High Availability Cluster: Difference between revisions
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Before going in production do as many tests as possible. | Before going in production do as many tests as possible. | ||
==Useful command line tools== | ==Useful command line tools== | ||
Here is a list of useful | Here is a list of useful CLI tools: | ||
*clustat - Cluster Status Utility | *clustat - Cluster Status Utility | ||
*clusvcadm - Cluster User Service Administration Utility | *clusvcadm - Cluster User Service Administration Utility |
Revision as of 10:02, 23 December 2011
Note: Article about Proxmox VE 2.0 beta |
Introduction
Proxmox VE High Availability Cluster (Proxmox VE HA Cluster) enables the definition of high available virtual machines. In simple words, if a virtual machine (VM) is configured as HA and the physical host fails, the VM is automatically restarted on one of the remaining Proxmox VE Cluster nodes.
The Proxmox VE HA Cluster is based on proofed Linux HA technologies, providing stable and reliable HA service.
System requirements
If you run HA, only high end server hardware with no single point of failure should be used. This includes redundant disks (Hardware Raid), redundant power supply, UPS systems, network bonding.
- Fully configured Proxmox_VE_2.0_Cluster, with at least 3 nodes (maximum supported configuration: currently 16 nodes per cluster)
- Shared storage (SAN for Virtual Disk Image Store for HA KVM)
- Reliable network, suitable configured
- NFS for Containers
- Fencing device(s) - reliable and TESTED!
HA Configuration
The configuration of fence devices is CLI only. Adding and managing VM´s and containers for HA should be done via GUI.
Fencing is a needed part for Proxmox VE 2.0 HA, without fencing, HA will not start working.
Fencing
Configure VM or Containers for HA
Review again if you have everything you need and if all systems are running reliable. It makes no sense to configure HA cluster setup on unreliable hardware.
Enable a KVM VM or a Container for HA
See also the video tutorial on Proxmox VE Youtube channel
HA Cluster maintenance (node reboots)
If you need to reboot a node, e.g. because of a kernel update you need to stop rgmanager. By doing this, all resources are stopped and moved to other nodes. All KVM guests will get a ACPI shutdown request (if this does not work due to VM internal setting just a 'stop').
You can stop the rgmanager service via GUI or just run:
/etc/init.d/rgmanager stop
The command will take a while, monitor the "tasks" and the VM´s and CT´s on the GUI. as soon as the rgmanager is stopped, you can reboot your node. as soon as the node is up again, continue with the next node and so on.
Video Tutorials
Certified Configurations and Examples
Testing
Before going in production do as many tests as possible.
Useful command line tools
Here is a list of useful CLI tools:
- clustat - Cluster Status Utility
- clusvcadm - Cluster User Service Administration Utility
- ccs_config_validate - validate cluster.conf file
- fence_tool - a utility for the fenced daemon
- fence_node - a utility to run fence agents