than through the cluster configuration. + +NOTE: The scripts functionality in `crmsh` has been greatly expanded +and improved in `crmsh` 2.2. Many new scripts have been added, and in +addition the scripts are now used as the backend for the wizards +functionality in HAWK, the HA web interface. For more information, see +https://github.com/ClusterLabs/hawk. + +== Usage == + +Scripts are available through the `cluster` sub-level in the crm +shell. Some scripts have custom commands linked to them for +convenience, such as the `init`, `add` and `remove` commands available +in the `cluster` sublevel, for creating new clusters, introducing new +nodes into the cluster and for removing nodes from a running cluster. + +Other scripts can be accessed through the `script` sub-level. + +=== Common Parameters === + +Which parameters a script accepts varies from script to +script. However, there is a set of parameters that are common to all +scripts. These parameters can be passed to any script. + +`nodes`:: + List of nodes to execute the script for +`dry_run`:: + If set, simulate execution only + (default: no) +`action`:: + If set, only execute a single action (index, as returned by verify) +`statefile`:: + When single-stepping, the state is saved in the given file +`user`:: + Run script as the given user +`sudo`:: + If set, crm will prompt for a sudo password and use sudo when appropriate + (default: no) +`port`:: + Port to connect on +`timeout`:: + Execution timeout in seconds + (default: 600) + +=== List available scripts === + +To list the available scripts, use the following command: + +......... +# crm script +list +......... + +The available scripts are listed along with a short +description. Optionally, the arguments +all+ or +names+ can be +used. Without the +all+ flag, some scripts that are used by `crmsh` to +implement certain commands are hidden from view. With the +names+ +flag, only a plain list of script names is printed. + +=== Script description === + +To get more details about a script, run the `show` command. For +example, to get more information about what the `virtual-ip` script does +and what parameters it accepts, use the following command: + +......... +# crm script +show virtual-ip +......... + +`show` will print a longer description of the script, along with a +list of parameters divided into _steps_. Each script is divided into a +series of steps which are performed in order. Some steps may not +accept any parameters, but for those that do, the available parameters +are listed here. + +By default, only a basic subset of the available parameters is printed +in order to make the scripts easier to use. By passing `all` to the +`show` command, the advanced parameters are also shown. In addition, +there is a list of common parameters + +`show` will print a longer explanation for the script, along with +a list of parameters, each parameter having a description, a note +saying if it is an optional or required parameter, and if optional, +what the default value is. + +=== Verifying parameters === + +Since a script potentially performs a series of actions and may fail +for various reasons at any point, it is advisable to review the +actions that a script will perform before actually running it. To do +this, the `verify` command can be used. + +Pass the parameters that you would pass to `run`, and `verify` will +check that the parameter values are OK, as well as print the sequence +of steps that will be performed given the particular parameter values +given. + +The following is an example showing how to verify the creation of a +Virtual IP resource, using the `virtual-ip` script: + +.......... +# crm script +verify virtual-ip id=my-virtual-ip ip=192.168.0.10 +.......... + +`crmsh` will print something similar to the following output: + +........... +1. Configure cluster resources + + primitive my-virtual-ip ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2 + ip="192.168.0.10" + op start timeout="20" op stop timeout="20" + op monitor interval="10" timeout="20" +........... + +In this particular case, there is only a single step, and that step +configures a primitive resource. Other scripts may configure multiple +resources and constraints, or may perform multiple steps in sequence. + +=== Running a script === + +To run a script, all required parameters and any optional parameters +that should have values other than the default should be provided as +`key=value` pairs on the command line. + +The following example shows how to create a Virtual IP resource using +the `virtual-ip` script: + +........ +# crm script +run virtual-ip id=my-virtual-ip ip=192.168.0.10 +........ + +==== Single-stepping a script ==== + +It is possible to run a script action-by-action, with manual intervention +between actions. First of all, list the actions to perform given a +certain set of parameter values: + +........ +crm script verify health +........ + +To execute a single action, two things need to be provided: + +1. The index of the action to execute (printed by `verify`) +2. a file in which `crmsh` stores the state of execution. + +Note that it is entirely possible to run actions out-of-order, however +this is unlikely to work in practice since actions often rely on the +outcome of previous actions. + +The following command will execute the first action of the `health` +script and store the output in a temporary file named `health.json`: + +........ +crm script run health action=1 statefile='health.json' +........ + +The statefile contains the script parameters and the output of +previous steps, encoded as `json` data. + +To continue executing the next action in sequence, enter the next +action index: + +........ +crm script run health action=2 statefile='health.json' +........ + +Note that the `dry_run` flag that can be used to do partial execution +of scripts is not taken into consideration when single-stepping +through a script. + +== Creating a script == + +This section will describe how to create a new script, where to put +the script to allow `crmsh` to find it, and how to test that the +script works as intended. + +=== How scripts work, in detail === + +NOTE: The implementation of cluster scripts was revised between +`crmsh` 2.0 and `crmsh` 2.2. This section describes the revised +cluster script format. The old format is still accepted by `crmsh`. + +A cluster script consists of four main sections: + +. The name and description of the script. +. Any other scripts or agents included by this script, and any parameter value overrides to those provided by the included script. +. A set of parameters accepted by the script itself, in addition to those accepted by any scripts or agents included in the script. +. A sequence of actions which the script will perform. + +When the script runs, the actions defined in `main.yml` as described +below are executed one at a time. Each action prescribes a +modification that is applied to the cluster. Some actions work by +calling out to scripts on each of the cluster nodes, and others apply +only on the local node from which the script was executed. + +=== Actions === + +Scripts perform actions that are classified into a few basic +types. Each action is performed by calling out to a shell script, +but the arguments and location of that script varies depending on the +type. + +Here are the types of script actions that can be performed: + +cib:: + * Applies a new CIB configuration to the cluster + +install:: + * Ensures that the given list of packages is installed on all + cluster nodes using the system package manager. + +service:: + * Manages system services using the system init tools. The argument + should be a space-separated list of <service>:<state> pairs. + +call:: + * Run a shell command as specified in the action, either on the + local node on or all nodes. + +copy:: + * Installs a file on the cluster nodes. + * Using a configuration template, install a file on the cluster + nodes. + +crm:: + * Runs the given command using the `crm` shell. This can be used to + start and stop resources, for example. + +collect:: + * Runs on all cluster nodes + * Gathers information about the nodes, both general information and + information specific to the script. + +validate:: + * Runs on the local node + * Validate parameter values and node state based on collected + information. Can modify default values and report issues that + would prevent the script from applying successfully. + +apply:: + * Runs on all or any cluster nodes + * Applies changes, returning information about the applied changes + to the local node. + +apply_local:: + * Runs on the local node + * Applies changes to the cluster, where an action taken on a single + node affect the entire cluster. This includes updating the CIB in + Pacemaker, and also reloading the configuration for Corosync. + +report:: + * Runs on the local node + * This is similar to the _apply_local_ action, with the difference + that the output of a Report action is not interpreted as JSON data + to be passed to the next action. Instead, the output is printed to + the screen. + +==== When expressions ==== + +Actions can be made conditional on the value of script parameters using +the +when:+ expression. This expression has two basic forms. + +The first form is in the form of the name of a script parameter. For +example, given a boolean script parameter named +install+, an action +can be made conditional on that parameter being true using the syntax ++when: install+. + +The second form is a more complex expression. All parameters are +interpreted as either a string value or None if no value was provided. +These can be compared to string literals using python-style +comparators. For example, an action can be conditional on the string +parameter +mode+ having the value +"advanced"+ using the following +syntax: +when: mode == "advanced"+. + +=== Basic structure === + +The crm shell looks for scripts in two primary locations: Included +scripts are installed in the system-wide shared folder, usually +`/usr/share/crmsh/scripts/`. Local and custom scripts are loaded from +the user-local XDG_CONFIG folder, usually found at +`~/.local/crm/scripts/`. These locations may differ depending on how +the crm shell was installed and which system is used, but these are +the locations used on most distributions. + +To create a new script, make a new folder in the user-local scripts +folder and give it a unique name. In this example, we will call our +new script `check-uptime`. + +........ +mkdir -p ~/.local/crm/scripts/check-uptime +........ + +In this directory, create a file called `main.yml`. This is a YAML +document which describes the script, which parameters it requires, and +what actions it will perform. + +YAML is a human-readable markup language which is designed to be easy +to read and modify, while at the same time be compatible with JSON. To +learn more, see http:://yaml.org/[yaml.org]. + +Here is an example `main.yml` file which wraps the resource agent +`ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2`. + +[source,yaml] +---- +# The version must be exactly 2.2, and must always be +# specified in the script. If the version is missing or +# is less than 2.2, the script is assumed to be a legacy +# script (specified in the format used before crmsh 2.2). +version: 2.2 +shortdesc: Virtual IP +category: Basic +include: + - agent: ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2 + name: virtual-ip + parameters: + - name: id + type: resource + required: true + - name: ip + type: ip_address + required: true + - name: cidr_netmask + type: integer + required: false + - name: broadcast + type: ip_address + required: false + ops: | + op start timeout="20" op stop timeout="20" + op monitor interval="10" timeout="20" +actions: + - include: virtual-ip +---- + +For a bigger example, here is the `apache` agent which includes +multiple optional steps, the optional installation of packages, +defines multiple cluster resources and potentially calls bash commands +on each of the cluster nodes. + +[source,yaml] +---- +# Copyright (C) 2009 Dejan Muhamedagic +# Copyright (C) 2015 Kristoffer Gronlund +# +# License: GNU General Public License (GPL) +version: 2.2 +category: Server +shortdesc: Apache Webserver +longdesc: | + Configure a resource group containing a virtual IP address and + an instance of the Apache web server. + + You can optionally configure a Filesystem resource which will be + mounted before the web server is started. + + You can also optionally configure a database resource which will + be started before the web server but after mounting the optional + filesystem. +include: + - agent: ocf:heartbeat:apache + name: apache + longdesc: | + The Apache configuration file specified here must be available via the + same path on all cluster nodes, and Apache must be configured with + mod_status enabled. If in doubt, try running Apache manually via + its init script first, and ensure http://localhost:80/server-status is + accessible. + ops: | + op start timeout="40" + op stop timeout="60" + op monitor interval="10" timeout="20" + - script: virtual-ip + shortdesc: The IP address configured here will start before the Apache instance. + parameters: + - name: id + value: "{{id}}-vip" + - script: filesystem + shortdesc: Optional filesystem mounted before the web server is started. + required: false + - script: database + shortdesc: Optional database started before the web server is started. + required: false +parameters: + - name: install + type: boolean + shortdesc: Install and configure apache + value: false +actions: + - install: + - apache2 + shortdesc: Install the apache package + when: install + - service: + - apache: disable + shortdesc: Let cluster manage apache + when: install + - call: a2enmod status; true + shortdesc: Enable status module + when: install + - include: filesystem + - include: database + - include: virtual-ip + - include: apache + - cib: | + group g-{{id}} + {{filesystem:id}} + {{database:id}} + {{virtual-ip:id}} + {{id}} +---- + +The language for referring to parameter values in `cib` actions is +described below. + +=== Command arguments === + +The actions that accept a command as argument must not refer to +commands written in python. They can be plain bash scripts or any +other executable script as long as the nodes have the necessary +dependencies installed. However, see below why implementing scripts in +Python is easier. + +Actions report their progress either by returning JSON on standard +output, or by returning a non-zero return value and printing an error +message to standard error. + +Any JSON returned by an action will be available to the following +steps in the script. When the script executes, it does so in a +temporary folder created for that purpose. In that folder is a file +named `script.input`, containing a JSON array with the output produced +by previous steps. + +The first element in the array (the zeroth element, to be precise) is +a dict containing the parameter values. + +The following elements are dicts with the hostname of each node as key +and the output of the action generated by that node as value. + +In most cases, only local actions (`validate` and `apply_local`) will +use the information in previous steps, but scripts are not limited in +what they can do. + +With this knowledge, we can implement `fetch.py` and `report.py`. + +`fetch.py`: + +[source,python] +---- +#!/usr/bin/python3 +import crm_script as crm +try: + uptime = open('/proc/uptime').read().split()[0] + crm.exit_ok(uptime) +except Exception as e: + crm.exit_fail("Couldn't open /proc/uptime: %s" % (e)) +---- + +`report.py`: + +[source,python] +---- +#!/usr/bin/python3 +import crm_script as crm +show_all = crm.is_true(crm.param('show_all')) +uptimes = list(crm.output(1).items()) +max_uptime = '', 0 +for host, uptime in uptimes: + if float(uptime) > max_uptime[1]: + max_uptime = host, float(uptime) +if show_all: + print("Uptimes: %s" % (', '.join("%s: %s" % v for v in uptimes))) +print("Longest uptime is %s seconds on host %s" % (max_uptime[1], max_uptime[0])) +---- + +See below for more details on the helper library `crm_script`. + +Save the scripts as executable files in the same directory as the +`main.yml` file. + +Before running the script, it is possible to verify that the files are +in a valid format and in the right location. Run the following +command: + +........ +crm script verify check-uptime +........ + +If the verification is successful, try executing the script with the +following command: + +........ +crm script run check-uptime +........ + +Example output: + +[source,bash] +---- +# crm script run check-uptime +INFO: Check uptime of nodes +INFO: Nodes: ha-three, ha-one +OK: Fetch uptimes +OK: Report uptime +Longest uptime is 161054.04 seconds on host ha-one +---- + +To see if the `show_all` parameter works as intended, run the +following: + +........ +crm script run check-uptime show_all=yes +........ + +Example output: + +[source,bash] +---- +# crm script run check-uptime show_all=yes +INFO: Check uptime of nodes +INFO: Nodes: ha-three, ha-one +OK: Fetch uptimes +OK: Report uptime +Uptimes: ha-one: 161069.83, ha-three: 159950.38 +Longest uptime is 161069.83 seconds on host ha-one +---- + +=== Remote permissions === + +Some scripts may require super-user access to remote or local +nodes. It is recommended that this is handled through SSH certificates +and agents, to facilitate password-less access to nodes. + +=== Running scripts without a cluster === + +All cluster scripts can optionally take a `nodes` argument, which +determines the nodes that the script will run on. This node list is +not limited to nodes already in the cluster. It is even possible to +execute cluster scripts before a cluster is set up, such as the +`health` and `init` scripts used by the `cluster` sub-level. + +........ +crm script run health nodes=example1,example2 +........ + +The list of nodes can be comma- or space-separated, but if the list +contains spaces, the whole argument will have to be quoted: + +........ +crm script run health nodes="example1 example2" +........ + +=== Running in validate mode === + +It may be desirable to do a dry-run of a script, to see if any +problems are present that would make the script fail before trying to +apply it. To do this, add the argument `dry_run=yes` to the invocation: + +......... +crm script run health dry_run=yes +......... + +The script execution will stop at the first `apply` action. Note that +non-modifying steps that happen after the first `apply` action will +not be performed in a dry run. + +=== Helper library === + +When the script data is copied to each node, a small helper library is +also passed along with the script. This library can be found in +`utils/crm_script.py` in the source repository. This library helps +with producing output in the correct format, parsing the +`script.input` data provided to scripts, and more. + +.`crm_script` API +`host()`:: + Returns hostname of current node +`get_input()`:: + Returns the input data list. The first element in the list + is a dict of the script parameters. The rest are the output + from previous steps. +`parameters()`:: + Returns the script parameters as a dict. +`param(name)`:: + Returns the value of the named script parameter. +`output(step_idx)`:: + Returns the output of the given step, with the first step being step 1. +`exit_ok(data)`:: + Exits the step returning `data` as output. +`exit_fail(msg)`:: + Exits the step returning `msg` as error message. +`is_true(value)`:: + Converts a truth value from string to boolean. +`call(cmd, shell=False)`:: + Perform a system call. Returns `(rc, stdout, stderr)`. + +=== The handles language === + +CIB configurations and commands can refer to the value of parameters +in the text of the action. This is done using a custom language, +similar to handlebars. + +The language accepts the following constructions: + +............ +{{name}} = Inserts the value of the parameter <name> +{{script:name}} = Inserts the value of the parameter <name> from the + included script named <script>. +{{#name}} ... {{/name}} = Inserts the text between the mustasches when + name is truthy. +{{^name}} ... {{/name}} = Inserts the text between the mustasches when + name is falsy. +............ + diff --git a/doc/website-v1/start-guide.adoc b/doc/website-v1/start-guide.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7ad6a82 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/website-v1/start-guide.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,208 @@ += Getting Started + +So, you've successfully installed `crmsh` on one or more machines, and +now you want to configure a basic cluster. This guide is intended to +provide step-by-step instructions for configuring Pacemaker +with a single resource capable of failing over between a pair of +nodes, and then builds on that base to cover some more advanced topics +of cluster management. + +**** +Haven't installed yet? Please follow the +link:/installation[installation instructions] +before continuing this guide. Only `crmsh` and +its dependencies need to be installed before +following this guide. +**** + +Before continuing, make sure that this command executes successfully +on all nodes, and returns a version number that is `3.0` or higher: + +........ +crm --version +........ + +**** +In crmsh 3, the cluster init commands were replaced by the SLE HA +bootstrap scripts. These rely on `csync2` for configuration file +management, so make sure that you have the `csync2` command +installed before proceeding. This requirement may be removed in +the future. +**** + +.Example cluster +************************** + +These are the machines used as an example in this guide. Please +replace the references to these names and IP addresses to the values +appropriate for your cluster: + + +[options="header,footer"] +|======================= +|Name |IP +|alice |10.0.0.2 +|bob |10.0.0.3 +|======================= +************************** + + +== The cluster stack + +The composition of the GNU/Linux cluster stack has changed somewhat +over the years. The stack described here is the currently most common +variant, but there are other ways of configuring these tools. + +Simply put, a High Availability cluster is a set of machines (commonly +referred to as *nodes*) with redundant capacity, such that if one or +more of these machines experience failure of any kind, the other nodes +in the cluster can take over the responsibilities previously handled +by the failed node. + +The cluster stack is a set of programs running on all of these nodes, +communicating with each other over the network to monitor each other +and deciding where, when and how resources are stopped, started or +reconfigured. + +The main component of the stack is *Pacemaker*, the software +responsible for managing cluster resources, allocating them to cluster +nodes according to the rules specified in the *CIB*. + +The CIB is an XML document maintained by Pacemaker, which describes +all cluster resources, their configuration and the constraints that +decide where and how they are managed. This document is not edited +directly, and with the help of `crmsh` it is possible to avoid +exposure to the underlying XML at all. + +Beneath Pacemaker in the stack sits *Corosync*, a cluster +communication system. Corosync provides the communication capabilities +and cluster membership functionality used by Pacemaker. Corosync is +configured through the file `/etc/corosync/corosync.conf`. `crmsh` +provides tools for configuring corosync similar to Pacemaker. + +Aside from these two components, the stack also consists of a +collection of *Resource Agents*. These are basically scripts that wrap +software that the cluster needs to manage, providing a unified +interface to configuration, supervision and management of the +software. For example, there are agents that handle virtual IP +resources, web servers, databases and filesystems. + +`crmsh` is a command line tool which interfaces against all of these +components, providing a unified interface for configuration and +management of the whole cluster stack. + +== SSH + +`crmsh` runs as a command line tool on any one of the cluster +nodes. In order for to to control all cluster nodes, it needs to be +able to execute commands remotely. `crmsh` does this by invoking +`ssh`. + +Configure `/etc/hosts` on each of the nodes so that the names of the +other nodes map to the IP addresses of those nodes. For example in a +cluster consisting of `alice` and `bob`, executing `ping bob` when +logged in as root on `alice` should successfully locate `bob` on the +network. Given the IP addresses of `alice` and `bob` above, the +following should be entered into `/etc/hosts` on both nodes: + +........ +10.0.0.2 alice +10.0.0.3 bob +........ + +== Install and configure + +To configure the basic cluster, we use the `cluster init` command +provided by `crmsh`. This command has quite a few options for +setting up the cluster, but we will use a fairly basic configuration. + +........ +crm cluster init --name demo-cluster --nodes "alice bob" +........ + +The initialization tool will now ask a series of questions about the +configuration, and then proceed to configure and start the cluster +on both nodes. + +== Check cluster status + +To see if Pacemaker is running, what nodes are part of the cluster and +what resources are active, use the `status` command: + +......... +crm status +......... + +If this command fails or times out, there is some problem with +Pacemaker or Corosync on the local machine. Perhaps some dependency is +missing, a firewall is blocking cluster communication or some other +unrelated problem has occurred. If this is the case, the `cluster +health` command may be of use. + +== Cluster health check + +To check the health status of the machines in the cluster, use the +following command: + +........ +crm cluster health +........ + +This command will perform multiple diagnostics on all nodes in the +cluster, and return information about low disk space, communication +issues or problems with mismatching software versions between nodes, +for example. + +If no cluster has been configured or there is some fundamental problem +with cluster communications, `crmsh` may be unable to figure out what +nodes are part of the cluster. If this is the case, the list of nodes +can be provided to the health command directly: + +........ +crm cluster health nodes=alice,bob +........ + +== Adding a resource + +To test the cluster and make sure it is working properly, we can +configure a Dummy resource. The Dummy resource agent is a simple +resource that doesn't actually manage any software. It exposes a +single numerical parameter called `state` which can be used to test +the basic functionality of the cluster before introducing the +complexities of actual resources. + +To configure a Dummy resource, run the following command: + +........ +crm configure primitive p0 Dummy +........ + +This creates a new resource, gives it the name `p0` and sets the +agent for the resource to be the `Dummy` agent. + +`crm status` should now show the `p0` resource as started on one +of the cluster nodes: + +........ +# crm status +Last updated: Wed Jul 2 21:49:26 2014 +Last change: Wed Jul 2 21:49:19 2014 +Stack: corosync +Current DC: alice (2) - partition with quorum +Version: 1.1.11-c3f1a7f +2 Nodes configured +1 Resources configured + + +Online: [ alice bob ] + + p0 (ocf::heartbeat:Dummy): Started alice +........ + +The resource can be stopped or started using the `resource start` and +`resource stop` commands: + +........ +crm resource stop p0 +crm resource start p0 +........ |