[ClusterLabs] pacemaker apache and umask on CentOS 7

fatcharly at gmx.de fatcharly at gmx.de
Fri Apr 22 13:48:41 UTC 2016



> Gesendet: Mittwoch, 20. April 2016 um 19:35 Uhr
> Von: "Ken Gaillot" <kgaillot at redhat.com>
> An: users at clusterlabs.org
> Betreff: Re: [ClusterLabs] pacemaker apache and umask on CentOS 7
>
> On 04/20/2016 12:20 PM, Klaus Wenninger wrote:
> > On 04/20/2016 05:35 PM, fatcharly at gmx.de wrote:
> >>
> >>> Gesendet: Mittwoch, 20. April 2016 um 16:31 Uhr
> >>> Von: "Klaus Wenninger" <kwenning at redhat.com>
> >>> An: users at clusterlabs.org
> >>> Betreff: Re: [ClusterLabs] pacemaker apache and umask on CentOS 7
> >>>
> >>> On 04/20/2016 04:11 PM, fatcharly at gmx.de wrote:
> >>>> Hi,
> >>>>
> >>>> I´m running a 2-node apache webcluster on a fully patched CentOS 7 (pacemaker-1.1.13-10.el7_2.2.x86_64 pcs-0.9.143-15.el7.x86_64).
> >>>> Some files which are generated by the apache are created with a umask 137 but I need this files created with a umask of 117.
> >>>> To change this I first tried to add a umask 117 to /etc/sysconfig/httpd & rebooted the system. This had no effekt.
> >>>> So I found out (after some research) that this is not working under CentOS 7 and that this had to be changed via systemd.
> >>>> So I created a directory "/etc/systemd/system/httpd.service.d" and put there a "umask.conf"-File with this content: 
> >>>> [Service]
> >>>> UMask=0117
> >>>>
> >>>> Again I rebooted the system but no effekt.
> >>>> Is the pacemaker really starting the apache over the systemd ? And how can I solve the problem ?
> >>> Didn't check with CentOS7 but on RHEL7 there is a
> >>> /usr/lib/ocf/resource.d/heartbeat/apache.
> >>> So it depends on how you defined the resource starting apache if systemd
> >>> is used or if it being done by the ocf-ra.
> >> MY configuration is:
> >> Resource: apache (class=ocf provider=heartbeat type=apache)
> >>   Attributes: configfile=/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf statusurl=http://127.0.0.1:8089/server-status
> >>   Operations: start interval=0s timeout=40s (apache-start-timeout-40s)
> >>               stop interval=0s timeout=60s (apache-stop-timeout-60s)
> >>               monitor interval=1min (apache-monitor-interval-1min)
> >>
> >> So I quess it is ocf. But what will be the right way to do it ? I lack a bit of understandig about this /usr/lib/ocf/resource.d/heartbeat/apache file.  
> >>
> > There are the ocf-Resource-Agents (if there is none you can always
> > create one for your service) which usually
> > give you a little bit more control of the service from the cib. (You can
> > set a couple of variables like in this example
> > the pointer to the config-file)
> > And of course you can always create resources referring the native
> > services of your distro (systemd-units in
> > this case).
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>>> Any suggestions are welcome
> 
> If you add envfiles="/etc/sysconfig/httpd" to your apache resource, it
> should work.

worked like a charm. Thanks to everybody for your support.

Kind regards

fatcharly

> 
> >>>> Kind regards
> >>>>
> >>>> fatcharly
> 
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