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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-14 13:40:54 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-14 13:40:54 +0000 |
commit | 317c0644ccf108aa23ef3fd8358bd66c2840bfc0 (patch) | |
tree | c417b3d25c86b775989cb5ac042f37611b626c8a /sentinel.conf | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | redis-317c0644ccf108aa23ef3fd8358bd66c2840bfc0.tar.xz redis-317c0644ccf108aa23ef3fd8358bd66c2840bfc0.zip |
Adding upstream version 5:7.2.4.upstream/5%7.2.4
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | sentinel.conf | 361 |
1 files changed, 361 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/sentinel.conf b/sentinel.conf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b7b3604 --- /dev/null +++ b/sentinel.conf @@ -0,0 +1,361 @@ +# Example sentinel.conf + +# By default protected mode is disabled in sentinel mode. Sentinel is reachable +# from interfaces different than localhost. Make sure the sentinel instance is +# protected from the outside world via firewalling or other means. +protected-mode no + +# port <sentinel-port> +# The port that this sentinel instance will run on +port 26379 + +# By default Redis Sentinel does not run as a daemon. Use 'yes' if you need it. +# Note that Redis will write a pid file in /var/run/redis-sentinel.pid when +# daemonized. +daemonize no + +# When running daemonized, Redis Sentinel writes a pid file in +# /var/run/redis-sentinel.pid by default. You can specify a custom pid file +# location here. +pidfile /var/run/redis-sentinel.pid + +# Specify the server verbosity level. +# This can be one of: +# debug (a lot of information, useful for development/testing) +# verbose (many rarely useful info, but not a mess like the debug level) +# notice (moderately verbose, what you want in production probably) +# warning (only very important / critical messages are logged) +# nothing (nothing is logged) +loglevel notice + +# Specify the log file name. Also the empty string can be used to force +# Sentinel to log on the standard output. Note that if you use standard +# output for logging but daemonize, logs will be sent to /dev/null +logfile "" + +# To enable logging to the system logger, just set 'syslog-enabled' to yes, +# and optionally update the other syslog parameters to suit your needs. +# syslog-enabled no + +# Specify the syslog identity. +# syslog-ident sentinel + +# Specify the syslog facility. Must be USER or between LOCAL0-LOCAL7. +# syslog-facility local0 + +# sentinel announce-ip <ip> +# sentinel announce-port <port> +# +# The above two configuration directives are useful in environments where, +# because of NAT, Sentinel is reachable from outside via a non-local address. +# +# When announce-ip is provided, the Sentinel will claim the specified IP address +# in HELLO messages used to gossip its presence, instead of auto-detecting the +# local address as it usually does. +# +# Similarly when announce-port is provided and is valid and non-zero, Sentinel +# will announce the specified TCP port. +# +# The two options don't need to be used together, if only announce-ip is +# provided, the Sentinel will announce the specified IP and the server port +# as specified by the "port" option. If only announce-port is provided, the +# Sentinel will announce the auto-detected local IP and the specified port. +# +# Example: +# +# sentinel announce-ip 1.2.3.4 + +# dir <working-directory> +# Every long running process should have a well-defined working directory. +# For Redis Sentinel to chdir to /tmp at startup is the simplest thing +# for the process to don't interfere with administrative tasks such as +# unmounting filesystems. +dir /tmp + +# sentinel monitor <master-name> <ip> <redis-port> <quorum> +# +# Tells Sentinel to monitor this master, and to consider it in O_DOWN +# (Objectively Down) state only if at least <quorum> sentinels agree. +# +# Note that whatever is the ODOWN quorum, a Sentinel will require to +# be elected by the majority of the known Sentinels in order to +# start a failover, so no failover can be performed in minority. +# +# Replicas are auto-discovered, so you don't need to specify replicas in +# any way. Sentinel itself will rewrite this configuration file adding +# the replicas using additional configuration options. +# Also note that the configuration file is rewritten when a +# replica is promoted to master. +# +# Note: master name should not include special characters or spaces. +# The valid charset is A-z 0-9 and the three characters ".-_". +sentinel monitor mymaster 127.0.0.1 6379 2 + +# sentinel auth-pass <master-name> <password> +# +# Set the password to use to authenticate with the master and replicas. +# Useful if there is a password set in the Redis instances to monitor. +# +# Note that the master password is also used for replicas, so it is not +# possible to set a different password in masters and replicas instances +# if you want to be able to monitor these instances with Sentinel. +# +# However you can have Redis instances without the authentication enabled +# mixed with Redis instances requiring the authentication (as long as the +# password set is the same for all the instances requiring the password) as +# the AUTH command will have no effect in Redis instances with authentication +# switched off. +# +# Example: +# +# sentinel auth-pass mymaster MySUPER--secret-0123passw0rd + +# sentinel auth-user <master-name> <username> +# +# This is useful in order to authenticate to instances having ACL capabilities, +# that is, running Redis 6.0 or greater. When just auth-pass is provided the +# Sentinel instance will authenticate to Redis using the old "AUTH <pass>" +# method. When also an username is provided, it will use "AUTH <user> <pass>". +# In the Redis servers side, the ACL to provide just minimal access to +# Sentinel instances, should be configured along the following lines: +# +# user sentinel-user >somepassword +client +subscribe +publish \ +# +ping +info +multi +slaveof +config +client +exec on + +# sentinel down-after-milliseconds <master-name> <milliseconds> +# +# Number of milliseconds the master (or any attached replica or sentinel) should +# be unreachable (as in, not acceptable reply to PING, continuously, for the +# specified period) in order to consider it in S_DOWN state (Subjectively +# Down). +# +# Default is 30 seconds. +sentinel down-after-milliseconds mymaster 30000 + +# IMPORTANT NOTE: starting with Redis 6.2 ACL capability is supported for +# Sentinel mode, please refer to the Redis website https://redis.io/topics/acl +# for more details. + +# Sentinel's ACL users are defined in the following format: +# +# user <username> ... acl rules ... +# +# For example: +# +# user worker +@admin +@connection ~* on >ffa9203c493aa99 +# +# For more information about ACL configuration please refer to the Redis +# website at https://redis.io/topics/acl and redis server configuration +# template redis.conf. + +# ACL LOG +# +# The ACL Log tracks failed commands and authentication events associated +# with ACLs. The ACL Log is useful to troubleshoot failed commands blocked +# by ACLs. The ACL Log is stored in memory. You can reclaim memory with +# ACL LOG RESET. Define the maximum entry length of the ACL Log below. +acllog-max-len 128 + +# Using an external ACL file +# +# Instead of configuring users here in this file, it is possible to use +# a stand-alone file just listing users. The two methods cannot be mixed: +# if you configure users here and at the same time you activate the external +# ACL file, the server will refuse to start. +# +# The format of the external ACL user file is exactly the same as the +# format that is used inside redis.conf to describe users. +# +# aclfile /etc/redis/sentinel-users.acl + +# requirepass <password> +# +# You can configure Sentinel itself to require a password, however when doing +# so Sentinel will try to authenticate with the same password to all the +# other Sentinels. So you need to configure all your Sentinels in a given +# group with the same "requirepass" password. Check the following documentation +# for more info: https://redis.io/topics/sentinel +# +# IMPORTANT NOTE: starting with Redis 6.2 "requirepass" is a compatibility +# layer on top of the ACL system. The option effect will be just setting +# the password for the default user. Clients will still authenticate using +# AUTH <password> as usually, or more explicitly with AUTH default <password> +# if they follow the new protocol: both will work. +# +# New config files are advised to use separate authentication control for +# incoming connections (via ACL), and for outgoing connections (via +# sentinel-user and sentinel-pass) +# +# The requirepass is not compatible with aclfile option and the ACL LOAD +# command, these will cause requirepass to be ignored. + +# sentinel sentinel-user <username> +# +# You can configure Sentinel to authenticate with other Sentinels with specific +# user name. + +# sentinel sentinel-pass <password> +# +# The password for Sentinel to authenticate with other Sentinels. If sentinel-user +# is not configured, Sentinel will use 'default' user with sentinel-pass to authenticate. + +# sentinel parallel-syncs <master-name> <numreplicas> +# +# How many replicas we can reconfigure to point to the new replica simultaneously +# during the failover. Use a low number if you use the replicas to serve query +# to avoid that all the replicas will be unreachable at about the same +# time while performing the synchronization with the master. +sentinel parallel-syncs mymaster 1 + +# sentinel failover-timeout <master-name> <milliseconds> +# +# Specifies the failover timeout in milliseconds. It is used in many ways: +# +# - The time needed to re-start a failover after a previous failover was +# already tried against the same master by a given Sentinel, is two +# times the failover timeout. +# +# - The time needed for a replica replicating to a wrong master according +# to a Sentinel current configuration, to be forced to replicate +# with the right master, is exactly the failover timeout (counting since +# the moment a Sentinel detected the misconfiguration). +# +# - The time needed to cancel a failover that is already in progress but +# did not produced any configuration change (SLAVEOF NO ONE yet not +# acknowledged by the promoted replica). +# +# - The maximum time a failover in progress waits for all the replicas to be +# reconfigured as replicas of the new master. However even after this time +# the replicas will be reconfigured by the Sentinels anyway, but not with +# the exact parallel-syncs progression as specified. +# +# Default is 3 minutes. +sentinel failover-timeout mymaster 180000 + +# SCRIPTS EXECUTION +# +# sentinel notification-script and sentinel reconfig-script are used in order +# to configure scripts that are called to notify the system administrator +# or to reconfigure clients after a failover. The scripts are executed +# with the following rules for error handling: +# +# If script exits with "1" the execution is retried later (up to a maximum +# number of times currently set to 10). +# +# If script exits with "2" (or an higher value) the script execution is +# not retried. +# +# If script terminates because it receives a signal the behavior is the same +# as exit code 1. +# +# A script has a maximum running time of 60 seconds. After this limit is +# reached the script is terminated with a SIGKILL and the execution retried. + +# NOTIFICATION SCRIPT +# +# sentinel notification-script <master-name> <script-path> +# +# Call the specified notification script for any sentinel event that is +# generated in the WARNING level (for instance -sdown, -odown, and so forth). +# This script should notify the system administrator via email, SMS, or any +# other messaging system, that there is something wrong with the monitored +# Redis systems. +# +# The script is called with just two arguments: the first is the event type +# and the second the event description. +# +# The script must exist and be executable in order for sentinel to start if +# this option is provided. +# +# Example: +# +# sentinel notification-script mymaster /var/redis/notify.sh + +# CLIENTS RECONFIGURATION SCRIPT +# +# sentinel client-reconfig-script <master-name> <script-path> +# +# When the master changed because of a failover a script can be called in +# order to perform application-specific tasks to notify the clients that the +# configuration has changed and the master is at a different address. +# +# The following arguments are passed to the script: +# +# <master-name> <role> <state> <from-ip> <from-port> <to-ip> <to-port> +# +# <state> is currently always "start" +# <role> is either "leader" or "observer" +# +# The arguments from-ip, from-port, to-ip, to-port are used to communicate +# the old address of the master and the new address of the elected replica +# (now a master). +# +# This script should be resistant to multiple invocations. +# +# Example: +# +# sentinel client-reconfig-script mymaster /var/redis/reconfig.sh + +# SECURITY +# +# By default SENTINEL SET will not be able to change the notification-script +# and client-reconfig-script at runtime. This avoids a trivial security issue +# where clients can set the script to anything and trigger a failover in order +# to get the program executed. + +sentinel deny-scripts-reconfig yes + +# REDIS COMMANDS RENAMING (DEPRECATED) +# +# WARNING: avoid using this option if possible, instead use ACLs. +# +# Sometimes the Redis server has certain commands, that are needed for Sentinel +# to work correctly, renamed to unguessable strings. This is often the case +# of CONFIG and SLAVEOF in the context of providers that provide Redis as +# a service, and don't want the customers to reconfigure the instances outside +# of the administration console. +# +# In such case it is possible to tell Sentinel to use different command names +# instead of the normal ones. For example if the master "mymaster", and the +# associated replicas, have "CONFIG" all renamed to "GUESSME", I could use: +# +# SENTINEL rename-command mymaster CONFIG GUESSME +# +# After such configuration is set, every time Sentinel would use CONFIG it will +# use GUESSME instead. Note that there is no actual need to respect the command +# case, so writing "config guessme" is the same in the example above. +# +# SENTINEL SET can also be used in order to perform this configuration at runtime. +# +# In order to set a command back to its original name (undo the renaming), it +# is possible to just rename a command to itself: +# +# SENTINEL rename-command mymaster CONFIG CONFIG + +# HOSTNAMES SUPPORT +# +# Normally Sentinel uses only IP addresses and requires SENTINEL MONITOR +# to specify an IP address. Also, it requires the Redis replica-announce-ip +# keyword to specify only IP addresses. +# +# You may enable hostnames support by enabling resolve-hostnames. Note +# that you must make sure your DNS is configured properly and that DNS +# resolution does not introduce very long delays. +# +SENTINEL resolve-hostnames no + +# When resolve-hostnames is enabled, Sentinel still uses IP addresses +# when exposing instances to users, configuration files, etc. If you want +# to retain the hostnames when announced, enable announce-hostnames below. +# +SENTINEL announce-hostnames no + +# When master_reboot_down_after_period is set to 0, Sentinel does not fail over +# when receiving a -LOADING response from a master. This was the only supported +# behavior before version 7.0. +# +# Otherwise, Sentinel will use this value as the time (in ms) it is willing to +# accept a -LOADING response after a master has been rebooted, before failing +# over. + +SENTINEL master-reboot-down-after-period mymaster 0 |