Appendix P: Managing Power Events¶
Overview¶
Once your OpenStack cloud is deployed and in production you will need to consider how to manage applications in terms of shutting them down and starting them up. Examples of situations where this knowledge would be useful include controlled power events such as node reboots and restarting an AZ (or an entire cloud). You will also be better able to counter uncontrolled power events like a power outage. This guide covers how to manage these kinds of power events in your cloud successfully.
For the purposes of this document, a node is any non-containerised system that houses at least one cloud service. In practice, this typically constitutes a physical host.
In addition, any known issues affecting the restarting of parts of the cloud stack are documented. Although they are presented last, it is highly recommended to review them prior to attempting to apply any of the information shown here.
An important assumption made in this document is that the cloud is hyperconverged. That is, multiple applications cohabit each cloud node. This aspect makes a power event especially significant as it can potentially affect the entire cloud.
Note
This document may help influence a cloud’s initial design. Once it is understood how an application should be treated in the context of a power event the cloud architect will be able to make better informed decisions.
Section Notable applications contains valuable information when stopping and starting services. It will be used in the context of power events but its contents can also be used during the normal operation of a cloud.
General guidelines¶
As each cloud is unique this section will provide general guidelines on how to prepare for and manage power events in your cloud.
Important
It is recommended that every deployed cloud have a list of detailed procedures that cover the uniqueness of that cloud. The guidelines in this current document can act as starting point for such a resource.
HA applications¶
Theoretically, an application with high availability is resilient to a power event, meaning that one would have no impact on both client requests to the application and the application itself. However, depending on the situation, some such applications may still require attention when starting back up. The percona-cluster application is a good example of this.
Cloud applications are typically made highly available through the use of the
hacluster subordinate charm. Some applications, though, achieve HA at the
software layer (outside of Juju), and can be called natively HA. One such
application is rabbitmq-server
. See OpenStack high availability for more information.
Cloud topology¶
The very first step is to map out the topology of your cloud. In other words, you need to know what application units are running on what machines, and whether those machines are physical (metal), virtual (kvm), or container (lxd) in nature. Each application’s HA status should also be indicated.
A natural way for Juju operators to map out their cloud is by inspecting the
output of the juju status
command. For a demonstration see Cloud
topology example. It is based on this production
Reference cloud.
Control plane, data plane, and shutdown order¶
Data plane services involve networking, storage, and virtualisation, whereas control plane services are necessary to administer and operate the cloud. See High availability and Control plane architecture for more details.
When a cloud is in production the priority for the administrator is to ensure that instances and their associated workloads continue to run. This means that in terms of the impact a power event may have, the data plane has priority over the control plane.
Generally, data plane services (DP) are stopped prior to control plane (CP) services. Also, services within a plane will typically depend upon another service within that same plane. The conclusion is that the dependant service should be brought down before the service being depended upon (e.g. stop Nova before stopping Ceph).
In terms of core applications then, an approximate service shutdown ordered list can be built to act as a general guideline. Some services, such as API services, have less, if any, impact on other services and can therefore be turned off in any order.
In the below list, the most notable aspects are the extremes: nova-compute and Ceph should be stopped first and keystone, rabbitmq-server, and percona-cluster should be stopped last:
nova-compute
(DP)ceph-osd
(DP)ceph-mon
(DP)ceph-radosgw
(DP)neutron-gateway
(DP)neutron-openvswitch
(DP)glance
(CP)cinder
(CP)neutron-gateway
(CP)neutron-api
(CP)placement
(CP)nova-cloud-controller
(CP)keystone
(CP)rabbitmq-server
(CP)percona-cluster
(CP)
Each node can now be analysed to see what applications it hosts and in what order they should be stopped.
Stopping and starting services¶
When stopping a service (not an entire application and not a unit agent) on a hyperconverged cloud node it is safer to act on each unit and stop the service individually. The alternative is to power down the node hosting the service, which will, of course, stop every other service hosted on that node. Ensure that you understand the consequences of powering down a node.
In addition, whenever a service is stopped on a node you need to know what impact that will have on the cloud. For instance, the default effect of turning off a Ceph OSD is that data will be re-distributed among the other OSDs, resulting in high disk and network activity. Most services should be in HA mode but you should be aware of the quorum that must be maintained in order for HA to function as designed. For example, turning off two out of three Keystone cluster members is not advisable.
Wherever possible, this document shows how to manage services with Juju actions. Apart from their intrinsic benefits (i.e. sanctioned by experts), actions are not hampered by SSH-restricted environments. Note that a charm may not implement every desired command in the form of an action however. In that case, the only alternative is to interact directly with the unit’s operating system via SSH.
Important
When an action is used the resulting state persists within Juju, and, in
particular, will survive a node reboot. This can be very advantageous in
the context of controlled shutdown and startup procedures, but it does
demand tracking on the part of the operator. To assist with this, some
charms expose action information in the output of the juju status
command .
When actions are not used, in terms of starting services on a single node or across a cloud, it may not be possible to do so in a prescribed order unless the services were explicitly configured to not start automatically during the bootup of a node.
Regardless of whether a service is started with a Juju action, via SSH, or by booting the corresponding node, it is vital that you verify afterwards that the service is actually running and functioning properly.
Controlled power events¶
The heart of managing your cloud in terms of controlled power events is the power-cycling of an individual cloud node. Once you’re able to make decisions on a per-node basis extending the power event to a group of nodes, such as an AZ or even an entire cloud, will become less daunting.
Power-cycling a cloud node¶
When a hyperconverged cloud node requires to be power-cycled begin by considering the cloud topology, at least for the machine in question.
To illustrate, machines 17, 18, 20 from the Cloud topology example will be used. Note that only fundamental applications will be included (i.e. applications such as openstack-dashboard, ceilometer, etc. will be omitted).
The main issue behind power-cycling a node is to come up with a shutdown list of services, as the startup list is typically just the shutdown list in reverse. This is what is shown below for each machine. Information regarding HA status and machine type has been retained (from the source topology example).
The shutdown lists are based on section Control plane, data plane, and shutdown order.
machine 17¶
nova-compute
(metal)ceph-osd
(natively HA; metal)ceph-mon
(natively HA; lxd)ceph-radosgw
(natively HA; lxd)glance
(HA; lxd)cinder
(HA; lxd)keystone
(HA; lxd)percona-cluster
(HA; lxd)
machine 18¶
nova-compute
(metal)ceph-osd
(natively HA; metal)neutron-api
(HA; lxd)nova-cloud-controller
(HA; lxd)rabbitmq-server
(natively HA; lxd)
machine 20¶
ceph-osd
(natively HA; metal)neutron-gateway
(natively HA; metal)neutron-api
(HA; lxd)nova-cloud-controller
(HA; lxd)rabbitmq-server
(natively HA; lxd)
See section Notable applications for instructions on stopping individual services.
Power-cycling an AZ or an entire cloud¶
Apart from the difference in scale of the service outage, stopping and starting an AZ (availability zone) or an entire cloud is a superset of the case of power-cycling an individual node. You just need to identify the group of nodes that are involved. An AZ or cloud would consist of all of the core services listed in section Control plane, data plane, and shutdown order.
Uncontrolled power events¶
In the context of this document, an uncontrolled power event is an unintended power outage. The result of such an event is that one or many physical cloud hosts have turned off non-gracefully. Since we now know that some cloud services should be stopped in a particular order and in a particular way the task now is to ascertain what services could have been negatively impacted and how to proceed in getting such services back in working order.
Begin as was done in the case of Power-cycling a cloud node by determining the topology of the affected nodes. See whether any corresponding services have special shutdown procedures as documented in section Notable applications. Any such services will require special scrutiny when they are eventually started. Determine an ordered startup list for the affected services. As was shown in Power-cycling a cloud node, this list is the reverse of the shutdown list. Finally, once the nodes are powered on, by abiding as much as possible to the startup list, act on any verification steps found in section Notable applications for all cloud services.
Important
To prevent affected machines from turning back on automatically, and thus interfering with the startup procedures for your cloud, it is recommended to disable the auto-poweron BIOS setting on all cloud nodes.
Notable applications¶
This section contains application-specific shutdown/restart procedures, well-known caveats, or just valuable tips.
As noted under Stopping and starting services, this document encourages the use of actions for managing application services. The general syntax is:
juju run-action --wait <unit> <action>
In the procedures that follow, <unit> will be replaced by an example only (e.g.
nova-compute/0
). You will need to substitute in the actual unit for your
cloud.
For convenience, the applications are listed here (you can also use the table of contents in the upper left-hand-side):
ceph¶
All Ceph services are grouped under this one heading.
Note
Some ceph-related charms are lacking in actions. Some procedures will involve direct intervention. See bugs LP #1846049, LP #1846050, LP #1849222, and LP #1849224.
shutdown¶
With respect to powering down a node that hosts an OSD, by default, the Ceph CRUSH map is configured to treat each cluster machine as a failure domain. The default pool behaviour is to replicate data across three failure domains, and require at least two of them to be present to accept writes. Shutting down multiple machines too quickly may cause two of three copies of a particular placement group to become temporarily unavailable, which would cause consuming applications to block on writes. The CRUSH map can be configured to spread replicas over a failure domain other than machines. See CRUSH maps in the Ceph documentation.
The shutdown procedures for Ceph are provided for both a cluster and for
individual components (e.g. ceph-mon
).
cluster¶
Ensure that the cluster is in a healthy state. From a Juju client, run a status check on any MON unit:
juju ssh ceph-mon/1 sudo ceph status
Shut down all components/clients consuming Ceph before shutting down Ceph components to avoid application-level data loss.
Set the cluster-wide
noout
option, on any MON unit, to prevent data rebalancing from occurring when OSDs start disappearing from the network:juju run-action --wait ceph-mon/1 set-noout
Query status again to ensure that the option is set:
juju ssh ceph-mon/1 sudo ceph status
Expected partial output is:
health: HEALTH_WARN noout flag(s) set
Stop the RADOS Gateway service on each
ceph-radosgw
unit.First get the current status:
juju ssh ceph-radosgw/0 systemctl status ceph-radosgw@\*
Example partial output is:
● ceph-radosgw@rgw.ip-172-31-93-254.service - Ceph rados gateway Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/ceph-radosgw@.service; indirect; vendor preset: enabled) Active: active (running) since Mon 2019-09-30 21:33:53 UTC; 9min ago
Now pause the service:
juju run-action --wait ceph-radosgw/0 pause
Verify that the service has stopped:
juju ssh ceph-radosgw/0 systemctl status ceph-radosgw@\*
Expected output is null (no output).
Mark all of a unit’s OSDs as ‘out’. Do this on each
ceph-osd
unit:juju run-action --wait ceph-osd/1 osd-out
Once done, verify that all of the cluster’s OSDs are out:
juju ssh ceph-mon/1 sudo ceph status
Assuming a total of six OSDs, expected partial output (“0 in”) is:
osd: 6 osds: 6 up, 0 in; 66 remapped pgs
Stop the MON service on each
ceph-mon
unit:juju ssh ceph-mon/0 sudo systemctl stop ceph-mon.service
Verify that the MON service has stopped on each unit:
juju ssh ceph-mon/0 systemctl status ceph-mon.service
Expected partial output is:
Active: inactive (dead) since Mon 2019-09-30 19:46:09 UTC; 1h 1min ago
Important
Once the MON units have lost quorum you will lose the ability to query the cluster.
component¶
Ensure that the cluster is in a healthy state. On any MON:
juju ssh ceph-mon/1 sudo ceph status
ceph-mon - To bring down a single MON service:
Stop the MON service on the
ceph-mon
unit:juju ssh ceph-mon/0 sudo systemctl stop ceph-mon.service
Do not bring down another MON until the cluster has recovered from the loss of the current one (run a status check).
ceph-osd - To bring down all the OSDs on a single unit:
Mark all the OSDs on the
ceph-osd
unit as ‘out’:juju run-action --wait ceph-osd/2 osd-out
Do not mark OSDs on another unit as ‘out’ until the cluster has recovered from the loss of the current one (run a status check).
startup¶
The startup procedures for Ceph are provided for both a cluster and for
individual components (e.g. ceph-mon
).
cluster¶
Nodes hosting Ceph services should be powered on such that the services are started in this order:
ceph-mon
ceph-osd
ceph-radosgw
Important: If during cluster shutdown,
a unit’s OSDs were marked as ‘out’ then you must re-insert them. Do this for each
ceph-osd
unit:juju run-action --wait ceph-osd/0 osd-in
the
noout
option was set, you will need to unset it. On any MON unit:juju run-action --wait ceph-mon/0 unset-noout
a RADOS Gateway service was paused, you will need to resume it. Do this for each
ceph-radosgw
unit:juju run-action --wait ceph-radosgw/0 resume
Finally, ensure that the cluster is in a healthy state by running a status check on any MON unit:
juju ssh ceph-mon/0 sudo ceph status
component¶
Ensure that the cluster is in a healthy state. On any MON:
juju ssh ceph-mon/0 sudo ceph status
ceph-mon - To bring up a single MON service:
Start the MON service on the
ceph-mon
unit:juju ssh ceph-mon/1 sudo systemctl start ceph-mon.service
Do not bring up another MON until the cluster has recovered from the addition of the current one (run a status check).
ceph-osd - To bring up all the OSDs on a unit:
Re-insert the OSDs on the
ceph-osd
unit:juju run-action --wait ceph-osd/1 osd-in
Do not re-insert OSDs on another unit until the cluster has recovered from the addition of the current ones (run a status check).
Important
Individual OSDs on a unit cannot be started or stopped using actions. They are managed as a collective.
cinder¶
etcd¶
Note
The etcd
charm is lacking in actions. Some procedures will involve
direct intervention. See bug LP #1846257.
read queries¶
To see the etcd cluster status. On any etcd
unit:
juju run-action --wait etcd/0 health
loss of etcd quorum¶
If the majority of the etcd units fail (e.g. 2 out of 3) you can scale down the cluster (e.g. 3 to 1). However, if all hooks have not had a chance to run (e.g. you may have to force remove and redeploy faulty units) the surviving master will not accept new cluster members/units. In that case, do the following:
Scale down the cluster to 1 unit any way you can (remove faulty units / stop the etcd service / delete the database on the slave units).
Force the surviving master to become a 1-node cluster. On the appropriate unit:
Stop the service:
juju ssh etcd/0 sudo systemctl stop snap.etcd.etcd
Connect to the unit via SSH and edit /var/snap/etcd/common/etcd.conf.yml by setting force-new-cluster to ‘true’.
Start the service:
juju ssh etcd/0 sudo systemctl start snap.etcd.etcd
Connect to the unit via SSH and edit /var/snap/etcd/common/etcd.conf.yml by setting force-new-cluster to ‘false’.
Scale up the cluster by adding new etcd units.
glance¶
shutdown¶
To pause the Glance service:
juju run-action --wait glance/0 pause
Important
If Glance is clustered using the ‘hacluster’ charm, first pause hacluster and then pause Glance.
startup¶
To resume the Glance service:
juju run-action --wait glance/0 resume
Important
If Glance is clustered using the ‘hacluster’ charm, first resume Glance and then resume hacluster.
keystone¶
shutdown¶
To pause the Keystone service:
juju run-action --wait keystone/0 pause
Important
If Keystone is clustered using the ‘hacluster’ charm, first pause hacluster and then pause Keystone.
startup¶
To resume the Keystone service:
juju run-action --wait keystone/0 resume
Important
If Keystone is clustered using the ‘hacluster’ charm, first resume Keystone and then resume hacluster.
landscape¶
Note
The postgresql
charm, needed by Landscape, is lacking in actions. Some
procedures will involve direct intervention. See bug LP #1846279.
shutdown¶
Pause the Landscape service:
juju run-action --wait landscape-server/0 pause
Stop the PostgreSQL service:
juju ssh postgresql/0 sudo systemctl stop postgresql
Pause the RabbitMQ service:
juju run-action --wait rabbitmq-server/0 pause
Caution
Services other than Landscape may also be using either of the PostgreSQL or RabbitMQ services.
startup¶
The startup of Landscape should be done in the reverse order.
Ensure the RabbitMQ service is started:
juju run-action --wait rabbitmq-server/0 pause
Ensure the PostgreSQL service is started:
juju ssh postgresql/0 sudo systemctl start postgresql
Resume the Landscape service:
juju run-action --wait landscape-server/0 pause
neutron-gateway¶
neutron agents¶
A cloud outage will occur if a node hosting a non-HA neutron-gateway
is
power cycled due to the lack of neutron agents.
Before stopping the service you can manually check for HA status of neutron agents on the node using the commands below. HA is confirmed by the presence of more than one agent per router, in the case of L3 agents, and more than one per network, in the case of DHCP agents.
To return the list of L3 agents serving each of the routers connected to a node:
for i in `openstack network agent list | grep L3 | awk '/$NODE/ {print $2}'` ; \
do printf "\nAgent $i serves:" ; \
for f in `neutron router-list-on-l3-agent $i | awk '/network_id/ {print$2}'` ; \
do printf "\n Router $f served by these agents:\n" ; \
neutron l3-agent-list-hosting-router $f ; \
done ; done
To return the list of DHCP agents serving each of the networks connected to a node:
for i in `openstack network agent list| grep -i dhcp | awk '/$NODE/ {print $2}'` ; \
do printf "\nAgent $i serves:" ; \
for f in `neutron net-list-on-dhcp-agent $i | awk '!/+/ {print$2}'` ; \
do printf "\nNetwork $f served by these agents:\n" ; \
neutron dhcp-agent-list-hosting-net $f ; \
done ; done
Note
Replace $NODE
with the node hostname as known to OpenStack (i.e.
openstack host list
).
neutron-openvswitch¶
nova-cloud-controller¶
shutdown¶
To pause Nova controller services (Nova scheduler, Nova api, Nova network, Nova objectstore):
juju run-action --wait nova-cloud-controller/0 pause
nova-compute¶
shutdown¶
True HA is not possible for nova-compute
nor its instances. If a node
hosting this service is power-cycled the corresponding hypervisor is removed
from the pool of available hypervisors, and its instances will become
inaccessible. Generally speaking, individual hypervisors are fallible
components in a cloud. The standard response to this is to implement HA on the
instance workloads. Provided shared storage is set up, you can also move
instances to another compute node and boot them anew (state is lost) - see
Evacuate instances.
To stop a Nova service:
Some affected nova instances may require a special shutdown sequence (e.g. an instance may host a workload that demands particular care when turning it off). Invoke them now.
Gracefully stop all remaining affected nova instances.
Pause the Nova service:
juju run-action --wait nova-compute/0 pause
Tip
If shared storage is implemented, instead of shutting down instances you may consider moving (“evacuating”) them to another compute node. See Evacuate instances.
startup¶
To resume a Nova service:
juju run-action --wait nova-compute/0 resume
Instances that fail to come up properly can be moved to another compute host (see Evacuate instances).
percona-cluster¶
shutdown¶
To pause the MySQL service for a percona-cluster
unit:
juju run-action --wait percona-cluster/0 pause
To gracefully shut down the cluster repeat the above for every unit.
startup¶
A special startup procedure is necessary regardless of whether services were shut down gracefully or not (power outage or hard shutdown):
Run action
bootstrap-pxc
on any percona-cluster unit.
If the MySQL sequence numbers (obtained with command juju status
percona-cluster
) vary across units then the action must be run on the unit
with the highest sequence number:
juju run-action --wait percona-cluster/? bootstrap-pxc
Run action
notify-bootstrapped
on a percona-cluster unit.There are two possibilities:
If the
bootstrap-pxc
action was run on a leader then runnotify-bootstrapped
on a non-leader.If the
bootstrap-pxc
action was run on a non-leader then runnotify-bootstrapped
on the leader.
Run the appropriate command now:
juju run-action --wait percona-cluster/? notify-bootstrapped
For details see the percona-cluster charm.
rabbitmq-server¶
read queries¶
Provided rabbitmq is running on a rabbitmq-server
unit, you can perform a
status check:
juju run-action --wait rabbitmq-server/1 cluster-status
Example partial output is:
Cluster status of node 'rabbit@ip-172-31-13-243'
[{nodes,[{disc,['rabbit@ip-172-31-13-243']}]},
{running_nodes,['rabbit@ip-172-31-13-243']},
{cluster_name,<<"rabbit@ip-172-31-13-243.ec2.internal">>},
{partitions,[]},
{alarms,[{'rabbit@ip-172-31-13-243',[]}]}]
It is expected that there are no objects listed on the partitions line (as above).
To list unconsumed queues (those with pending messages):
juju run-action --wait rabbitmq-server/1 list-unconsumed-queues
See Partitions and Queues in the RabbitMQ documentation.
partitions¶
Any partitioned units will need to be attended to. Stop and start the
rabbitmq-server service for each rabbitmq-server
unit, checking for status
along the way:
juju run-action --wait rabbitmq-server/0 pause
juju run-action --wait rabbitmq-server/1 cluster-status
juju run-action --wait rabbitmq-server/0 pause
juju run-action --wait rabbitmq-server/1 cluster-status
If errors persist, the mnesia database will need to be removed from the
affected unit so it can be resynced from the other units. Do this by removing
the contents of the /var/lib/rabbitmq/mnesia
directory between the stop and
start commands.
Note
The network partitioning handling mode configured by the
rabbitmq-server
charm is autoheal
.
vault¶
Note
The vault
charm is lacking in actions. Some procedures will involve
direct intervention. See bug LP #1846282.
read queries¶
To see Vault service status:
juju ssh vault/0 /snap/bin/vault status
Expected output is:
Cluster is sealed
unsealing units¶
When Vault is clustered, each unit will manually (and locally) need to be
unsealed with its respective VAULT_ADDR
environment variable and with the
minimum number of unseal keys (three here):
export VAULT_ADDR="http://<IP of vault unit>:8200"
vault operator unseal <key>
vault operator unseal <key>
vault operator unseal <key>
See the Vault appendix in the Charms Deployment Guide for more details.
Known issues¶
LP #1804261 : ceph-osds will need to be restarted if they start before Vault is ready and unsealed
LP #1818260 : forget cluster node failed during cluster-relation-changed hook
LP #1818680 : booting should succeed even if vault is unavailable
LP #1818973 : vault fails to start when MySQL backend down
LP #1827690 : barbican-worker is down: Requested revision 1a0c2cdafb38 overlaps with other requested revisions 39cf2e645cba
LP #1840706 : install hook fails with psycopg2 ImportError
Consult each charm’s bug tracker for full bug listings. See the OpenStack Charms project group.