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分类: LINUX

2005-07-04 14:59:19

之前没搞过Heartbeat的双机,今天在VMWare上试了一下,效果还可以。

一:安装程序:

先安装以下程序:

ipvsadm-1.21-1.rh.el.1.i386.rpm
ipvsadm-debuginfo-1.21-1.rh.el.1.i386.rpm
libnet-1.1.0-1.rh.el.1.i386.rpm
libnet-debuginfo-1.1.0-1.rh.el.1.i386.rpm
perl-Authen-SASL-2.03-1.rh.el.um.1.noarch.rpm
perl-Convert-ASN1-0.16-2.rh.el.um.1.noarch.rpm
perl-Digest-HMAC-1.01-11.1.noarch.rpm
perl-Digest-SHA1-2.01-15.1.i386.rpm
perl-IO-Socket-SSL-0.92-1.rh.el.um.1.noarch.rpm
perl-ldap-0.2701-1.rh.el.um.1.noarch.rpm
perl-Mail-IMAPClient-2.2.7-1.rh.el.um.1.noarch.rpm
perl-Net-SSLeay-1.23-1.rh.el.um.1.i386.rpm
perl-Net-SSLeay-debuginfo-1.23-1.rh.el.um.1.i386.rpm
perl-Parse-RecDescent-1.80-1.rh.el.um.1.noarch.rpm
perl-XML-NamespaceSupport-1.08-1.rh.el.um.1.noarch.rpm
77,255 perl-XML-SAX-0.12-1.rh.el.um.1.noarch.rpm

然后再安装以下程序:

heartbeat-ldirectord-1.2.3-2.rh.el.3.0.i386.rpm

heartbeat-1.2.3-2.rh.el.3.0.i386.rpm

heartbeat-pils-1.2.3-2.rh.el.3.0.i386.rpm

heartbeat-stonith-1.2.3-2.rh.el.3.0.i386.rpm

二:配置文件:

                                                                                          /etc/hosts

127.0.0.1       localhost.localdomain localhost
192.168.247.160 ha1.chess.gz ha1
192.168.247.161 ha2.chess.gz ha2
192.168.247.180 ha.chess.gz ha

                                                                                            /etc/ha.d/authkeys

#
#       Authentication file.  Must be mode 600
#
#
#       Must have exactly one auth directive at the front.
#       auth    send authentication using this method-id
#
#       Then, list the method and key that go with that method-id
#
#       Available methods: crc sha1, md5.  Crc doesn't need/want a key.
#
#       You normally only have one authentication method-id listed in this file
#
#       Put more than one to make a smooth transition when changing auth
#       methods and/or keys.
#
#
#       sha1 is believed to be the "best", md5 next best.
#
#       crc adds no security, except from packet corruption.
#               Use only on physically secure networks.
#
auth 1
1 crc
#2 sha1 HI!
#3 md5 Hello!

                                                                                            /etc/ha.d/ha.cf

#
#       There are lots of options in this file.  All you have to have is a set
#       of nodes listed {"node ...} one of {serial, bcast, mcast, or ucast},
#       and a value for "auto_failback".
#
#       ATTENTION: As the configuration file is read line by line,
#                  THE ORDER OF DIRECTIVE MATTERS!
#
#       In particular, make sure that the udpport, serial baud rate
#       etc. are set before the heartbeat media are defined!
#       debug and log file directives go into effect when they
#       are encountered.
#
#       All will be fine if you keep them ordered as in this example.
#
#
#       Note on logging:
#       If any of debugfile, logfile and logfacility are defined then they
#       will be used. If debugfile and/or logfile are not defined and
#       logfacility is defined then the respective logging and debug
#       messages will be loged to syslog. If logfacility is not defined
#       then debugfile and logfile will be used to log messges. If
#       logfacility is not defined and debugfile and/or logfile are not
#       defined then defaults will be used for debugfile and logfile as
#       required and messages will be sent there.
#
#       File to write debug messages to
debugfile /var/log/ha-debug
#
#
#       File to write other messages to
#
logfile /var/log/ha-log
#
#
#       Facility to use for syslog()/logger
#
logfacility     local0
#
#
#       A note on specifying "how long" times below...
#
#       The default time unit is seconds
#               10 means ten seconds
#
#       You can also specify them in milliseconds
#               1500ms means 1.5 seconds
#
#
#       keepalive: how long between heartbeats?
#
keepalive 2
#
#       deadtime: how long-to-declare-host-dead?
#
#               If you set this too low you will get the problematic
#               split-brain (or cluster partition) problem.
#               See the FAQ for how to use warntime to tune deadtime.
#
deadtime 10
#
#       warntime: how long before issuing "late heartbeat" warning?
#       See the FAQ for how to use warntime to tune deadtime.
#
warntime 10
#
#
#       Very first dead time (initdead)
#
#       On some machines/OSes, etc. the network takes a while to come up
#       and start working right after you've been rebooted.  As a result
#       we have a separate dead time for when things first come up.
#       It should be at least twice the normal dead time.
#
initdead 120
#
#
#       What UDP port to use for bcast/ucast communication?
#
udpport 694
#
#       Baud rate for serial ports...
#
#baud   19200
#      
#       serial  serialportname ...
#serial /dev/ttyS0      # Linux
#serial /dev/cuaa0      # FreeBSD
#serial /dev/cua/a      # Solaris
#
#
#       What interfaces to broadcast heartbeats over?
#
#bcast  eth0            # Linux
#bcast  eth1 eth2       # Linux
#bcast  le0             # Solaris
#bcast  le1 le2         # Solaris
bcast eth1
#
#       Set up a multicast heartbeat medium
#       mcast [dev] [mcast group] [port] [ttl] [loop]
#
#       [dev]           device to send/rcv heartbeats on
#       [mcast group]   multicast group to join (class D multicast address
#                       224.0.0.0 - 239.255.255.255)
#       [port]          udp port to sendto/rcvfrom (set this value to the
#                       same value as "udpport" above)
#       [ttl]           the ttl value for outbound heartbeats.  this effects
#                       how far the multicast packet will propagate.  (0-255)
#                       Must be greater than zero.
#       [loop]          toggles loopback for outbound multicast heartbeats.
#                       if enabled, an outbound packet will be looped back and
#                       received by the interface it was sent on. (0 or 1)
#                       Set this value to zero.
#              
#
#mcast eth0 225.0.0.1 694 1 0
mcast eth1 225.0.0.1 694 1 0
#
#       Set up a unicast / udp heartbeat medium
#       ucast [dev] [peer-ip-addr]
#
#       [dev]           device to send/rcv heartbeats on
#       [peer-ip-addr]  IP address of peer to send packets to
#
#ucast eth0 192.168.1.2
#
#
#       About boolean values...
#
#       Any of the following case-insensitive values will work for true:
#               true, on, yes, y, 1
#       Any of the following case-insensitive values will work for false:
#               false, off, no, n, 0
#
#
#
#       auto_failback:  determines whether a resource will
#       automatically fail back to its "primary" node, or remain
#       on whatever node is serving it until that node fails, or
#       an administrator intervenes.
#
#       The possible values for auto_failback are:
#               on      - enable automatic failbacks
#               off     - disable automatic failbacks
#               legacy  - enable automatic failbacks in systems
#                       where all nodes do not yet support
#                       the auto_failback option.
#
#       auto_failback "on" and "off" are backwards compatible with the old
#               "nice_failback on" setting.
#
#       See the FAQ for information on how to convert
#               from "legacy" to "on" without a flash cut.
#               (i.e., using a "rolling upgrade" process)
#
#       The default value for auto_failback is "legacy", which
#       will issue a warning at startup.  So, make sure you put
#       an auto_failback directive in your ha.cf file.
#       (note: auto_failback can be any boolean or "legacy")
#
auto_failback on
#
#
#       Basic STONITH support
#       Using this directive assumes that there is one stonith
#       device in the cluster.  Parameters to this device are
#       read from a configuration file. The format of this line is:
#
#         stonith
#
#       NOTE: it is up to you to maintain this file on each node in the
#       cluster!
#
#stonith baytech /etc/ha.d/conf/stonith.baytech
#
#       STONITH support
#       You can configure multiple stonith devices using this directive.
#       The format of the line is:
#         stonith_host
#         is the machine the stonith device is attached
#              to or * to mean it is accessible from any host.
#         is the type of stonith device (a list of
#              supported drives is in /usr/lib/stonith.)
#         are driver specific parameters.  To see the
#              format for a particular device, run:
#           stonith -l -t
#
#
#       Note that if you put your stonith device access information in
#       here, and you make this file publically readable, you're asking
#       for a denial of service attack ;-)
#
#       To get a list of supported stonith devices, run
#               stonith -L
#       For detailed information on which stonith devices are supported
#       and their detailed configuration options, run this command:
#               stonith -h
#
#stonith_host *     baytech 10.0.0.3 mylogin mysecretpassword
#stonith_host ken3  rps10 /dev/ttyS1 kathy 0
#stonith_host kathy rps10 /dev/ttyS1 ken3 0
#
#       Watchdog is the watchdog timer.  If our own heart doesn't beat for
#       a minute, then our machine will reboot.
#       NOTE: If you are using the software watchdog, you very likely
#       wish to load the module with the parameter "nowayout=0" or
#       compile it without CONFIG_WATCHDOG_NOWAYOUT set. Otherwise even
#       an orderly shutdown of heartbeat will trigger a reboot, which is
#       very likely NOT what you want.
#
watchdog /dev/watchdog
#      
#       Tell what machines are in the cluster
#       node    nodename ...    -- must match uname -n
#node   ken3
#node   kathy
node ha1.chess.gz
node ha2.chess.gz
#
#       Less common options...
#
#       Treats 10.10.10.254 as a psuedo-cluster-member
#       Used together with ipfail below...
#
#ping 10.10.10.254
#
#       Treats 10.10.10.254 and 10.10.10.253 as a psuedo-cluster-member
#       called group1. If either 10.10.10.254 or 10.10.10.253 are up
#       then group1 is up
#       Used together with ipfail below...
#
#ping_group group1 10.10.10.254 10.10.10.253
#
#       Processes started and stopped with heartbeat.  Restarted unless
#               they exit with rc=100
#
#respawn userid /path/name/to/run
#respawn hacluster /usr/lib/heartbeat/ipfail
#
#       Access control for client api
#               default is no access
#
#apiauth client-name gid=gidlist uid=uidlist
#apiauth ipfail gid=haclient uid=hacluster
###########################
#
#       Unusual options.
#
###########################
#
#       hopfudge maximum hop count minus number of nodes in config
#hopfudge 1
#
#       deadping - dead time for ping nodes
#deadping 30
#
#       hbgenmethod - Heartbeat generation number creation method
#               Normally these are stored on disk and incremented as needed.
#hbgenmethod time
#
#       realtime - enable/disable realtime execution (high priority, etc.)
#               defaults to on
#realtime off
#
#       debug - set debug level
#               defaults to zero
#debug 1
#
#       API Authentication - replaces the fifo-permissions-based system of the past
#
#
#       You can put a uid list and/or a gid list.
#       If you put both, then a process is authorized if it qualifies under either
#       the uid list, or under the gid list.
#
#       The groupname "default" has special meaning.  If it is specified, then
#       this will be used for authorizing groupless clients, and any client groups
#       not otherwise specified.
#
#apiauth        ipfail uid=hacluster
#apiauth ccm uid=hacluster
#apiauth ping gid=haclient uid=alanr,root
#apiauth default gid=haclient

# message format in the wire, it can be classic or netstring, default is classic
###########################
#
#       hopfudge maximum hop count minus number of nodes in config
#hopfudge 1
#
#       deadping - dead time for ping nodes
#deadping 30
#
#       hbgenmethod - Heartbeat generation number creation method
#               Normally these are stored on disk and incremented as needed.
#hbgenmethod time
#
#       realtime - enable/disable realtime execution (high priority, etc.)
#               defaults to on
#realtime off
#
#       debug - set debug level
#               defaults to zero
#debug 1
#
#       API Authentication - replaces the fifo-permissions-based system of the past
#
#
#       You can put a uid list and/or a gid list.
#       If you put both, then a process is authorized if it qualifies under either
#       the uid list, or under the gid list.
#
#       The groupname "default" has special meaning.  If it is specified, then
#       this will be used for authorizing groupless clients, and any client groups
#       not otherwise specified.
#
#apiauth        ipfail uid=hacluster
#apiauth ccm uid=hacluster
#apiauth ping gid=haclient uid=alanr,root
#apiauth default gid=haclient

# message format in the wire, it can be classic or netstring, default is classic
#msgfmt  netstring

                                                                                            /etc/ha.d/haresources

#
#       This is a list of resources that move from machine to machine as
#       nodes go down and come up in the cluster.  Do not include
#       "administrative" or fixed IP addresses in this file.
#
#
#       The haresources files MUST BE IDENTICAL on all nodes of the cluster.
#
#       The node names listed in front of the resource group information
#       is the name of the preferred node to run the service.  It is
#       not necessarily the name of the current machine.  If you are running
#       auto_failback ON (or legacy), then these services will be started
#       up on the preferred nodes - any time they're up.
#
#       If you are running with auto_failback OFF, then the node information
#       will be used in the case of a simultaneous start-up, or when using
#       the hb_standby {foreign,local} command.
#
#       BUT FOR ALL OF THESE CASES, the haresources files MUST BE IDENTICAL.
#       If your files are different then almost certainly something
#       won't work right.
#

#
#      
#       We refer to this file when we're coming up, and when a machine is being
#       taken over after going down.
#
#       You need to make this right for your installation, then install it in
#       /etc/ha.d
#
#       Each logical line in the file constitutes a "resource group".
#       A resource group is a list of resources which move together from
#       one node to another - in the order listed.  It is assumed that there
#       is no relationship between different resource groups.  These
#       resource in a resource group are started left-to-right, and stopped
#       right-to-left.  Long lists of resources can be continued from line
#       to line by ending the lines with backslashes ("").
#
#       These resources in this file are either IP addresses, or the name
#       of scripts to run to "start" or "stop" the given resource.
#
#       The format is like this:
#
#node-name resource1 resource2 ... resourceN
#
#
#       If the resource name contains an :: in the middle of it, the
#       part after the :: is passed to the resource script as an argument.
#       Multiple arguments are separated by the :: delimeter
#
#       In the case of IP addresses, the resource script name IPaddr is
#       implied.
#
#       For example, the IP address 135.9.8.7 could also be represented
#       as IPaddr::135.9.8.7
#
#       THIS IS IMPORTANT!!     vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv
#
#       The given IP address is directed to an interface which has a route
#       to the given address.  This means you have to have a net route
#       set up outside of the High-Availability structure.  We don't set it
#       up here -- we key off of it.
#
#       The broadcast address for the IP alias that is created to support
#       an IP address defaults to the highest address on the subnet.
#
#       The netmask for the IP alias that is created defaults to the same
#       netmask as the route that it selected in in the step above.
#
#       The base interface for the IPalias that is created defaults to the
#       same netmask as the route that it selected in in the step above.
#
#       If you want to specify that this IP address is to be brought up
#       on a subnet with a netmask of 255.255.255.0, you would specify
#       this as IPaddr::135.9.8.7/24 . 
#
#       If you wished to tell it that the broadcast address for this subnet
#       was 135.9.8.210, then you would specify that this way:
#               IPaddr::135.9.8.7/24/135.9.8.210
#
#       If you wished to tell it that the interface to add the address to
#       is eth0, then you would need to specify it this way:
#               IPaddr::135.9.8.7/24/eth0
#
#       And this way to specify both the broadcast address and the
#       interface:
#               IPaddr::135.9.8.7/24/eth0/135.9.8.210
#
#       The IP addresses you list in this file are called "service" addresses,
#       since they're they're the publicly advertised addresses that clients
#       use to get at highly available services.
#
#       For a hot/standby (non load-sharing) 2-node system with only
#       a single service address,
#       you will probably only put one system name and one IP address in here.
#       The name you give the address to is the name of the default "hot"
#       system.
#
#       Where the nodename is the name of the node which "normally" owns the
#       resource.  If this machine is up, it will always have the resource
#       it is shown as owning.
#
#       The string you put in for nodename must match the uname -n name
#       of your machine.  Depending on how you have it administered, it could
#       be a short name or a FQDN.
#
#-------------------------------------------------------------------
#
#       Simple case: One service address, default subnet and netmask
#               No servers that go up and down with the IP address
#
#just.linux-ha.org      135.9.216.110
#
#-------------------------------------------------------------------
#
#       Assuming the adminstrative addresses are on the same subnet...
#       A little more complex case: One service address, default subnet
#       and netmask, and you want to start and stop http when you get
#       the IP address...
#
#just.linux-ha.org      135.9.216.110 http
#-------------------------------------------------------------------
#
#-------------------------------------------------------------------
#
#       A little more complex case: Three service addresses, default subnet
#       and netmask, and you want to start and stop http when you get
#       the IP address...
#
#just.linux-ha.org      135.9.216.110 135.9.215.111 135.9.216.112 httpd
#-------------------------------------------------------------------
#
#       One service address, with the subnet, interface and bcast addr
#       explicitly defined.
#
#just.linux-ha.org      135.9.216.3/28/eth0/135.9.216.12 httpd
#
#-------------------------------------------------------------------
#
#       An example where a shared filesystem is to be used.
#       Note that multiple aguments are passed to this script using
#       the delimiter '::' to separate each argument.
#
#node1  10.0.0.170 Filesystem::/dev/sda1::/data1::ext2
#
#       Regarding the node-names in this file:
#
#       They must match the names of the nodes listed in ha.cf, which in turn
#       must match the `uname -n` of some node in the cluster.  So they aren't
#       virtual in any sense of the word.
#
ha1.chess.gz    192.168.247.180 Filesystem::/dev/sdb2::/www::ext3::rw httpd Filesystem::/dev/sdb1::/exports::/exports::ext3::rw nfs

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