[Pacemaker] Advisory ordering and "Cannot migrate"

David Vossel dvossel at redhat.com
Tue May 29 18:37:42 EDT 2012



----- Original Message -----
> From: "Vladislav Bogdanov" <bubble at hoster-ok.com>
> To: pacemaker at oss.clusterlabs.org
> Sent: Tuesday, May 29, 2012 3:48:12 PM
> Subject: Re: [Pacemaker] Advisory ordering and "Cannot migrate"
> 
> 29.05.2012 18:51, David Vossel wrote:
> > ----- Original Message -----
> >> From: "Vladislav Bogdanov" <bubble at hoster-ok.com>
> >> To: "The Pacemaker cluster resource manager"
> >> <pacemaker at oss.clusterlabs.org>
> >> Sent: Tuesday, May 29, 2012 7:27:12 AM
> >> Subject: [Pacemaker] Advisory ordering and "Cannot migrate"
> >>
> >> Hi Andrew, David, all,
> >>
> >> It seems that advisory ordering is honored when pengine wants to
> >> move
> >> two advisory-ordered resources in one transition, and one of
> >> resources
> >> (then) is migrateable.
> >>
> >> I have advisory ordering configured for two resources, "mgs" and
> >> "drbd-testfs-stacked":
> >>
> >> order drbd-testfs-stacked-after-mgs 0: mgs:start
> >> drbd-testfs-stacked:start
> >>
> >> "mgs" is ordinary resource, "drbd-testfs-stacked" is migrateable.
> >>
> >> If both that resources are located on one node, and I request
> >> shutdown
> >> of that node, I see:
> >> pengine[2069]:   notice: check_stack_element: Cannot migrate
> >> drbd-testfs-stacked due to dependency on mgs (order)
> >>
> >> From what I understand, symmetrical advisory ordering should
> >> affect
> >> resources which are about to be both started or both stopped in
> >> one
> >> transition. That's fine.
> >>
> >> But, should it be honored when one resource is to be moved with
> >> start/stop while another is to be migrated?
> > 
> > I would expect the constraint to be honored.  What else could we
> > possibly do that would make sense?
> > 
> > If you have the following symmetrical order constraint,
> > 
> > start A then start B
> > stop B then stop A
> > 
> > , where B can be migrated but A can not. I would expect B to be
> > stopped before A is allowed to stop regardless if B has be ability
> > to be
> > migrated or not. If both A and B were to be moved to a different
> > node,
> > and B was migrated instead of stop/started, that would invalidate
> > both
> > sides of the order constraint.
> 
> That is absolutely valid, but for _mandatory_ ordering, isn't it?
> 
> For _advisory_ one that would be
> If you're about to start A and B at the same time, then start A
> first.
> Otherwise skip this constraint. Do the same in the opposite direction
> for 'stop'.

Yeah I missed the advisory part of this.

I bet this suffers from the same implementation complications that http://bugs.clusterlabs.org/show_bug.cgi?id=5055 has.  This will likely resolve itself once 5055 gets fixed... or we might be able to make a temporary targeted fix for this before then.

The migration operations don't actually get calculated by the policy engine.  All moves are calculated as "stop/start" internally and then at the end of all the calculations we attempt to detect when we can migrate based on the final graph.

-- Vossel

> At the other hand, migration is a very special operation I'd say. It
> is
> not a stop on one node and start on another one, but a magical move
> of
> resource. It was running on one node and oops, it runs on another. It
> does neither stop nor start, does not allocate or free resources. It
> just appears in a different place.
> Most common example of resource migration is live VM migration.
> And last part of migration (actual switch to another node) is done
> almost atomically nowadays. VM just appears on a different node.
> 
> Another example of a "real life" migration (not in clusters) would be
> remote desktop, where you start application on a remote server being
> at
> work, then you come home, connect to that desktop and see your
> application. You do not stop and do not start it. You just see that
> your
> window is "migrated" to another place.
> 
> For pacemaker this could be illustrated with some resource agent
> which
> manages some external entity which exists "somewhere". And "resource
> is
> running on node A" just means that that entity is managed from node
> A.
> It does not run there, it is just managed from there. In my case that
> entity is a pacemaker ticket. It exists everywhere in the cluster,
> but
> is granted or revoked by a script (resource agent) running on one
> node.
> I do not want that ticket to be ever touched without my explicit
> command. I just allow to migrate the management point.
> 
> So, from my PoV, term "migration" does not assume any start or stop
> operations. And advisory ordering (which applies to simultaneous
> start
> or stop of two different resources) should not be honored because
> only
> one resource is actually starting/stopping. Do I miss something here?
>
> Best,
> Vladislav
> 
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