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1 [[chapter-ha-manager]]
2 ifdef::manvolnum[]
3 PVE(1)
4 ======
5 include::attributes.txt[]
6
7 :pve-toplevel:
8
9 NAME
10 ----
11
12 ha-manager - Proxmox VE HA Manager
13
14 SYNOPSIS
15 --------
16
17 include::ha-manager.1-synopsis.adoc[]
18
19 DESCRIPTION
20 -----------
21 endif::manvolnum[]
22
23 ifndef::manvolnum[]
24 High Availability
25 =================
26 include::attributes.txt[]
27 endif::manvolnum[]
28
29 ifdef::wiki[]
30 :pve-toplevel:
31 endif::wiki[]
32
33 Our modern society depends heavily on information provided by
34 computers over the network. Mobile devices amplified that dependency,
35 because people can access the network any time from anywhere. If you
36 provide such services, it is very important that they are available
37 most of the time.
38
39 We can mathematically define the availability as the ratio of (A) the
40 total time a service is capable of being used during a given interval
41 to (B) the length of the interval. It is normally expressed as a
42 percentage of uptime in a given year.
43
44 .Availability - Downtime per Year
45 [width="60%",cols="<d,d",options="header"]
46 |===========================================================
47 |Availability % |Downtime per year
48 |99 |3.65 days
49 |99.9 |8.76 hours
50 |99.99 |52.56 minutes
51 |99.999 |5.26 minutes
52 |99.9999 |31.5 seconds
53 |99.99999 |3.15 seconds
54 |===========================================================
55
56 There are several ways to increase availability. The most elegant
57 solution is to rewrite your software, so that you can run it on
58 several host at the same time. The software itself need to have a way
59 to detect errors and do failover. This is relatively easy if you just
60 want to serve read-only web pages. But in general this is complex, and
61 sometimes impossible because you cannot modify the software
62 yourself. The following solutions works without modifying the
63 software:
64
65 * Use reliable ``server'' components
66
67 NOTE: Computer components with same functionality can have varying
68 reliability numbers, depending on the component quality. Most vendors
69 sell components with higher reliability as ``server'' components -
70 usually at higher price.
71
72 * Eliminate single point of failure (redundant components)
73 ** use an uninterruptible power supply (UPS)
74 ** use redundant power supplies on the main boards
75 ** use ECC-RAM
76 ** use redundant network hardware
77 ** use RAID for local storage
78 ** use distributed, redundant storage for VM data
79
80 * Reduce downtime
81 ** rapidly accessible administrators (24/7)
82 ** availability of spare parts (other nodes in a {pve} cluster)
83 ** automatic error detection (provided by `ha-manager`)
84 ** automatic failover (provided by `ha-manager`)
85
86 Virtualization environments like {pve} make it much easier to reach
87 high availability because they remove the ``hardware'' dependency. They
88 also support to setup and use redundant storage and network
89 devices. So if one host fail, you can simply start those services on
90 another host within your cluster.
91
92 Even better, {pve} provides a software stack called `ha-manager`,
93 which can do that automatically for you. It is able to automatically
94 detect errors and do automatic failover.
95
96 {pve} `ha-manager` works like an ``automated'' administrator. First, you
97 configure what resources (VMs, containers, ...) it should
98 manage. `ha-manager` then observes correct functionality, and handles
99 service failover to another node in case of errors. `ha-manager` can
100 also handle normal user requests which may start, stop, relocate and
101 migrate a service.
102
103 But high availability comes at a price. High quality components are
104 more expensive, and making them redundant duplicates the costs at
105 least. Additional spare parts increase costs further. So you should
106 carefully calculate the benefits, and compare with those additional
107 costs.
108
109 TIP: Increasing availability from 99% to 99.9% is relatively
110 simply. But increasing availability from 99.9999% to 99.99999% is very
111 hard and costly. `ha-manager` has typical error detection and failover
112 times of about 2 minutes, so you can get no more than 99.999%
113 availability.
114
115 Requirements
116 ------------
117
118 * at least three cluster nodes (to get reliable quorum)
119
120 * shared storage for VMs and containers
121
122 * hardware redundancy (everywhere)
123
124 * hardware watchdog - if not available we fall back to the
125 linux kernel software watchdog (`softdog`)
126
127 * optional hardware fencing devices
128
129
130 Resources
131 ---------
132
133 We call the primary management unit handled by `ha-manager` a
134 resource. A resource (also called ``service'') is uniquely
135 identified by a service ID (SID), which consists of the resource type
136 and an type specific ID, e.g.: `vm:100`. That example would be a
137 resource of type `vm` (virtual machine) with the ID 100.
138
139 For now we have two important resources types - virtual machines and
140 containers. One basic idea here is that we can bundle related software
141 into such VM or container, so there is no need to compose one big
142 service from other services, like it was done with `rgmanager`. In
143 general, a HA enabled resource should not depend on other resources.
144
145
146 How It Works
147 ------------
148
149 This section provides an in detail description of the {PVE} HA-manager
150 internals. It describes how the CRM and the LRM work together.
151
152 To provide High Availability two daemons run on each node:
153
154 `pve-ha-lrm`::
155
156 The local resource manager (LRM), it controls the services running on
157 the local node.
158 It reads the requested states for its services from the current manager
159 status file and executes the respective commands.
160
161 `pve-ha-crm`::
162
163 The cluster resource manager (CRM), it controls the cluster wide
164 actions of the services, processes the LRM results and includes the state
165 machine which controls the state of each service.
166
167 .Locks in the LRM & CRM
168 [NOTE]
169 Locks are provided by our distributed configuration file system (pmxcfs).
170 They are used to guarantee that each LRM is active once and working. As a
171 LRM only executes actions when it holds its lock we can mark a failed node
172 as fenced if we can acquire its lock. This lets us then recover any failed
173 HA services securely without any interference from the now unknown failed node.
174 This all gets supervised by the CRM which holds currently the manager master
175 lock.
176
177 Local Resource Manager
178 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
179
180 The local resource manager (`pve-ha-lrm`) is started as a daemon on
181 boot and waits until the HA cluster is quorate and thus cluster wide
182 locks are working.
183
184 It can be in three states:
185
186 wait for agent lock::
187
188 The LRM waits for our exclusive lock. This is also used as idle state if no
189 service is configured.
190
191 active::
192
193 The LRM holds its exclusive lock and has services configured.
194
195 lost agent lock::
196
197 The LRM lost its lock, this means a failure happened and quorum was lost.
198
199 After the LRM gets in the active state it reads the manager status
200 file in `/etc/pve/ha/manager_status` and determines the commands it
201 has to execute for the services it owns.
202 For each command a worker gets started, this workers are running in
203 parallel and are limited to at most 4 by default. This default setting
204 may be changed through the datacenter configuration key `max_worker`.
205 When finished the worker process gets collected and its result saved for
206 the CRM.
207
208 .Maximum Concurrent Worker Adjustment Tips
209 [NOTE]
210 The default value of at most 4 concurrent workers may be unsuited for
211 a specific setup. For example may 4 live migrations happen at the same
212 time, which can lead to network congestions with slower networks and/or
213 big (memory wise) services. Ensure that also in the worst case no congestion
214 happens and lower the `max_worker` value if needed. In the contrary, if you
215 have a particularly powerful high end setup you may also want to increase it.
216
217 Each command requested by the CRM is uniquely identifiable by an UID, when
218 the worker finished its result will be processed and written in the LRM
219 status file `/etc/pve/nodes/<nodename>/lrm_status`. There the CRM may collect
220 it and let its state machine - respective the commands output - act on it.
221
222 The actions on each service between CRM and LRM are normally always synced.
223 This means that the CRM requests a state uniquely marked by an UID, the LRM
224 then executes this action *one time* and writes back the result, also
225 identifiable by the same UID. This is needed so that the LRM does not
226 executes an outdated command.
227 With the exception of the `stop` and the `error` command,
228 those two do not depend on the result produced and are executed
229 always in the case of the stopped state and once in the case of
230 the error state.
231
232 .Read the Logs
233 [NOTE]
234 The HA Stack logs every action it makes. This helps to understand what
235 and also why something happens in the cluster. Here its important to see
236 what both daemons, the LRM and the CRM, did. You may use
237 `journalctl -u pve-ha-lrm` on the node(s) where the service is and
238 the same command for the pve-ha-crm on the node which is the current master.
239
240 Cluster Resource Manager
241 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
242
243 The cluster resource manager (`pve-ha-crm`) starts on each node and
244 waits there for the manager lock, which can only be held by one node
245 at a time. The node which successfully acquires the manager lock gets
246 promoted to the CRM master.
247
248 It can be in three states:
249
250 wait for agent lock::
251
252 The CRM waits for our exclusive lock. This is also used as idle state if no
253 service is configured
254
255 active::
256
257 The CRM holds its exclusive lock and has services configured
258
259 lost agent lock::
260
261 The CRM lost its lock, this means a failure happened and quorum was lost.
262
263 It main task is to manage the services which are configured to be highly
264 available and try to always enforce them to the wanted state, e.g.: a
265 enabled service will be started if its not running, if it crashes it will
266 be started again. Thus it dictates the LRM the actions it needs to execute.
267
268 When an node leaves the cluster quorum, its state changes to unknown.
269 If the current CRM then can secure the failed nodes lock, the services
270 will be 'stolen' and restarted on another node.
271
272 When a cluster member determines that it is no longer in the cluster
273 quorum, the LRM waits for a new quorum to form. As long as there is no
274 quorum the node cannot reset the watchdog. This will trigger a reboot
275 after the watchdog then times out, this happens after 60 seconds.
276
277 Configuration
278 -------------
279
280 The HA stack is well integrated in the Proxmox VE API2. So, for
281 example, HA can be configured via `ha-manager` or the PVE web
282 interface, which both provide an easy to use tool.
283
284 The resource configuration file can be located at
285 `/etc/pve/ha/resources.cfg` and the group configuration file at
286 `/etc/pve/ha/groups.cfg`. Use the provided tools to make changes,
287 there shouldn't be any need to edit them manually.
288
289 Node Power Status
290 -----------------
291
292 If a node needs maintenance you should migrate and or relocate all
293 services which are required to run always on another node first.
294 After that you can stop the LRM and CRM services. But note that the
295 watchdog triggers if you stop it with active services.
296
297 Package Updates
298 ---------------
299
300 When updating the ha-manager you should do one node after the other, never
301 all at once for various reasons. First, while we test our software
302 thoughtfully, a bug affecting your specific setup cannot totally be ruled out.
303 Upgrading one node after the other and checking the functionality of each node
304 after finishing the update helps to recover from an eventual problems, while
305 updating all could render you in a broken cluster state and is generally not
306 good practice.
307
308 Also, the {pve} HA stack uses a request acknowledge protocol to perform
309 actions between the cluster and the local resource manager. For restarting,
310 the LRM makes a request to the CRM to freeze all its services. This prevents
311 that they get touched by the Cluster during the short time the LRM is restarting.
312 After that the LRM may safely close the watchdog during a restart.
313 Such a restart happens on a update and as already stated a active master
314 CRM is needed to acknowledge the requests from the LRM, if this is not the case
315 the update process can be too long which, in the worst case, may result in
316 a watchdog reset.
317
318
319 Fencing
320 -------
321
322 What is Fencing
323 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
324
325 Fencing secures that on a node failure the dangerous node gets will be rendered
326 unable to do any damage and that no resource runs twice when it gets recovered
327 from the failed node. This is a really important task and one of the base
328 principles to make a system Highly Available.
329
330 If a node would not get fenced it would be in an unknown state where it may
331 have still access to shared resources, this is really dangerous!
332 Imagine that every network but the storage one broke, now while not
333 reachable from the public network the VM still runs and writes on the shared
334 storage. If we would not fence the node and just start up this VM on another
335 Node we would get dangerous race conditions, atomicity violations the whole VM
336 could be rendered unusable. The recovery could also simply fail if the storage
337 protects from multiple mounts and thus defeat the purpose of HA.
338
339 How {pve} Fences
340 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
341
342 There are different methods to fence a node, for example fence devices which
343 cut off the power from the node or disable their communication completely.
344
345 Those are often quite expensive and bring additional critical components in
346 a system, because if they fail you cannot recover any service.
347
348 We thus wanted to integrate a simpler method in the HA Manager first, namely
349 self fencing with watchdogs.
350
351 Watchdogs are widely used in critical and dependable systems since the
352 beginning of micro controllers, they are often independent and simple
353 integrated circuit which programs can use to watch them. After opening they need to
354 report periodically. If, for whatever reason, a program becomes unable to do
355 so the watchdogs triggers a reset of the whole server.
356
357 Server motherboards often already include such hardware watchdogs, these need
358 to be configured. If no watchdog is available or configured we fall back to the
359 Linux Kernel softdog while still reliable it is not independent of the servers
360 Hardware and thus has a lower reliability then a hardware watchdog.
361
362 Configure Hardware Watchdog
363 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
364 By default all watchdog modules are blocked for security reasons as they are
365 like a loaded gun if not correctly initialized.
366 If you have a hardware watchdog available remove its kernel module from the
367 blacklist, load it with insmod and restart the `watchdog-mux` service or reboot
368 the node.
369
370 Recover Fenced Services
371 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
372
373 After a node failed and its fencing was successful we start to recover services
374 to other available nodes and restart them there so that they can provide service
375 again.
376
377 The selection of the node on which the services gets recovered is influenced
378 by the users group settings, the currently active nodes and their respective
379 active service count.
380 First we build a set out of the intersection between user selected nodes and
381 available nodes. Then the subset with the highest priority of those nodes
382 gets chosen as possible nodes for recovery. We select the node with the
383 currently lowest active service count as a new node for the service.
384 That minimizes the possibility of an overload, which else could cause an
385 unresponsive node and as a result a chain reaction of node failures in the
386 cluster.
387
388 Groups
389 ------
390
391 A group is a collection of cluster nodes which a service may be bound to.
392
393 Group Settings
394 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
395
396 nodes::
397
398 List of group node members where a priority can be given to each node.
399 A service bound to this group will run on the nodes with the highest priority
400 available. If more nodes are in the highest priority class the services will
401 get distributed to those node if not already there. The priorities have a
402 relative meaning only.
403 Example;;
404 You want to run all services from a group on `node1` if possible. If this node
405 is not available, you want them to run equally splitted on `node2` and `node3`, and
406 if those fail it should use `node4`.
407 To achieve this you could set the node list to:
408 [source,bash]
409 ha-manager groupset mygroup -nodes "node1:2,node2:1,node3:1,node4"
410
411 restricted::
412
413 Resources bound to this group may only run on nodes defined by the
414 group. If no group node member is available the resource will be
415 placed in the stopped state.
416 Example;;
417 Lets say a service uses resources only available on `node1` and `node2`,
418 so we need to make sure that HA manager does not use other nodes.
419 We need to create a 'restricted' group with said nodes:
420 [source,bash]
421 ha-manager groupset mygroup -nodes "node1,node2" -restricted
422
423 nofailback::
424
425 The resource won't automatically fail back when a more preferred node
426 (re)joins the cluster.
427 Examples;;
428 * You need to migrate a service to a node which hasn't the highest priority
429 in the group at the moment, to tell the HA manager to not move this service
430 instantly back set the 'nofailback' option and the service will stay on
431 the current node.
432
433 * A service was fenced and it got recovered to another node. The admin
434 repaired the node and brought it up online again but does not want that the
435 recovered services move straight back to the repaired node as he wants to
436 first investigate the failure cause and check if it runs stable. He can use
437 the 'nofailback' option to achieve this.
438
439
440 Start Failure Policy
441 ---------------------
442
443 The start failure policy comes in effect if a service failed to start on a
444 node once ore more times. It can be used to configure how often a restart
445 should be triggered on the same node and how often a service should be
446 relocated so that it gets a try to be started on another node.
447 The aim of this policy is to circumvent temporary unavailability of shared
448 resources on a specific node. For example, if a shared storage isn't available
449 on a quorate node anymore, e.g. network problems, but still on other nodes,
450 the relocate policy allows then that the service gets started nonetheless.
451
452 There are two service start recover policy settings which can be configured
453 specific for each resource.
454
455 max_restart::
456
457 Maximum number of tries to restart an failed service on the actual
458 node. The default is set to one.
459
460 max_relocate::
461
462 Maximum number of tries to relocate the service to a different node.
463 A relocate only happens after the max_restart value is exceeded on the
464 actual node. The default is set to one.
465
466 NOTE: The relocate count state will only reset to zero when the
467 service had at least one successful start. That means if a service is
468 re-enabled without fixing the error only the restart policy gets
469 repeated.
470
471 Error Recovery
472 --------------
473
474 If after all tries the service state could not be recovered it gets
475 placed in an error state. In this state the service won't get touched
476 by the HA stack anymore. To recover from this state you should follow
477 these steps:
478
479 * bring the resource back into a safe and consistent state (e.g.,
480 killing its process)
481
482 * disable the ha resource to place it in an stopped state
483
484 * fix the error which led to this failures
485
486 * *after* you fixed all errors you may enable the service again
487
488
489 Service Operations
490 ------------------
491
492 This are how the basic user-initiated service operations (via
493 `ha-manager`) work.
494
495 enable::
496
497 The service will be started by the LRM if not already running.
498
499 disable::
500
501 The service will be stopped by the LRM if running.
502
503 migrate/relocate::
504
505 The service will be relocated (live) to another node.
506
507 remove::
508
509 The service will be removed from the HA managed resource list. Its
510 current state will not be touched.
511
512 start/stop::
513
514 `start` and `stop` commands can be issued to the resource specific tools
515 (like `qm` or `pct`), they will forward the request to the
516 `ha-manager` which then will execute the action and set the resulting
517 service state (enabled, disabled).
518
519
520 Service States
521 --------------
522
523 stopped::
524
525 Service is stopped (confirmed by LRM), if detected running it will get stopped
526 again.
527
528 request_stop::
529
530 Service should be stopped. Waiting for confirmation from LRM.
531
532 started::
533
534 Service is active an LRM should start it ASAP if not already running.
535 If the Service fails and is detected to be not running the LRM restarts it.
536
537 fence::
538
539 Wait for node fencing (service node is not inside quorate cluster
540 partition).
541 As soon as node gets fenced successfully the service will be recovered to
542 another node, if possible.
543
544 freeze::
545
546 Do not touch the service state. We use this state while we reboot a
547 node, or when we restart the LRM daemon.
548
549 migrate::
550
551 Migrate service (live) to other node.
552
553 error::
554
555 Service disabled because of LRM errors. Needs manual intervention.
556
557
558 ifdef::manvolnum[]
559 include::pve-copyright.adoc[]
560 endif::manvolnum[]
561