NAME
hastctl
—
Highly Available Storage control
utility
SYNOPSIS
hastctl |
create [-d ]
[-c config]
[-e extentsize]
[-k keepdirty]
[-m mediasize]
name ... |
hastctl |
role [-d ]
[-c config] ⟨init |
primary | secondary⟩ all |
name ... |
hastctl |
list [-d ]
[-c config]
[all | name ...] |
hastctl |
status [-d ]
[-c config]
[all | name ...] |
hastctl |
dump [-d ]
[-c config]
[all | name ...] |
DESCRIPTION
Thehastctl
utility is used to control the behaviour of
the hastd(8) daemon.
This utility should be used by HA software like
heartbeat
or ucarp
to setup
HAST resources role when changing from primary mode to secondary or vice
versa. Be aware that if a file system like UFS exists on HAST provider and
primary node dies, file system has to be checked for inconsistencies with
the fsck(8) utility after switching secondary node to primary role.
The first argument to hastctl
indicates an
action to be performed:
create
- Initialize local provider configured for the given resource. Additional
options include:
-e
extentsize- Size of an extent. Extent is a block which is used for synchronization. hastd(8) maintains a map of dirty extents and extent is the smallest region that can be marked as dirty. If any part of an extent is modified, entire extent will be synchronized when nodes connect. If extent size is too small, there will be too much disk activity related to dirty map updates, which will degrade performance of the given resource. If extent size is too large, synchronization, even in case of short outage, can take a long time increasing the risk of losing up-to-date node before synchronization process is completed. The default extent size is 2MB.
-k
keepdirty- Maximum number of dirty extents to keep dirty all the time. Most recently used extents are kept dirty to reduce number of metadata updates. The default number of most recently used extents which will be kept dirty is 64.
-m
mediasize- Size of the smaller provider used as backend storage on both nodes. This option can be omitted if node providers have the same size on both sides.
If size is suffixed with a k, M, G or T, it is taken as a kilobyte, megabyte, gigabyte or terabyte measurement respectively.
role
- Change role of the given resource. The role can be one of:
init
- Resource is turned off.
primary
- Local hastd(8) daemon will act as primary node for the given resource. System on which resource role is set to primary can use /dev/hast/<name> GEOM provider.
secondary
- Local hastd(8) daemon will act as secondary node for the given resource - it will wait for connection from the primary node and will handle I/O requests received from it. GEOM provider /dev/hast/<name> will not be created on secondary node.
list
- Present verbose status of the configured resources.
status
- Present terse (and more easy machine-parseable) status of the configured resources.
dump
- Dump metadata stored on local component for the configured resources.
In addition, every subcommand can be followed by the following options:
-c
config- Specify alternative location of the configuration file. The default location is /etc/hast.conf.
-d
- Print debugging information. This option can be specified multiple times to raise the verbosity level.
FILES
- /etc/hast.conf
- Configuration file for
hastctl
and hastd(8). - /var/run/hastctl
- Control socket used by
hastctl
to communicate with the hastd(8) daemon.
EXIT STATUS
Exit status is 0 on success, or one of the values described in sysexits(3) on failure.
EXAMPLES
Initialize HAST provider, create file system on it and mount it.
nodeB# hastctl create shared nodeB# hastd nodeB# hastctl role secondary shared nodeA# hastctl create shared nodeA# hastd nodeA# hastctl role primary shared nodeA# newfs -U /dev/hast/shared nodeA# mount -o noatime /dev/hast/shared /shared nodeA# application_start
Switch roles for the shared
HAST
resource.
nodeA# application_stop nodeA# umount -f /shared nodeA# hastctl role secondary shared nodeB# hastctl role primary shared nodeB# fsck -t ufs /dev/hast/shared nodeB# mount -o noatime /dev/hast/shared /shared nodeB# application_start
SEE ALSO
sysexits(3), geom(4), hast.conf(5), fsck(8), ggatec(8), ggatel(8), hastd(8), mount(8), newfs(8)
HISTORY
The hastctl
utility appeared in
FreeBSD 8.1.
AUTHORS
The hastctl
was developed by
Pawel Jakub Dawidek
<pjd@FreeBSD.org>
under sponsorship of the FreeBSD Foundation.