source: vendor/current/ctdb/doc/ctdb-tunables.7

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1'\" t
2.\" Title: ctdb-tunables
3.\" Author:
4.\" Generator: DocBook XSL Stylesheets v1.78.1 <http://docbook.sf.net/>
5.\" Date: 09/22/2016
6.\" Manual: CTDB - clustered TDB database
7.\" Source: ctdb
8.\" Language: English
9.\"
10.TH "CTDB\-TUNABLES" "7" "09/22/2016" "ctdb" "CTDB \- clustered TDB database"
11.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
12.\" * Define some portability stuff
13.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
14.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
15.\" http://bugs.debian.org/507673
16.\" http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/groff/2009-02/msg00013.html
17.\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
18.ie \n(.g .ds Aq \(aq
19.el .ds Aq '
20.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
21.\" * set default formatting
22.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
23.\" disable hyphenation
24.nh
25.\" disable justification (adjust text to left margin only)
26.ad l
27.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
28.\" * MAIN CONTENT STARTS HERE *
29.\" -----------------------------------------------------------------
30.SH "NAME"
31ctdb-tunables \- CTDB tunable configuration variables
32.SH "DESCRIPTION"
33.PP
34CTDB\*(Aqs behaviour can be configured by setting run\-time tunable variables\&. This lists and describes all tunables\&. See the
35\fBctdb\fR(1)\fBlistvars\fR,
36\fBsetvar\fR
37and
38\fBgetvar\fR
39commands for more details\&.
40.PP
41The tunable variables are listed alphabetically\&.
42.SS "AllowClientDBAttach"
43.PP
44Default: 1
45.PP
46When set to 0, clients are not allowed to attach to any databases\&. This can be used to temporarily block any new processes from attaching to and accessing the databases\&. This is mainly used for detaching a volatile database using \*(Aqctdb detach\*(Aq\&.
47.SS "AllowUnhealthyDBRead"
48.PP
49Default: 0
50.PP
51When set to 1, ctdb allows database traverses to read unhealthy databases\&. By default, ctdb does not allow reading records from unhealthy databases\&.
52.SS "ControlTimeout"
53.PP
54Default: 60
55.PP
56This is the default setting for timeout for when sending a control message to either the local or a remote ctdb daemon\&.
57.SS "DatabaseHashSize"
58.PP
59Default: 100001
60.PP
61Number of the hash chains for the local store of the tdbs that ctdb manages\&.
62.SS "DatabaseMaxDead"
63.PP
64Default: 5
65.PP
66Maximum number of dead records per hash chain for the tdb databses managed by ctdb\&.
67.SS "DBRecordCountWarn"
68.PP
69Default: 100000
70.PP
71When set to non\-zero, ctdb will log a warning during recovery if a database has more than this many records\&. This will produce a warning if a database grows uncontrollably with orphaned records\&.
72.SS "DBRecordSizeWarn"
73.PP
74Default: 10000000
75.PP
76When set to non\-zero, ctdb will log a warning during recovery if a single record is bigger than this size\&. This will produce a warning if a database record grows uncontrollably\&.
77.SS "DBSizeWarn"
78.PP
79Default: 1000000000
80.PP
81When set to non\-zero, ctdb will log a warning during recovery if a database size is bigger than this\&. This will produce a warning if a database grows uncontrollably\&.
82.SS "DeferredAttachTO"
83.PP
84Default: 120
85.PP
86When databases are frozen we do not allow clients to attach to the databases\&. Instead of returning an error immediately to the client, the attach request from the client is deferred until the database becomes available again at which stage we respond to the client\&.
87.PP
88This timeout controls how long we will defer the request from the client before timing it out and returning an error to the client\&.
89.SS "DeterministicIPs"
90.PP
91Default: 0
92.PP
93When set to 1, ctdb will try to keep public IP addresses locked to specific nodes as far as possible\&. This makes it easier for debugging since you can know that as long as all nodes are healthy public IP X will always be hosted by node Y\&.
94.PP
95The cost of using deterministic IP address assignment is that it disables part of the logic where ctdb tries to reduce the number of public IP assignment changes in the cluster\&. This tunable may increase the number of IP failover/failbacks that are performed on the cluster by a small margin\&.
96.SS "DisableIPFailover"
97.PP
98Default: 0
99.PP
100When set to non\-zero, ctdb will not perform failover or failback\&. Even if a node fails while holding public IPs, ctdb will not recover the IPs or assign them to another node\&.
101.PP
102When this tunable is enabled, ctdb will no longer attempt to recover the cluster by failing IP addresses over to other nodes\&. This leads to a service outage until the administrator has manually performed IP failover to replacement nodes using the \*(Aqctdb moveip\*(Aq command\&.
103.SS "ElectionTimeout"
104.PP
105Default: 3
106.PP
107The number of seconds to wait for the election of recovery master to complete\&. If the election is not completed during this interval, then that round of election fails and ctdb starts a new election\&.
108.SS "EnableBans"
109.PP
110Default: 1
111.PP
112This parameter allows ctdb to ban a node if the node is misbehaving\&.
113.PP
114When set to 0, this disables banning completely in the cluster and thus nodes can not get banned, even it they break\&. Don\*(Aqt set to 0 unless you know what you are doing\&. You should set this to the same value on all nodes to avoid unexpected behaviour\&.
115.SS "EventScriptTimeout"
116.PP
117Default: 30
118.PP
119Maximum time in seconds to allow an event to run before timing out\&. This is the total time for all enabled scripts that are run for an event, not just a single event script\&.
120.PP
121Note that timeouts are ignored for some events ("takeip", "releaseip", "startrecovery", "recovered") and converted to success\&. The logic here is that the callers of these events implement their own additional timeout\&.
122.SS "FetchCollapse"
123.PP
124Default: 1
125.PP
126This parameter is used to avoid multiple migration requests for the same record from a single node\&. All the record requests for the same record are queued up and processed when the record is migrated to the current node\&.
127.PP
128When many clients across many nodes try to access the same record at the same time this can lead to a fetch storm where the record becomes very active and bounces between nodes very fast\&. This leads to high CPU utilization of the ctdbd daemon, trying to bounce that record around very fast, and poor performance\&. This can improve performance and reduce CPU utilization for certain workloads\&.
129.SS "HopcountMakeSticky"
130.PP
131Default: 50
132.PP
133For database(s) marked STICKY (using \*(Aqctdb setdbsticky\*(Aq), any record that is migrating so fast that hopcount exceeds this limit is marked as STICKY record for
134\fIStickyDuration\fR
135seconds\&. This means that after each migration the sticky record will be kept on the node
136\fIStickyPindown\fRmilliseconds and prevented from being migrated off the node\&.
137.PP
138This will improve performance for certain workloads, such as locking\&.tdb if many clients are opening/closing the same file concurrently\&.
139.SS "KeepaliveInterval"
140.PP
141Default: 5
142.PP
143How often in seconds should the nodes send keep\-alive packets to each other\&.
144.SS "KeepaliveLimit"
145.PP
146Default: 5
147.PP
148After how many keepalive intervals without any traffic should a node wait until marking the peer as DISCONNECTED\&.
149.PP
150If a node has hung, it can take
151\fIKeepaliveInterval\fR
152* (\fIKeepaliveLimit\fR
153+ 1) seconds before ctdb determines that the node is DISCONNECTED and performs a recovery\&. This limit should not be set too high to enable early detection and avoid any application timeouts (e\&.g\&. SMB1) to kick in before the fail over is completed\&.
154.SS "LCP2PublicIPs"
155.PP
156Default: 1
157.PP
158When set to 1, ctdb uses the LCP2 ip allocation algorithm\&.
159.SS "LockProcessesPerDB"
160.PP
161Default: 200
162.PP
163This is the maximum number of lock helper processes ctdb will create for obtaining record locks\&. When ctdb cannot get a record lock without blocking, it creates a helper process that waits for the lock to be obtained\&.
164.SS "LogLatencyMs"
165.PP
166Default: 0
167.PP
168When set to non\-zero, ctdb will log if certains operations take longer than this value, in milliseconds, to complete\&. These operations include "process a record request from client", "take a record or database lock", "update a persistent database record" and "vaccum a database"\&.
169.SS "MaxQueueDropMsg"
170.PP
171Default: 1000000
172.PP
173This is the maximum number of messages to be queued up for a client before ctdb will treat the client as hung and will terminate the client connection\&.
174.SS "MonitorInterval"
175.PP
176Default: 15
177.PP
178How often should ctdb run the \*(Aqmonitor\*(Aq event in seconds to check for a node\*(Aqs health\&.
179.SS "MonitorTimeoutCount"
180.PP
181Default: 20
182.PP
183How many \*(Aqmonitor\*(Aq events in a row need to timeout before a node is flagged as UNHEALTHY\&. This setting is useful if scripts can not be written so that they do not hang for benign reasons\&.
184.SS "NoIPFailback"
185.PP
186Default: 0
187.PP
188When set to 1, ctdb will not perform failback of IP addresses when a node becomes healthy\&. When a node becomes UNHEALTHY, ctdb WILL perform failover of public IP addresses, but when the node becomes HEALTHY again, ctdb will not fail the addresses back\&.
189.PP
190Use with caution! Normally when a node becomes available to the cluster ctdb will try to reassign public IP addresses onto the new node as a way to distribute the workload evenly across the clusternode\&. Ctdb tries to make sure that all running nodes have approximately the same number of public addresses it hosts\&.
191.PP
192When you enable this tunable, ctdb will no longer attempt to rebalance the cluster by failing IP addresses back to the new nodes\&. An unbalanced cluster will therefore remain unbalanced until there is manual intervention from the administrator\&. When this parameter is set, you can manually fail public IP addresses over to the new node(s) using the \*(Aqctdb moveip\*(Aq command\&.
193.SS "NoIPHostOnAllDisabled"
194.PP
195Default: 0
196.PP
197If no nodes are HEALTHY then by default ctdb will happily host public IPs on disabled (unhealthy or administratively disabled) nodes\&. This can cause problems, for example if the underlying cluster filesystem is not mounted\&. When set to 1 on a node and that node is disabled, any IPs hosted by this node will be released and the node will not takeover any IPs until it is no longer disabled\&.
198.SS "NoIPTakeover"
199.PP
200Default: 0
201.PP
202When set to 1, ctdb will not allow IP addresses to be failed over onto this node\&. Any IP addresses that the node currently hosts will remain on the node but no new IP addresses can be failed over to the node\&.
203.SS "PullDBPreallocation"
204.PP
205Default: 10*1024*1024
206.PP
207This is the size of a record buffer to pre\-allocate for sending reply to PULLDB control\&. Usually record buffer starts with size of the first record and gets reallocated every time a new record is added to the record buffer\&. For a large number of records, this can be very inefficient to grow the record buffer one record at a time\&.
208.SS "RecBufferSizeLimit"
209.PP
210Default: 1000000
211.PP
212This is the limit on the size of the record buffer to be sent in various controls\&. This limit is used by new controls used for recovery and controls used in vacuuming\&.
213.SS "RecdFailCount"
214.PP
215Default: 10
216.PP
217If the recovery daemon has failed to ping the main dameon for this many consecutive intervals, the main daemon will consider the recovery daemon as hung and will try to restart it to recover\&.
218.SS "RecdPingTimeout"
219.PP
220Default: 60
221.PP
222If the main dameon has not heard a "ping" from the recovery dameon for this many seconds, the main dameon will log a message that the recovery daemon is potentially hung\&. This also increments a counter which is checked against
223\fIRecdFailCount\fR
224for detection of hung recovery daemon\&.
225.SS "RecLockLatencyMs"
226.PP
227Default: 1000
228.PP
229When using a reclock file for split brain prevention, if set to non\-zero this tunable will make the recovery dameon log a message if the fcntl() call to lock/testlock the recovery file takes longer than this number of milliseconds\&.
230.SS "RecoverInterval"
231.PP
232Default: 1
233.PP
234How frequently in seconds should the recovery daemon perform the consistency checks to determine if it should perform a recovery\&.
235.SS "RecoverPDBBySeqNum"
236.PP
237Default: 1
238.PP
239When set to zero, database recovery for persistent databases is record\-by\-record and recovery process simply collects the most recent version of every individual record\&.
240.PP
241When set to non\-zero, persistent databases will instead be recovered as a whole db and not by individual records\&. The node that contains the highest value stored in the record "__db_sequence_number__" is selected and the copy of that nodes database is used as the recovered database\&.
242.PP
243By default, recovery of persistent databses is done using __db_sequence_number__ record\&.
244.SS "RecoverTimeout"
245.PP
246Default: 120
247.PP
248This is the default setting for timeouts for controls when sent from the recovery daemon\&. We allow longer control timeouts from the recovery daemon than from normal use since the recovery dameon often use controls that can take a lot longer than normal controls\&.
249.SS "RecoveryBanPeriod"
250.PP
251Default: 300
252.PP
253The duration in seconds for which a node is banned if the node fails during recovery\&. After this time has elapsed the node will automatically get unbanned and will attempt to rejoin the cluster\&.
254.PP
255A node usually gets banned due to real problems with the node\&. Don\*(Aqt set this value too small\&. Otherwise, a problematic node will try to re\-join cluster too soon causing unnecessary recoveries\&.
256.SS "RecoveryDropAllIPs"
257.PP
258Default: 120
259.PP
260If a node is stuck in recovery, or stopped, or banned, for this many seconds, then ctdb will release all public addresses on that node\&.
261.SS "RecoveryGracePeriod"
262.PP
263Default: 120
264.PP
265During recoveries, if a node has not caused recovery failures during the last grace period in seconds, any records of transgressions that the node has caused recovery failures will be forgiven\&. This resets the ban\-counter back to zero for that node\&.
266.SS "RepackLimit"
267.PP
268Default: 10000
269.PP
270During vacuuming, if the number of freelist records are more than
271\fIRepackLimit\fR, then the database is repacked to get rid of the freelist records to avoid fragmentation\&.
272.PP
273Databases are repacked only if both
274\fIRepackLimit\fR
275and
276\fIVacuumLimit\fR
277are exceeded\&.
278.SS "RerecoveryTimeout"
279.PP
280Default: 10
281.PP
282Once a recovery has completed, no additional recoveries are permitted until this timeout in seconds has expired\&.
283.SS "Samba3AvoidDeadlocks"
284.PP
285Default: 0
286.PP
287If set to non\-zero, enable code that prevents deadlocks with Samba (only for Samba 3\&.x)\&.
288.PP
289This should be set to 1 only when using Samba version 3\&.x to enable special code in ctdb to avoid deadlock with Samba version 3\&.x\&. This code is not required for Samba version 4\&.x and must not be enabled for Samba 4\&.x\&.
290.SS "SeqnumInterval"
291.PP
292Default: 1000
293.PP
294Some databases have seqnum tracking enabled, so that samba will be able to detect asynchronously when there has been updates to the database\&. Everytime a database is updated its sequence number is increased\&.
295.PP
296This tunable is used to specify in milliseconds how frequently ctdb will send out updates to remote nodes to inform them that the sequence number is increased\&.
297.SS "StatHistoryInterval"
298.PP
299Default: 1
300.PP
301Granularity of the statistics collected in the statistics history\&. This is reported by \*(Aqctdb stats\*(Aq command\&.
302.SS "StickyDuration"
303.PP
304Default: 600
305.PP
306Once a record has been marked STICKY, this is the duration in seconds, the record will be flagged as a STICKY record\&.
307.SS "StickyPindown"
308.PP
309Default: 200
310.PP
311Once a STICKY record has been migrated onto a node, it will be pinned down on that node for this number of milliseconds\&. Any request from other nodes to migrate the record off the node will be deferred\&.
312.SS "TakeoverTimeout"
313.PP
314Default: 9
315.PP
316This is the duration in seconds in which ctdb tries to complete IP failover\&.
317.SS "TDBMutexEnabled"
318.PP
319Default: 0
320.PP
321This paramter enables TDB_MUTEX_LOCKING feature on volatile databases if the robust mutexes are supported\&. This optimizes the record locking using robust mutexes and is much more efficient that using posix locks\&.
322.SS "TickleUpdateInterval"
323.PP
324Default: 20
325.PP
326Every
327\fITickleUpdateInterval\fR
328seconds, ctdb synchronizes the client connection information across nodes\&.
329.SS "TraverseTimeout"
330.PP
331Default: 20
332.PP
333This is the duration in seconds for which a database traverse is allowed to run\&. If the traverse does not complete during this interval, ctdb will abort the traverse\&.
334.SS "VacuumFastPathCount"
335.PP
336Default: 60
337.PP
338During a vacuuming run, ctdb usually processes only the records marked for deletion also called the fast path vacuuming\&. After finishing
339\fIVacuumFastPathCount\fR
340number of fast path vacuuming runs, ctdb will trigger a scan of complete database for any empty records that need to be deleted\&.
341.SS "VacuumInterval"
342.PP
343Default: 10
344.PP
345Periodic interval in seconds when vacuuming is triggered for volatile databases\&.
346.SS "VacuumLimit"
347.PP
348Default: 5000
349.PP
350During vacuuming, if the number of deleted records are more than
351\fIVacuumLimit\fR, then databases are repacked to avoid fragmentation\&.
352.PP
353Databases are repacked only if both
354\fIRepackLimit\fR
355and
356\fIVacuumLimit\fR
357are exceeded\&.
358.SS "VacuumMaxRunTime"
359.PP
360Default: 120
361.PP
362The maximum time in seconds for which the vacuuming process is allowed to run\&. If vacuuming process takes longer than this value, then the vacuuming process is terminated\&.
363.SS "VerboseMemoryNames"
364.PP
365Default: 0
366.PP
367When set to non\-zero, ctdb assigns verbose names for some of the talloc allocated memory objects\&. These names are visible in the talloc memory report generated by \*(Aqctdb dumpmemory\*(Aq\&.
368.SH "SEE ALSO"
369.PP
370\fBctdb\fR(1),
371\fBctdbd\fR(1),
372\fBctdbd.conf\fR(5),
373\fBctdb\fR(7),
374\m[blue]\fB\%http://ctdb.samba.org/\fR\m[]
375.SH "AUTHOR"
376.br
377.PP
378This documentation was written by Ronnie Sahlberg, Amitay Isaacs, Martin Schwenke
379.SH "COPYRIGHT"
380.br
381Copyright \(co 2007 Andrew Tridgell, Ronnie Sahlberg
382.br
383.PP
384This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version\&.
385.PP
386This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE\&. See the GNU General Public License for more details\&.
387.PP
388You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, see
389\m[blue]\fB\%http://www.gnu.org/licenses\fR\m[]\&.
390.sp
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