[Pacemaker] Should monitor operations be stopped after a resource is unmanaged?
Serge Dubrouski
sergeyfd at gmail.com
Fri Apr 1 22:19:48 CEST 2011
On Fri, Apr 1, 2011 at 2:09 PM, Ron Kerry <rkerry at sgi.com> wrote:
> On 7/22/64 2:59 PM, Pavel Levshin wrote:
>>
>> 01.04.2011 18:36, Ron Kerry:
>> > Folks -
>> >
>> > Consider a running cluster with all resources managed. We want to stop
>> > and quickly restart a particular resource without impacting other
>> > resources. The software stack running on the system can deal with this
>> > sort of temporary outage. We perform the following actions:
>> > * unmanage the resource
>> > * stop the resource
>> > * start the resource
>> > * manage the resource
>> >
>> > The above procedure is sometimes successful. However, we will also
>> > sometimes get a resource monitor failure after stopping the resource.
>> > It is clear that the monitor operation was not stopped (at least not
>> > immediately) by unmanaging the resource.
>>
>> Unmanaged resource cannot be started and stopped, but can still be
>> monitored.
>
> So unmanaged really means the resource is still being managed to some
> degree?
It means that Pacemaker still wants to know its state. What kind of
problem does it create?
>
> This does not seem desirable behavior. An unmanaged resource should be
> exactly that ... completely unmanaged ==> It cannot be stopped, started OR
> monitored.
>
>
> --
>
> Ron Kerry rkerry at sgi.com
> Global Product Support - SGI Federal
>
> _______________________________________________
> Pacemaker mailing list: Pacemaker at oss.clusterlabs.org
> http://oss.clusterlabs.org/mailman/listinfo/pacemaker
>
> Project Home: http://www.clusterlabs.org
> Getting started: http://www.clusterlabs.org/doc/Cluster_from_Scratch.pdf
> Bugs:
> http://developerbugs.linux-foundation.org/enter_bug.cgi?product=Pacemaker
>
--
Serge Dubrouski.
More information about the Pacemaker
mailing list