Provided by: swift_2.7.1-0ubuntu2_all bug

NAME

       swift-ring-builder - Openstack-swift ring builder

SYNOPSIS

       swift-ring-builder <builder_file> <commands> <arguments> <...>

DESCRIPTION

       The  swift-ring-builder utility is used to create, search and manipulate the swift storage
       ring. The ring-builder assigns partitions  to  devices  and  writes  an  optimized  Python
       structure  to  a gzipped, pickled file on disk for shipping out to the servers. The server
       processes just check the modification time of the file occasionally and reload  their  in-
       memory  copies  of  the  ring structure as needed. Because of how the ring-builder manages
       changes to the ring, using a slightly older ring usually  just  means  one  of  the  three
       replicas  for  a  subset  of  the partitions will be incorrect, which can be easily worked
       around.

       The ring-builder also keeps its own builder file with the ring information and  additional
       data  required  to build future rings. It is very important to keep multiple backup copies
       of these builder files. One option is to copy the builder files out to every server  while
       copying  the  ring  files  themselves.   Another  is  to upload the builder files into the
       cluster itself. Complete loss of a builder  file  will  mean  creating  a  new  ring  from
       scratch,  nearly  all  partitions will end up assigned to different devices, and therefore
       nearly all data stored will have to be replicated to new locations. So,  recovery  from  a
       builder  file  loss  is  possible, but data will definitely be unreachable for an extended
       time.

       If invoked as 'swift-ring-builder-safe' the directory containing the builder file provided
       will  be  locked  (via a .lock file in the files parent directory).  This provides a basic
       safe guard against multiple instances of the swift-ring-builder (or other  utilities  that
       observe  this  lock)  from  attempting  to  write  to or read the builder/ring files while
       operations are in progress. This can be useful in environments where ring  management  has
       been automated but the operator still needs to interact with the rings manually.

SEARCH

       <search-value>
            Can be of the form:
            d<device_id>z<zone>-<ip>:<port>/<device_name>_<meta>

            Any part is optional, but you must include at least one, examples:

               d74              Matches the device id 74
               z1               Matches devices in zone 1
               z1-1.2.3.4       Matches devices in zone 1 with the ip 1.2.3.4
               1.2.3.4          Matches devices in any zone with the ip 1.2.3.4
               z1:5678          Matches devices in zone 1 using port 5678
               :5678            Matches devices that use port 5678
               /sdb1            Matches devices with the device name sdb1
               _shiny           Matches devices with shiny in the meta data
               _'snet: 5.6.7.8' Matches devices with snet: 5.6.7.8 in the meta data
               [::1]            Matches devices in any zone with the ip ::1
               z1-[::1]:5678    Matches devices in zone 1 with ip ::1 and port 5678

            Most specific example:

               d74z1-1.2.3.4:5678/sdb1_"snet: 5.6.7.8"

            Nerd explanation:

               All items require their single character prefix except the ip, in which case the -
               is optional unless the device id or zone is also included.

COMMANDS

       <builder_file>
            Shows information about the ring and the devices within.

       search  <search-value>
            Shows information about matching devices.

       add z<zone>-<ip>:<port>/<device_name>_<meta> <weight>
       add r<region>z<zone>-<ip>:<port>/<device_name>_<meta> <weight>
       add -r <region> -z <zone> -i <ip> -p <port> -d <device_name> -m <meta> -w <weight>
            Adds a device to the ring with the given information. No partitions will be  assigned
            to  the  new device until after running 'rebalance'. This is so you can make multiple
            device changes and rebalance them all just once.

       create <part_power> <replicas> <min_part_hours>
            Creates   <builder_file>   with    2^<part_power>    partitions    and    <replicas>.
            <min_part_hours> is number of hours to restrict moving a partition more than once.

       list_parts <search-value> [<search-value>] ..
            Returns a 2 column list of all the partitions that are assigned to any of the devices
            matching the search values given. The first column is the assigned  partition  number
            and the second column is the number of device matches for that partition. The list is
            ordered from most number of matches to least. If there are a lot of devices to  match
            against, this command could take a while to run.

       rebalance
            Attempts  to  rebalance the ring by reassigning partitions that haven't been recently
            reassigned.

       remove <search-value>
            Removes the device(s) from the ring. This should normally just be used for  a  device
            that  has  failed. For a device you wish to decommission, it's best to set its weight
            to 0, wait for it to drain all its data, then use this remove command. This will  not
            take effect until after running 'rebalance'.  This is so you can make multiple device
            changes and rebalance them all just once.

       set_info <search-value> <ip>:<port>/<device_name>_<meta>
            Resets the device's information. This information isn't used to assign partitions, so
            you  can use 'write_ring' afterward to rewrite the current ring with the newer device
            information.    Any    of    the    parts    are    optional     in     the     final
            <ip>:<port>/<device_name>_<meta>  parameter;  just  give what you want to change. For
            instance set_info d74 _"snet: 5.6.7.8" would just update the meta data for device  id
            74.

       set_min_part_hours <hours>
            Changes the <min_part_hours> to the given <hours>. This should be set to however long
            a full replication/update cycle takes. We're working on a way to determine this  more
            easily than scanning logs.

       set_weight <search-value> <weight>
            Resets  the  device's  weight. No partitions will be reassigned to or from the device
            until after running 'rebalance'. This is so you can make multiple device changes  and
            rebalance them all just once.

       validate
            Just runs the validation routines on the ring.

       write_ring
            Just  rewrites  the  distributable  ring  file.  This  is  done automatically after a
            successful rebalance, so really this is only useful  after  one  or  more  'set_info'
            calls  when  no  rebalance  is  needed  but  you  want  to  send  out  the new device
            information.

       Quick list: add create list_parts rebalance remove search set_info
                   set_min_part_hours set_weight validate write_ring

       Exit codes: 0 = ring changed, 1 = ring did not change, 2 = error

DOCUMENTATION

       More in depth documentation about the swift ring and also Openstack-Swift as a  whole  can
       be            found            at           http://swift.openstack.org/overview_ring.html,
       http://swift.openstack.org/admin_guide.html#managing-the-rings                         and
       http://swift.openstack.org