[Pacemaker] [Question and Problem] In vSphere5.1 environment, IO blocking of pengine occurs at the time of shared disk trouble for a long time.
Andrew Beekhof
andrew at beekhof.net
Wed May 15 08:18:30 UTC 2013
On 15/05/2013, at 5:31 PM, Vladislav Bogdanov <bubble at hoster-ok.com> wrote:
> 15.05.2013 10:25, Andrew Beekhof wrote:
>>
>> On 15/05/2013, at 3:50 PM, Vladislav Bogdanov <bubble at hoster-ok.com> wrote:
>>
>>> 15.05.2013 08:23, Andrew Beekhof wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On 15/05/2013, at 3:11 PM, renayama19661014 at ybb.ne.jp wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Hi Andrew,
>>>>>
>>>>> Thank you for comments.
>>>>>
>>>>>>> The guest located it to the shared disk.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> What is on the shared disk? The whole OS or app-specific data (i.e. nothing pacemaker needs directly)?
>>>>>
>>>>> Shared disk has all the OS and the all data.
>>>>
>>>> Oh. I can imagine that being problematic.
>>>> Pacemaker really isn't designed to function without disk access.
>>>>
>>>> You might be able to get away with it if you turn off saving PE files to disk though.
>>>
>>> I store CIB and PE files to tmpfs, and sync them to remote storage
>>> (CIFS) with lsyncd level 1 config (I may share it on request). It copies
>>> critical data like cib.xml, and moves everything else, symlinking it to
>>> original place. The same technique may apply here, but with local fs
>>> instead of cifs.
>>>
>>> Btw, the following patch is needed for that, otherwise pacemaker
>>> overwrites remote files instead of creating new ones on tmpfs:
>>>
>>> --- a/lib/common/xml.c 2011-02-11 11:42:37.000000000 +0100
>>> +++ b/lib/common/xml.c 2011-02-24 15:07:48.541870829 +0100
>>> @@ -529,6 +529,8 @@ write_file(const char *string, const char *filename)
>>> return -1;
>>> }
>>>
>>> + unlink(filename);
>>
>> Seems like it should be safe to include for normal operation.
>
> Exactly.
Small flaw in that logic... write_file() is not used anywhere.
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