ha_cluster
An Ansible role for managing High Availability Clustering.
Limitations
-
Supported OS: RHEL 8.3+, Fedora 31+
-
Systems running RHEL are expected to be registered and have High-Availability repositories accessible.
-
The role replaces the configuration of HA Cluster on specified nodes. Any settings not specified in the role variables will be lost.
-
For now, the role is capable of configuring:
-
a basic corosync cluster
-
pacemaker cluster properties
-
stonith and resources
-
resource constraints
-
Role Variables
Defined in defaults/main.yml
ha_cluster_enable_repos
boolean, default: yes
RHEL and CentOS only, enable repositories contaning needed packages
ha_cluster_cluster_present
boolean, default: yes
If set to yes
, HA cluster will be configured on the hosts according to
other variables. If set to no
, all HA Cluster configuration will be
purged from target hosts.
ha_cluster_start_on_boot
boolean, default: yes
If set to yes
, cluster services will be configured to start on boot.
If set to no
, cluster services will be configured not to start on
boot.
ha_cluster_fence_agent_packages
list of fence agent packages to install, default: fence-agents-all, fence-virt
ha_cluster_extra_packages
list of additional packages to be installed, default: no packages
This variable can be used to install additional packages not installed automatically by the role, for example custom resource agents.
It is possible to specify fence agents here as well. However,
ha_cluster_fence_agent_packages
is preferred for that, so that its
default value is overriden.
ha_cluster_hacluster_password
string, no default - must be specified
Password of the hacluster
user. This user has full access to a
cluster. It is recommended to vault encrypt the value, see
https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/user_guide/vault.html for
details.
ha_cluster_corosync_key_src
path to corosync authkey file, default: null
Authentication and encryption key for Corosync communication. It is highly recommended to have a unique value for each cluster. The key should be 256 bytes of random data.
If value is provided, it is recommended to vault encrypt it. See https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/user_guide/vault.html for details.
If no key is specified, a key already present on the nodes will be used. If nodes don’t have the same key, a key from one node will be distributed to other nodes so that all nodes have the same key. If no node has a key, a new key will be generated and distributed to the nodes.
If this variable is set, ha_cluster_regenerate_keys
is ignored for
this key.
ha_cluster_pacemaker_key_src
path to pacemaker authkey file, default: null
Authentication and encryption key for Pacemaker communication. It is highly recommended to have a unique value for each cluster. The key should be 256 bytes of random data.
If value is provided, it is recommended to vault encrypt it. See https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/user_guide/vault.html for details.
If no key is specified, a key already present on the nodes will be used. If nodes don’t have the same key, a key from one node will be distributed to other nodes so that all nodes have the same key. If no node has a key, a new key will be generated and distributed to the nodes.
If this variable is set, ha_cluster_regenerate_keys
is ignored for
this key.
ha_cluster_fence_virt_key_src
path to fence-virt or fence-xvm pre-shared key file, default: null
Authentication key for fence-virt or fence-xvm fence agent.
If value is provided, it is recommended to vault encrypt it. See https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/user_guide/vault.html for details.
If no key is specified, a key already present on the nodes will be used. If nodes don’t have the same key, a key from one node will be distributed to other nodes so that all nodes have the same key. If no node has a key, a new key will be generated and distributed to the nodes.
If this variable is set, ha_cluster_regenerate_keys
is ignored for
this key.
If you let the role to generate new key, you are supposed to copy the key to your nodes' hypervisor to ensure that fencing works.
ha_cluster_pcsd_public_key_src
, ha_cluster_pcsd_private_key_src
path to pcsd TLS certificate and key, default: null
TLS certificate and private key for pcsd. If this is not specified, a certificate - key pair already present on the nodes will be used. If certificate - key pair is not present, a random new one will be generated.
If private key value is provided, it is recommended to vault encrypt it. See https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/user_guide/vault.html for details.
If these variables are set, ha_cluster_regenerate_keys
is ignored for
this certificate - key pair.
ha_cluster_regenerate_keys
boolean, default: no
If this is set to yes
, pre-shared keys and TLS certificates will be
regenerated. See also: ha_cluster_corosync_key_src
,
ha_cluster_pacemaker_key_src
, ha_cluster_fence_virt_key_src
,
ha_cluster_pcsd_public_key_src
, ha_cluster_pcsd_private_key_src
ha_cluster_pcs_permission_list
structure and default value:
ha_cluster_pcs_permission_list:
- type: group
name: haclient
allow_list:
- grant
- read
- write
This configures permissions to manage a cluster using pcsd. The items are as follows:
-
type
-user
orgroup
-
name
- user or group name -
allow_list
- Allowed actions for the specified user or group:-
read
- allows to view cluster status and settings -
write
- allows to modify cluster settings except permissions and ACLs -
grant
- allows to modify cluster permissions and ACLs -
full
- allows unrestricted access to a cluster including adding and removing nodes and access to keys and certificates
-
ha_cluster_cluster_name
string, default: my-cluster
Name of the cluster.
ha_cluster_cluster_properties
structure, default: no properties
ha_cluster_cluster_properties:
- attrs:
- name: property1_name
value: property1_value
- name: property2_name
value: property2_value
List of sets of cluster properties - pacemaker cluster-wide configuration. Currently, only one set is supported.
You may take a look at an example.
ha_cluster_resource_primitives
structure, default: no resources
ha_cluster_resource_primitives:
- id: resource-id
agent: resource-agent
instance_attrs:
- attrs:
- name: attribute1_name
value: attribute1_value
- name: attribute2_name
value: attribute2_value
meta_attrs:
- attrs:
- name: meta_attribute1_name
value: meta_attribute1_value
- name: meta_attribute2_name
value: meta_attribute2_value
operations:
- action: operation1-action
attrs:
- name: operation1_attribute1_name
value: operation1_attribute1_value
- name: operation1_attribute2_name
value: operation1_attribute2_value
- action: operation2-action
attrs:
- name: operation2_attribute1_name
value: operation2_attribute1_value
- name: operation2_attribute2_name
value: operation2_attribute2_value
This variable defines pacemaker resources (including stonith) configured by the role. The items are as follows:
-
id
(mandatory) - ID of a resource. -
agent
(mandatory) - Name of a resource or stonith agent, for exampleocf:pacemaker:Dummy
orstonith:fence_xvm
. It is mandatory to usestonith:
for stonith agents. For resource agents, it is possible to use a short name, such asDummy
instead ofocf:pacemaker:Dummy
. However, if several agents with the same short name are installed, the role will fail as it will be unable to decide which agent should be used. Therefore, it is recommended to use full names. -
instance_attrs
(optional) - List of sets of the resource’s instance attributes. Currently, only one set is supported. The exact names and values of attributes, as well as whether they are mandatory or not, depends on the resource or stonith agent. -
meta_attrs
(optional) - List of sets of the resource’s meta attributes. Currently, only one set is supported. -
operations
(optional) - List of the resource’s operations.-
action
(mandatory) - Operation action as defined by pacemaker and the resource or stonith agent. -
attrs
(mandatory) - Operation options, at least one option must be specified.
-
You may take a look at an example.
ha_cluster_resource_groups
structure, default: no resource groups
ha_cluster_resource_groups:
- id: group-id
resource_ids:
- resource1-id
- resource2-id
meta_attrs:
- attrs:
- name: group_meta_attribute1_name
value: group_meta_attribute1_value
- name: group_meta_attribute2_name
value: group_meta_attribute2_value
This variable defines resource groups. The items are as follows:
-
id
(mandatory) - ID of a group. -
resources
(mandatory) - List of the group’s resources. Each resource is referenced by its ID and the resources must be defined inha_cluster_resource_primitives
. At least one resource must be listed. -
meta_attrs
(optional) - List of sets of the group’s meta attributes. Currently, only one set is supported.
You may take a look at an example.
ha_cluster_resource_clones
structure, default: no resource clones
ha_cluster_resource_clones:
- resource_id: resource-to-be-cloned
promotable: yes
id: custom-clone-id
meta_attrs:
- attrs:
- name: clone_meta_attribute1_name
value: clone_meta_attribute1_value
- name: clone_meta_attribute2_name
value: clone_meta_attribute2_value
This variable defines resource clones. The items are as follows:
-
resource_id
(mandatory) - Resource to be cloned. The resource must be defined inha_cluster_resource_primitives
orha_cluster_resource_groups
. -
promotable
(optional) - Create a promotable clone, yes or no. -
id
(optional) - Custom ID of the clone. If no ID is specified, it will be generated. Warning will be emitted if this option is not supported by the cluster. -
meta_attrs
(optional) - List of sets of the clone’s meta attributes. Currently, only one set is supported.
You may take a look at an example.
ha_cluster_constraints_location
structure, default: no constraints
This variable defines resource location constraints. They tell the cluster which nodes a resource can run on. Resources can be specified by their ID or a pattern matching more resources. Nodes can be specified by their name or a rule.
Structure for constraints with resource ID and node name:
ha_cluster_constraints_location:
- resource:
id: resource-id
node: node-name
id: constraint-id
options:
- name: score
value: score-value
- name: option-name
value: option-value
-
resource
(mandatory) - Specification of a resource the constraint applies to. -
node
(mandatory) - Name of a node the resource should prefer or avoid. -
id
(optional) - ID of the constraint. If not specified, it will be autogenerated. -
options
(optional) - List of name-value dictionaries.-
score
- Score sets weight of the constraint.-
Positive value means the resource prefers running on the node.
-
Negative value means the resource should avoid running on the node.
-
-INFINITY
means the resource must avoid running on the node. -
If not specified,
score
defaults toINFINITY
.
-
-
You may take a look at an example.
Structure for constraints with resource pattern and node name:
ha_cluster_constraints_location:
- resource:
pattern: resource-pattern
node: node-name
id: constraint-id
options:
- name: score
value: score-value
- name: resource-discovery
value: resource-discovery-value
-
This is the same as the previous type, except the resource specification.
-
pattern
(mandatory) - POSIX extended regular expression resource IDs are matched against.
You may take a look at an example.
Structure for constraints with resource ID and a rule:
ha_cluster_constraints_location:
- resource:
id: resource-id
role: resource-role
rule: rule-string
id: constraint-id
options:
- name: score
value: score-value
- name: resource-discovery
value: resource-discovery-value
-
resource
(mandatory) - Specification of a resource the constraint applies to.-
id
(mandatory) - Resource ID. -
role
(optional) - You may limit the constraint to the specified resource role:Started
,Unpromoted
,Promoted
.
-
-
rule
(mandatory) - Constraint rule written using pcs syntax. Seepcs(8)
man page, sectionconstraint location
for details. -
Other items have the same meaning as above.
You may take a look at an example.
Structure for constraints with resource pattern and a rule:
ha_cluster_constraints_location:
- resource:
pattern: resource-pattern
role: resource-role
rule: rule-string
id: constraint-id
options:
- name: score
value: score-value
- name: resource-discovery
value: resource-discovery-value
-
This is the same as the previous type, except the resource specification.
-
pattern
(mandatory) - POSIX extended regular expression resource IDs are matched against.
You may take a look at an example.
ha_cluster_constraints_colocation
structure, default: no constraints
This variable defines resource colocation constraints. They tell the cluster that the location of one resource depends on the location of another one. There are two types of colocation constraints: a simple one for two resources, and a set constraint for multiple resources.
Structure for simple constraints:
ha_cluster_constraints_colocation:
- resource_follower:
id: resource-id1
role: resource-role1
resource_leader:
id: resource-id2
role: resource-role2
id: constraint-id
options:
- name: score
value: score-value
- name: option-name
value: option-value
-
resource_follower
(mandatory) - A resource that should be located relative toresource_leader
.-
id
(mandatory) - Resource ID. -
role
(optional) - You may limit the constraint to the specified resource role:Started
,Unpromoted
,Promoted
.
-
-
resource_leader
(mandatory) - The cluster will decide where to put this resource first and then decide where to putresource_follower
.-
id
(mandatory) - Resource ID. -
role
(optional) - You may limit the constraint to the specified resource role:Started
,Unpromoted
,Promoted
.
-
-
id
(optional) - ID of the constraint. If not specified, it will be autogenerated. -
options
(optional) - List of name-value dictionaries.-
score
(optional) - Score sets weight of the constraint.-
Positive values indicate the resources should run on the same node.
-
Negative values indicate the resources should run on different nodes.
-
Values of
+INFINITY
and-INFINITY
change "should" to "must". -
If not specified,
score
defaults toINFINITY
.
-
-
You may take a look at an example.
Structure for set constraints:
ha_cluster_constraints_colocation:
- resource_sets:
- resource_ids:
- resource-id1
- resource-id2
options:
- name: option-name
value: option-value
id: constraint-id
options:
- name: score
value: score-value
- name: option-name
value: option-value
-
resource_sets
(mandatory) - List of resource sets.-
resource_ids
(mandatory) - List of resources in a set. -
options
(optional) - List of name-value dictionaries fine-tuning how resources in the sets are treated by the constraint.
-
-
id
(optional) - Same as above. -
options
(optional) - Same as above.
You may take a look at an example.
ha_cluster_constraints_order
structure, default: no constraints
This variable defines resource order constraints. They tell the cluster the order in which certain resource actions should occur. There are two types of order constraints: a simple one for two resources, and a set constraint for multiple resources.
Structure for simple constraints:
ha_cluster_constraints_order:
- resource_first:
id: resource-id1
action: resource-action1
resource_then:
id: resource-id2
action: resource-action2
id: constraint-id
options:
- name: score
value: score-value
- name: option-name
value: option-value
-
resource_first
(mandatory) - Resource that theresource_then
depends on.-
id
(mandatory) - Resource ID. -
action
(optional) - The action that the resource must complete before an action can be initiated for theresource_then
. Allowed values:start
,stop
,promote
,demote
.
-
-
resource_then
(mandatory) - The dependent resource.-
id
(mandatory) - Resource ID. -
action
(optional) - The action that the resource can execute only after the action on theresource_first
has completed. Allowed values:start
,stop
,promote
,demote
.
-
-
id
(optional) - ID of the constraint. If not specified, it will be autogenerated. -
options
(optional) - List of name-value dictionaries.
You may take a look at an example.
Structure for set constraints:
ha_cluster_constraints_order:
- resource_sets:
- resource_ids:
- resource-id1
- resource-id2
options:
- name: option-name
value: option-value
id: constraint-id
options:
- name: score
value: score-value
- name: option-name
value: option-value
-
resource_sets
(mandatory) - List of resource sets.-
resource_ids
(mandatory) - List of resources in a set. -
options
(optional) - List of name-value dictionaries fine-tuning how resources in the sets are treated by the constraint.
-
-
id
(optional) - Same as above. -
options
(optional) - Same as above.
You may take a look at an example.
ha_cluster_constraints_ticket
structure, default: no constraints
This variable defines resource ticket constraints. They let you specify the resources depending on a certain ticket. There are two types of ticket constraints: a simple one for two resources, and a set constraint for multiple resources.
Structure for simple constraints:
ha_cluster_constraints_ticket:
- resource:
id: resource-id
role: resource-role
ticket: ticket-name
id: constraint-id
options:
- name: loss-policy
value: loss-policy-value
- name: option-name
value: option-value
-
resource
(mandatory) - Specification of a resource the constraint applies to.-
id
(mandatory) - Resource ID. -
role
(optional) - You may limit the constraint to the specified resource role:Started
,Unpromoted
,Promoted
.
-
-
ticket
(mandatory) - Name of a ticket the resource depends on. -
id
(optional) - ID of the constraint. If not specified, it will be autogenerated. -
options
(optional) - List of name-value dictionaries.-
loss-policy
(optional) - Action that should happen to the resource if the ticket is revoked.
-
You may take a look at an example.
Structure for set constraints:
ha_cluster_constraints_ticket:
- resource_sets:
- resource_ids:
- resource-id1
- resource-id2
options:
- name: option-name
value: option-value
ticket: ticket-name
id: constraint-id
options:
- name: option-name
value: option-value
-
resource_sets
(mandatory) - List of resource sets.-
resource_ids
(mandatory) - List of resources in a set. -
options
(optional) - List of name-value dictionaries fine-tuning how resources in the sets are treated by the constraint.
-
-
ticket
(mandatory) - Same as above. -
id
(optional) - Same as above. -
options
(optional) - Same as above.
You may take a look at an example.
Inventory
Nodes' names and addresses can be configured in inventory. This is optional. If no names or addresses are configured, play’s targets will be used.
Example inventory with targets node1
and node2
:
all:
hosts:
node1:
ha_cluster:
node_name: node-A
pcs_address: node1-address
corosync_addresses:
- 192.168.1.11
- 192.168.2.11
node2:
ha_cluster:
node_name: node-B
pcs_address: node2-address:2224
corosync_addresses:
- 192.168.1.12
- 192.168.2.12
-
node_name
- the name of a node in a cluster -
pcs_address
- an address used by pcs to communicate with the node, it can be a name, FQDN or an IP address and it can contain port -
corosync_addresses
- list of addresses used by Corosync, all nodes must have the same number of addresses and the order of the addresses matters
Example Playbooks
Creating a cluster running no resources
- hosts: node1 node2
vars:
ha_cluster_cluster_name: my-new-cluster
ha_cluster_hacluster_password: password
roles:
- redhat.rhel_system_roles.ha_cluster
Configuring cluster properties
- hosts: node1 node2
vars:
ha_cluster_cluster_name: my-new-cluster
ha_cluster_hacluster_password: password
ha_cluster_cluster_properties:
- attrs:
- name: stonith-enabled
value: 'true'
- name: no-quorum-policy
value: stop
roles:
- redhat.rhel_system_roles.ha_cluster
Creating a cluster with fencing and several resources
- hosts: node1 node2
vars:
ha_cluster_cluster_name: my-new-cluster
ha_cluster_hacluster_password: password
ha_cluster_resource_primitives:
- id: xvm-fencing
agent: 'stonith:fence_xvm'
instance_attrs:
- attrs:
- name: pcmk_host_list
value: node1 node2
- id: simple-resource
agent: 'ocf:pacemaker:Dummy'
- id: resource-with-options
agent: 'ocf:pacemaker:Dummy'
instance_attrs:
- attrs:
- name: fake
value: fake-value
- name: passwd
value: passwd-value
meta_attrs:
- attrs:
- name: target-role
value: Started
- name: is-managed
value: 'true'
operations:
- action: start
attrs:
- name: timeout
value: '30s'
- action: monitor
attrs:
- name: timeout
value: '5'
- name: interval
value: '1min'
- id: dummy-1
agent: 'ocf:pacemaker:Dummy'
- id: dummy-2
agent: 'ocf:pacemaker:Dummy'
- id: dummy-3
agent: 'ocf:pacemaker:Dummy'
- id: simple-clone
agent: 'ocf:pacemaker:Dummy'
- id: clone-with-options
agent: 'ocf:pacemaker:Dummy'
ha_cluster_resource_groups:
- id: simple-group
resource_ids:
- dummy-1
- dummy-2
meta_attrs:
- attrs:
- name: target-role
value: Started
- name: is-managed
value: 'true'
- id: cloned-group
resource_ids:
- dummy-3
ha_cluster_resource_clones:
- resource_id: simple-clone
- resource_id: clone-with-options
promotable: yes
id: custom-clone-id
meta_attrs:
- attrs:
- name: clone-max
value: '2'
- name: clone-node-max
value: '1'
- resource_id: cloned-group
promotable: yes
roles:
- redhat.rhel_system_roles.ha_cluster
Creating a cluster with resource constraints
- hosts: node1 node2
vars:
ha_cluster_cluster_name: my-new-cluster
ha_cluster_hacluster_password: password
# In order to use constraints, we need resources the constraints will apply
# to.
ha_cluster_resource_primitives:
- id: xvm-fencing
agent: 'stonith:fence_xvm'
instance_attrs:
- attrs:
- name: pcmk_host_list
value: node1 node2
- id: dummy-1
agent: 'ocf:pacemaker:Dummy'
- id: dummy-2
agent: 'ocf:pacemaker:Dummy'
- id: dummy-3
agent: 'ocf:pacemaker:Dummy'
- id: dummy-4
agent: 'ocf:pacemaker:Dummy'
- id: dummy-5
agent: 'ocf:pacemaker:Dummy'
- id: dummy-6
agent: 'ocf:pacemaker:Dummy'
# location constraints
ha_cluster_constraints_location:
# resource ID and node name
- resource:
id: dummy-1
node: node1
options:
- name: score
value: 20
# resource pattern and node name
- resource:
pattern: dummy-\d+
node: node1
options:
- name: score
value: 10
# resource ID and rule
- resource:
id: dummy-2
rule: '#uname eq node2 and date in_range 2022-01-01 to 2022-02-28'
# resource pattern and rule
- resource:
pattern: dummy-\d+
rule: node-type eq weekend and date-spec weekdays=6-7
# colocation constraints
ha_cluster_constraints_colocation:
# simple constraint
- resource_leader:
id: dummy-3
resource_follower:
id: dummy-4
options:
- name: score
value: -5
# set constraint
- resource_sets:
- resource_ids:
- dummy-1
- dummy-2
- resource_ids:
- dummy-5
- dummy-6
options:
- name: sequential
value: "false"
options:
- name: score
value: 20
# order constraints
ha_cluster_constraints_order:
# simple constraint
- resource_first:
id: dummy-1
resource_then:
id: dummy-6
options:
- name: symmetrical
value: "false"
# set constraint
- resource_sets:
- resource_ids:
- dummy-1
- dummy-2
options:
- name: require-all
value: "false"
- name: sequential
value: "false"
- resource_ids:
- dummy-3
- resource_ids:
- dummy-4
- dummy-5
options:
- name: sequential
value: "false"
# ticket constraints
ha_cluster_constraints_ticket:
# simple constraint
- resource:
id: dummy-1
ticket: ticket1
options:
- name: loss-policy
value: stop
# set constraint
- resource_sets:
- resource_ids:
- dummy-3
- dummy-4
- dummy-5
ticket: ticket2
options:
- name: loss-policy
value: fence
roles:
- redhat.rhel_system_roles.ha_cluster
Purging all cluster configuration
- hosts: node1 node2
vars:
ha_cluster_cluster_present: no
roles:
- redhat.rhel_system_roles.ha_cluster
License
MIT
Author Information
Tomas Jelinek