[Pacemaker] Shooting and diagnosis of stonith plugins

Dejan Muhamedagic dejanmm at fastmail.fm
Thu Oct 16 05:26:51 EDT 2008


Hi,

On Thu, Oct 16, 2008 at 06:00:16PM +0900, Takenaka Kazuhiro wrote:
> Hi Dejan.
>
>>> If 'ibmrsa-telnet' goes right way, it means any stonith plugin
>>> that can't shoot a host machine with a power fault must not
>>> be used alone. They must use with some other plugin which checks
>>> if its target machines is running or not.
>>
>> This is an inherent problem of the lights-out devices such as IBM
>> RSA or HP iLO, i.e. that they share power source with the node
>> they manage. Power failure renders this kind of stonith device
>> useless. Unfortunately, there's nothing one can do about it.
>
> But something must be done.

If one had only means :) The only way to deal with this would be
to fall back to meatware.

> In this case, what a plugin can do is one of the following:
>
>   A) Check the target by another way.
>   B) Retry forever.
>   C) Return failure to caller.
>
> A is what 'ssh' does.
>   And you said 'ssh' isn't a production.
>   Does it mean any other real stonith plugin must not do A?
>
> B is remarked in http://www.linux-ha.org/STONITH.
>   it says like this.
>
>     3. When given a RESET or OFF command it must not return
>        control to its caller until the node is no longer running.

stonithd retries forever.

>   Any plugin follows B keeps running until stonithd kills it
>   on an error.
>
> C is what 'ibmrsa-telnet' does.
>   Any plugin follows C returns failure on an error immediatly.
>   But I don't know any document which encourages C.

That's all fine, but remember that the said plugin can't reach
the stonith device. Hence, all it can do is report an error.

Sorry, but I really can't see where's the issue here.

Thanks,

Dejan

> Which is a right choice for real stonith plugins?
>
> Dejan Muhamedagic wrote:
>> Hi Takenaka-san,
>>
>> On Wed, Oct 15, 2008 at 02:09:17PM +0900, Takenaka Kazuhiro wrote:
>>> Hi Dejan.
>>>
>>>> Hi Takenaka-san,
>>>>
>>>> On Fri, Oct 10, 2008 at 03:30:27PM +0900, Takenaka Kazuhiro wrote:
>>>>> Hi all.
>>>>>
>>>>> So far as I know, every stonith plugin is expected to diagnose if
>>>>> its target is fenced out from the other nodes before it returns
>>>>> successful status on 'reset' or 'off'.
>>>> It depends on the stonith device. Sometimes it is enough just to
>>>> send the reset command and let the device deal with it. Sometimes
>>>> it is necessary to check the current power state. However, it
>>>> looks like this is not what you want to talk about.
>>> You said "The point of a stonith operation is to ensure that a host
>>> is down or rebooted." in the following thread.
>>>
>>> http://lists.community.tummy.com/pipermail/linux-ha/2008-August/034323.html
>>>
>>> So I have thought any stonith plugin should make sure if its target
>>> is down or rebooted before it returns. However, this isn't a main
>>> issue just as you understood.
>>>
>>>>> However, I think this diagnosis is somewhat excess burden for an
>>>>> indivdual plugin.
>>>> Actually, the stonith plugins are not required to know the state
>>> ... snip ...
>>>>>   <primitive type="external/ssh class="stonith" task="shoot" ...>
>>>>>
>>>>> I hope some kind of agreement will be made about this problem.
>>> Please let me put aside your comments abobe for now.
>>> I have an question about your comments below and I'd like
>>> you to answer it first.
>>>
>>>> This new concept does make sense with the ssh plugin. However,
>>>> all other plugins function in a significantly different way and I
>>>> don't see how this can apply to them.
>>>>
>>>> Thanks,
>>>>
>>>> Dejan
>>> Yes. 'ssh' is so different from 'ibmrsa-telnet'.
>>>
>>> 'ssh' shooots a target via a NIC.
>>> 'ibmrsa-telnet' shooots a target via a RSA.
>>
>> Actually, I'd rather leave ssh out of this discussion. It was
>> never meant for production, just for testing.
>>
>>> So, these devices must lost their power when power-faults
>>> occur on their host machines
>>>
>>> In this case, neither 'ssh' nor 'ibmrsa-telnet' can deal with
>>> their target devices. They gets a explicit connection failure
>>> in this situation.
>>>
>>> But what actually follows is so different.
>>>
>>> In the case where 'ssh' is used as a stonith plugin, it returns a
>>> successful status and the suspended resources are resumed on the
>>> other nodes.
>>>
>>> On the other hand, In the case where 'ibmrsa-telnet' is used,
>>> it returns an error status and the suspended resources are not
>>> resumed anywhere. (I think 'ibmrsa-telnet' isn't only one plugin
>>> that works in this way. 'ibmrsa' and 'ipmi' also should work in
>>> the same way.)
>>>
>>> 'ssh' and 'ibmrsa-telnet' measure success and failure of
>>> shooting targets in different way and it makes difference
>>> of these results.
>>>
>>> 'ssh' never checks whether it could deal with its target device.
>>> Even if the deal failes explicitly, 'ssh' ignores it.
>>> Instead, 'ssh' always returns its status according to a subsequent
>>> ping check.
>>>
>>> On the other hand, 'ibmrsa-telnet' returns its status according
>>> to if it could deal with the device. Whenever 'ibmrsa-telnet'
>>> gets any explicit failure with dealing, it returns an error
>>> status. 'ibmrsa-telnet' never checks target's status in any way.
>>>
>>> Which is a correct implementation as a stonith plugin?
>>
>> Both. Note that ssh relies on the network, hence using ping to
>> verify the host status is fine. However, for a "real" stonith
>> device such as RSA doing that would be wrong.
>>
>>> In the other words, When a explicit connection error occurs
>>> during a stonith action, How should stonith plugins do?
>>>
>>> I have believed 'ssh' goes right way. Because I have thought
>>> a stonith plugin which failes a failover on a power fault
>>> is out of problem.
>>
>> If the stonith device cannot be reached then we don't know if the
>> host is running or not. Hence we have to assume the worst case.
>>
>>> If 'ibmrsa-telnet' goes right way, it means any stonith plugin
>>> that can't shoot a host machine with a power fault must not
>>> be used alone. They must use with some other plugin which checks
>>> if its target machines is running or not.
>>
>> This is an inherent problem of the lights-out devices such as IBM
>> RSA or HP iLO, i.e. that they share power source with the node
>> they manage. Power failure renders this kind of stonith device
>> useless. Unfortunately, there's nothing one can do about it.
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Dejan
>>
>>> Dejan Muhamedagic wrote:
>>>> Hi Takenaka-san,
>>>>
>>>> On Fri, Oct 10, 2008 at 03:30:27PM +0900, Takenaka Kazuhiro wrote:
>>>>> Hi all.
>>>>>
>>>>> So far as I know, every stonith plugin is expected to diagnose if
>>>>> its target is fenced out from the other nodes before it returns
>>>>> successful status on 'reset' or 'off'.
>>>> It depends on the stonith device. Sometimes it is enough just to
>>>> send the reset command and let the device deal with it. Sometimes
>>>> it is necessary to check the current power state. However, it
>>>> looks like this is not what you want to talk about.
>>>>
>>>>> However, I think this diagnosis is somewhat excess burden for an
>>>>> indivdual plugin.
>>>> Actually, the stonith plugins are not required to know the state
>>>> of the host. They just make sure that the host is in a certain
>>>> state or that it is reset. This normally doesn't involve the host
>>>> itself, just the device which can manage it. Put in other words:
>>>> If you pull the power plug or press the reset button there's no
>>>> need to try ping or ssh or whatever else to verify that the host
>>>> really went down.
>>>>
>>>>> Because authors of plugins know how to deal with stonith devices
>>>>> for which they make plugins, but they can't always expect structure
>>>>> of clusters on which their plugins will work.
>>>>>
>>>>> When a clusters administrator try to use some plugin but the diagnosis
>>>>> of the plugin doesn't match the cluster, the administrator can't help
>>>>> but directly alter the plugin.
>>>>>
>>>>> This gets down plugins' adaptiveness and can't be favorable.
>>>>> One idea to avoid this problem is making schemes or conventions
>>>>> which enable plugins to delegate the diagnosis to other plugins.
>>>>>
>>>>> Attached two plugins are a sample of this idea. They work cooperatively
>>>>> by the attached cib.xml.
>>>> It is an interesting idea. It seems like it would require that
>>>> all existing stonith plugins return false so that the next, the
>>>> "test status" plugin can report the state of the host.
>>>>
>>>>> 'sshAltered' only shoots its targets and 'pingAllAddr' only diagnoses
>>>>> activity of its targets.
>>>>>
>>>>> The followings are little more detailed explanations:
>>>>>
>>>>>   When some accidents made necessary to shoot a corrupted node
>>>>>   by another node, the shooter node uses 'sshAltered' firstly to
>>>>>   shoot the target node.
>>>>>
>>>>>   'sshAltered' shoots its targets but never exits with a successful
>>>>>   status if the value of attribute 'shoot_only' is "yes" in the same
>>>>>   way as the attached cib.xml. So, next plugin will be used always
>>>>>   if it is defined.
>>>>>
>>>>>   'pingAllAddr' confirms activity of the IP addresses of its targets
>>>>>   specified in cib.xml. If any of the IP addresses don't respond,
>>>>>   'pingAllAddr' exits with a successful status, otherwise it
>>>>>   exits with an error status.
>>>>>
>>>>> After once 'external/ssh' is rewritten into 'sshAltered', there
>>>>> is no need to rewrite it again to use other conditions to
>>>>> confirm targets' death.
>>>>>
>>>>> For example, if a cluster uses iSCSI shared storages and
>>>>> a failover action on this cluster must wait for the iSCSI target
>>>>> devices to sweep connections to the corrupted node, it can do by
>>>>> the other type plugins instead of 'pingAllAddr'. Their task is to
>>>>> ask iSCSI target devices about completion of connection sweeping.
>>>>>
>>>>> Vice-versa is also true. Any plugin which follows the explained
>>>>> convention can work together with 'pingAllAddr'.
>>>>>
>>>>> It can also be avalable by another tag-attibute like this:
>>>>>
>>>>>   <primitive type="external/ssh class="stonith" task="shoot" ...>
>>>>>
>>>>> I hope some kind of agreement will be made about this problem.
>>>> This new concept does make sense with the ssh plugin. However,
>>>> all other plugins function in a significantly different way and I
>>>> don't see how this can apply to them.
>>>>
>>>> Thanks,
>>>>
>>>> Dejan
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> Best regard.
>>>>> -- 
>>>>> Takenaka Kazuhiro <takenaka.kazuhiro at oss.ntt.co.jp>
>>>
>>>
>>>
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>>
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>
> -- 
> ?????? ??????
> Takenaka Kazuhiro <takenaka.kazuhiro at oss.ntt.co.jp>
> NTT OSS????????? ??????????????????
> TEL 03-5860-5135
>
>
>
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