Provided by: swift_2.25.2-0ubuntu1.1_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>r<region>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
               r1z1:5678        Matches devices in zone 1 present in region 1 using port 5678
               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.

OPTIONS

       -y, --yes
              Assume a yes response to all questions

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
       https://docs.openstack.org/swift/latest/overview_ring.html
       https://docs.openstack.org/swift/latest/admin_guide.html#managing-the-rings                           and
       https://docs.openstack.org/swift/latest/