Provided by: booth_1.0-6ubuntu1_amd64
NAME
boothd - The Booth Cluster Ticket Manager.
SYNOPSIS
boothd daemon [-SD] [-c config] [-l lockfile] booth list [-s site] [-c config] booth grant [-s site] [-c config] [-FCw] ticket booth revoke [-s site] [-c config] [-w] ticket booth peers [-s site] [-c config] booth status [-D] [-c config]
DESCRIPTION
Booth manages tickets which authorizes one of the cluster sites located in geographically dispersed distances to run certain resources. It is designed to be extend Pacemaker to support geographically distributed clustering. It is based on the RAFT protocol, see eg. https://ramcloud.stanford.edu/wiki/download/attachments/11370504/raft.pdf for details.
SHORT EXAMPLES
# boothd daemon -D # booth list # booth grant ticket-nfs # booth revoke ticket-nfs
OPTIONS
-c configfile Configuration to use. Can be a full path to a configuration file, or a short name; in the latter case, the directory /etc/booth and suffix .conf are added. Per default booth is used, which results in the path /etc/booth/booth.conf. The configuration name also determines the name of the PID file - for the defaults, /var/run/booth/booth.pid. -s Site address or name. The special value 'other' can be used to specify the other site. Obviously, in that case, the booth configuration must have exactly two sites defined. -F immediate grant: Don’t wait for unreachable sites to relinquish the ticket. See the Booth ticket management section below for more details. This option may be DANGEROUS. It makes booth grant the ticket even though it cannot ascertain that unreachable sites don't hold the same ticket. It is up to the user to make sure that unreachable sites don't have this ticket as granted. -w wait for the request outcome: The client waits for the final outcome of grant or revoke request. -C wait for ticket commit to CIB: The client waits for the ticket commit to CIB (only for grant requests). If one or more sites are unreachable, this takes the ticket expire time (plus, if defined, the acquire-after time). -h, --help Give a short usage output. --version Report version information. -S systemd mode: don’t fork. This is like -D but without the debug output. -D Debug output/don’t daemonize. Increases the debug output level; booth daemon remains in the foreground. -l lockfile Use another lock file. By default, the lock file name is inferred from the configuration file name. Normally not needed.
COMMANDS
Whether the binary is called as boothd or booth doesn’t matter; the first argument determines the mode of operation. daemon Tells boothd to serve a site. The locally configured interfaces are searched for an IP address that is defined in the configuration. booth then runs in either /arbitrator/ or /site/ mode. client Booth clients can list the ticket information (see also crm_ticket -L), and revoke or grant tickets to a site. The grant and, under certain circumstances, revoke operations may take a while to return a definite operation’s outcome. The client will wait up to the network timeout value (by default 5 seconds) for the result. Unless the -w option was set, in which case the client waits indefinitely. In this mode the configuration file is searched for an IP address that is locally reachable, ie. matches a configured subnet. This allows one to run the client commands on another node in the same cluster, as long as the config file and the service IP is locally reachable. For instance, if the booth service IP is 192.168.55.200, and the local node has 192.168.55.15 configured on one of its network interfaces, it knows which site it belongs to. Use -s to direct client to connect to a different site. status boothd looks for the (locked) PID file and the UDP socket, prints some output to stdout (for use in shell scripts) and returns an OCF-compatible return code. With -D, a human-readable message is printed to STDERR as well. peers List the other boothd servers we know about. In addition to the type, name (IP address), and the last time the server was heard from, network statistics are also printed. The statistics are split into two rows, the first one consists of counters for the sent packets and the second one for the received packets. The first counter is the total number of packets and descriptions of the other counters follows: resends Packets which had to be resent because the recipient didn’t acknowledge a message. This usually means that either the message or the acknowledgement got lost. The number of resends usually reflect the network reliability. error Packets which either couldn’t be sent, got truncated, or were badly formed. Should be zero. invalid These packets contain either invalid or non-existing ticket name or refer to a non-existing ticket leader. Should be zero. authfail Packets which couldn’t be authenticated. Should be zero.
CONFIGURATION FILE
The configuration file must be identical on all sites and arbitrators. A minimal file may look like this: site="192.168.201.100" site="192.168.202.100" arbitrator="192.168.203.100" ticket="ticket-db8" Comments start with a hash-sign ('#'). Whitespace at the start and end of the line, and around the '=', are ignored. The following key/value pairs are defined: port The UDP/TCP port to use. Default is 9929. transport The transport protocol to use for Raft exchanges. Currently only UDP is supported. Clients use TCP to communicate with a daemon; Booth will always bind and listen to both UDP and TCP ports. authfile File containing the authentication key. The key can be either binary or text. If the latter, then both leading and trailing white space, including new lines, is ignored. This key is a shared secret and used to authenticate both clients and servers. The key must be between 8 and 64 characters long and be readable only by the file owner. maxtimeskew As protection against replay attacks, packets contain generation timestamps. Such a timestamp is not allowed to be too old. Just how old can be specified with this parameter. The value is in seconds and the default is 600 (10 minutes). If clocks vary more than this default between sites and nodes (which is definitely something you should fix) then set this parameter to a higher value. The time skew test is performed only in concert with authentication. site Defines a site Raft member with the given IP. Sites can acquire tickets. The sites' IP should be managed by the cluster. arbitrator Defines an arbitrator Raft member with the given IP. Arbitrators help reach consensus in elections and cannot hold tickets. Booth needs at least three members for normal operation. Odd number of members provides more redundancy. site-user, site-group, arbitrator-user, arbitrator-group These define the credentials boothd will be running with. On a (Pacemaker) site the booth process will have to call crm_ticket, so the default is to use hacluster:'haclient'; for an arbitrator this user and group might not exists, so there we default to nobody:'nobody'. ticket Registers a ticket. Multiple tickets can be handled by single Booth instance. Use the special ticket name defaults to modify the defaults. The defaults stanza must precede all the other ticket specifications. All times are in seconds. expire The lease time for a ticket. After that time the ticket can be acquired by another site if the ticket holder is not reachable. The default is 600. acquire-after Once a ticket is lost, wait this time in addition before acquiring the ticket. This is to allow for the site that lost the ticket to relinquish the resources, by either stopping them or fencing a node. A typical delay might be 60 seconds, but ultimately it depends on the protected resources and the fencing configuration. The default is 0. renewal-freq Set the ticket renewal frequency period. If the network reliability is often reduced over prolonged periods, it is advisable to try to renew more often. Before every renewal, if defined, the command specified in before-acquire-handler is run. In that case the renewal-freq parameter is effectively also the local cluster monitoring interval. timeout After that time booth will re-send packets if there was an insufficient number of replies. This should be long enough to allow packets to reach other members. The default is 5. retries Defines how many times to retry sending packets before giving up waiting for acks from other members. Default is 10. Values lower than 3 are illegal. Ticket renewals should allow for this number of retries. Hence, the total retry time must be shorter than the renewal time (either half the expire time or renewal-freq): timeout*(retries+1) < renewal weights A comma-separated list of integers that define the weight of individual Raft members, in the same order as the site and arbitrator lines. Default is 0 for all; this means that the order in the configuration file defines priority for conflicting requests. before-acquire-handler If set, this command will be called before boothd tries to acquire or renew a ticket. On exit code other than 0, boothd relinquishes the ticket. Thus it is possible to ensure whether the services and its dependencies protected by the ticket are in good shape at this site. For instance, if a service in the dependency-chain has a failcount of INFINITY on all available nodes, the service will be unable to run. In that case, it is of no use to claim the ticket. See below for details about booth specific environment variables. The distributed service-runnable script is an example which may be used to test whether a pacemaker resource can be started. attr-prereq Sites can have GEO attributes managed with the geostore(8) program. Attributes are within ticket’s scope and may be tested by boothd for additional control of ticket failover (automatic) or ticket acquire (manual). Attributes are typically used to convey extra information about resources, for instance database replication status. The attributes are commonly updated by resource agents. Attribute values are referenced in expressions and may be tested for equality with the eq binary operator or inequality with the ne operator. The usage is as follows: attr-prereq = <grant_type> <name> <op> <value> <grant_type>: "auto" | "manual" <name>: attribute name <op>: "eq" | "ne" <value>: attribute value The two grant types are auto for ticket failover and manual for grants using the booth client. Only in case the expression evaluates to true can the ticket be granted. It is not clear whether the manual grant type has any practical use because, obviously, this operation is anyway controlled by a human. Note that there can be no guarantee on whether an attribute value is up to date, i.e. if it actually reflects the current state. One example of a booth configuration file: transport = udp port = 9930 # D-85774 site="192.168.201.100" # D-90409 site="::ffff:192.168.202.100" # A-1120 arbitrator="192.168.203.100" ticket="ticket-db8" expire = 600 acquire-after = 60 timeout = 10 retries = 5 renewal-freq = 60 before-acquire-handler = /usr/share/booth/service-runnable db8 attr-prereq = auto repl_state eq ACTIVE
BOOTH TICKET MANAGEMENT
The booth cluster guarantees that every ticket is owned by only one site at the time. Tickets must be initially granted with the booth client grant command. Once it gets granted, the ticket is managed by the booth cluster. Hence, only granted tickets are managed by booth. If the ticket gets lost, i.e. that the other members of the booth cluster do not hear from the ticket owner in a sufficiently long time, one of the remaining sites will acquire the ticket. This is what is called ticket failover. If the remaining members cannot form a majority, then the ticket cannot fail over. A ticket may be revoked at any time with the booth client revoke command. For revoke to succeed, the site holding the ticket must be reachable. Once the ticket is administratively revoked, it is not managed by the booth cluster anymore. For the booth cluster to start managing the ticket again, it must be again granted to a site. The grant operation, in case not all sites are reachable, may get delayed for the ticket expire time (and, if defined, the acquire-after time). The reason is that the other booth members may not know if the ticket is currently granted at the unreachable site. This delay may be disabled with the -F option. In that case, it is up to the administrator to make sure that the unreachable site is not holding the ticket. When the ticket is managed by booth, it is dangerous to modify it manually using either crm_ticket command or crm site ticket. Neither of these tools is aware of booth and, consequently, booth itself may not be aware of any ticket status changes. A notable exception is setting the ticket to standby which is typically done before a planned failover.
NOTES
Tickets are not meant to be moved around quickly, the default expire time is 600 seconds (10 minutes). booth works with both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. booth renews a ticket before it expires, to account for possible transmission delays. The renewal time, unless explicitly set, is set to half the expire time.
HANDLERS
Currently, there’s only one external handler defined (see the before-acquire-handler configuration item above). The following environment variables are exported to the handler: *BOOTH_TICKET The ticket name, as given in the configuration file. (See ticket item above.) *BOOTH_LOCAL The local site name, as defined in site. *BOOTH_CONF_PATH The path to the active configuration file. *BOOTH_CONF_NAME The configuration name, as used by the -c commandline argument. *BOOTH_TICKET_EXPIRES When the ticket expires (in seconds since 1.1.1970), or 0. The handler is invoked with positional arguments specified after it.
FILES
/etc/booth/booth.conf The default configuration file name. See also the -c argument. /etc/booth/authkey There is no default, but this is a typical location for the shared secret (authentication key). /var/run/booth/ Directory that holds PID/lock files. See also the status command.
RAFT IMPLEMENTATION
In essence, every ticket corresponds to a separate Raft cluster. A ticket is granted to the Raft Leader which then owns (or keeps) the ticket.
ARBITRATOR MANAGEMENT
The booth daemon for an arbitrator which typically doesn’t run the cluster stack, may be started through systemd or with /etc/init.d/booth-arbitrator, depending on which init system the platform supports. The SysV init script starts a booth arbitrator for every configuration file found in /etc/booth. Platforms running systemd can enable and start every configuration separately using systemctl: # systemctl enable booth@<configurationname> # systemctl start booth@<configurationname> systemctl requires the configuration name, even for the default name booth.
EXIT STATUS
0 Success. For the status command: Daemon running. 1 (PCMK_OCF_UNKNOWN_ERROR) General error code. 7 (PCMK_OCF_NOT_RUNNING) No daemon process for that configuration active.
BUGS
Booth is tested regularly. See the README-testing file for more information. Please report any bugs either at GitHub: https://github.com/ClusterLabs/booth/issues Or, if you prefer bugzilla, at openSUSE bugzilla (component "High Availability"): https://bugzilla.opensuse.org/enter_bug.cgi?product=openSUSE%20Factory
AUTHOR
boothd was originally written (mostly) by Jiaju Zhang. In 2013 and 2014 Philipp Marek took over maintainership. Since April 2014 it has been mainly developed by Dejan Muhamedagic. Many people contributed (see the AUTHORS file).
RESOURCES
GitHub: https://github.com/ClusterLabs/booth Documentation: http://doc.opensuse.org/products/draft/SLE-HA/SLE-ha-guide_sd_draft/cha.ha.geo.html
COPYING
Copyright © 2011 Jiaju Zhang <jjzhang@suse.de> Copyright © 2013-2014 Philipp Marek <philipp.marek@linbit.com> Copyright © 2014 Dejan Muhamedagic <dmuhamedagic@suse.com> Free use of this software is granted under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL). 04/08/2018 BOOTHD(8)