Raspberry Pi as third node

From Proxmox VE
Revision as of 19:22, 28 January 2017 by Michael (talk | contribs) (fix categore)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

This short wiki will document how to prepare and configure a Rasberry Pi to use as third node (widness) in a Proxmox cluster. This howto has been tested on a Rasberry Pi v3 but should also work on any other Rasberry Pi version where Raspbian is available. Raspbian version is Jessie.

  1. Login as root on your Pi
  2. Install Debian Jessie (Standard system utilities and SSH server)
  3. echo "deb http://ftp.debian.org/debian jessie-backports main contrib" > /etc/apt/sources.list.d/jessie-backports.list
  4. gpg --keyserver pgpkeys.mit.edu --recv-key 7638D0442B90D010 && gpg -a --export 7638D0442B90D010 | apt-key add -
  5. gpg --keyserver pgpkeys.mit.edu --recv-key 8B48AD6246925553 && gpg -a --export 8B48AD6246925553 | apt-key add -
  6. apt-get update
  7. apt-get -t jessie-backports install corosync
  8. sed -i 's/without-password/yes/' /etc/ssh/sshd_config && systemctl restart ssh
  9. scp <ip of pve node>:/etc/corosync/* /etc/corosync
  10. add new node under nodelist in /etc/corosync.conf (copy one of the current and adjust)
    for NODE in <ip of pve node 1> <ip of pve node 2>; do
    scp /etc/corosync/corosync.conf $NODE:/etc/corosync
    done
  11. ssh <ip of pve node 1> systemctl restart corosync
  12. ssh <ip of pve node 2> systemctl restart corosync
  13. systemctl start corosync
  14. run corosync-quorumtool to check all three nodes er registret as online and that there is quorum:
    corosync-quorumtool | grep Quorate:
    Quorate: Yes