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6 <refentry id="ctdbd.conf.5">
9 <refentrytitle>ctdbd.conf</refentrytitle>
10 <manvolnum>5</manvolnum>
11 <refmiscinfo class="source">ctdb</refmiscinfo>
12 <refmiscinfo class="manual">CTDB - clustered TDB database</refmiscinfo>
16 <refname>ctdbd.conf</refname>
17 <refpurpose>CTDB daemon configuration file</refpurpose>
21 <title>DESCRIPTION</title>
24 This file contains CTDB configuration variables that are affect
25 the operation of CTDB. The default location of this file is
26 <filename>/etc/ctdb/ctdbd.conf</filename>.
30 This file is a shell script (see
31 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>sh</refentrytitle>
32 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>) but is usually limited
33 to simple variable assignments and shell-style comments.
37 CTDB configuration variables are grouped into several categories below.
41 Variables defined in this document can also be set in a
42 distribution-specific configuration file such as
43 <filename>/etc/sysconfig/ctdb</filename> (Red Hat) or
44 <filename>/etc/default/ctdb</filename> (Debian). However, these
45 files should be reserved for variables used by the initscript.
46 A historical alternative is
47 <filename>/etc/ctdb/sysconfig/ctdb</filename> - this is
55 INITSCRIPT CONFIGURATION
59 Some options must be available to the initscript so they need to
60 be set in the distribution-specific initscript configuration,
61 such as <filename>/etc/sysconfig/ctdb</filename> or
62 <filename>/etc/default/ctdb</filename>.
68 <term>CTDB_PIDFILE=<parameter>FILENAME</parameter></term>
71 FILENAME is the name of the file used to contain the
72 process ID (PID) of the main CTDB daemon when it is
73 running. This is passed from the initscript to
74 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctdbd_wrapper</refentrytitle>
75 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
79 Default is <filename>/var/run/ctdb/ctdbd.pid</filename>.
80 Corresponds to <option>--pidfile</option>.
94 These options may be used in the initscripts, daemon and
101 <term>CTDB_BASE=<parameter>DIRECTORY</parameter></term>
104 DIRECTORY containing CTDB scripts and configuration files.
110 <term>CTDB_VARDIR=<parameter>DIRECTORY</parameter></term>
113 DIRECTORY containing CTDB files that are modified at
117 Defaults to <filename>/var/ctdb</filename>, unless
118 <filename>/var/lib/ctdb</filename> already exists in which
134 Variables in this section are processed by
135 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctdbd_wrapper</refentrytitle>
136 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> and are converted into
137 command-line arguments to
138 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctdbd</refentrytitle>
139 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>. Correspondence with
140 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctdbd</refentrytitle>
141 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> options is shown for
142 each variable. The the documentation for the relevant options
147 Many of these variables are also used by event scripts.
153 <term>CTDB_CAPABILITY_LMASTER=yes|no</term>
156 Defaults to yes. Corresponds to <option>--no-lmaster</option>.
162 <term>CTDB_CAPABILITY_RECMASTER=yes|no</term>
165 Defaults to yes. Corresponds to
166 <option>--no-recmaster</option>.
172 <term>CTDB_DBDIR=<parameter>DIRECTORY</parameter></term>
175 Defaults to <varname>CTDB_VARDIR</varname>. Corresponds to
176 <option>--dbdir</option>.
182 <term>CTDB_DBDIR_PERSISTENT=<parameter>DIRECTORY</parameter></term>
185 Defaults to <varname>CTDB_VARDIR</varname>/persistent.
186 Corresponds to <option>--dbdir-persistent</option>.
192 <term>CTDB_DBDIR_STATE=<parameter>DIRECTORY</parameter></term>
195 Defaults to <varname>CTDB_VARDIR</varname>/state.
196 Corresponds to <option>--dbdir-state</option>.
202 <term>CTDB_DEBUGLEVEL=<parameter>DEBUGLEVEL</parameter></term>
205 Default is ERR (0). Corresponds to <option>-d</option> or
206 <option>--debug</option>.
212 <term>CTDB_EVENT_SCRIPT_DIR=<parameter>DIRECTORY</parameter></term>
215 Default is <varname>CTDB_BASE</varname>/events.d, so usually
216 <filename>/etc/ctdb/events.d</filename>. Corresponds to
217 <option>--event-script-dir</option>.
223 <term>CTDB_LOGFILE=<parameter>FILENAME</parameter></term>
226 Defaults to <filename>/var/log/log.ctdb</filename>.
227 Corresponds to <option>--logfile</option>. See also
228 <citetitle>CTDB_SYSLOG</citetitle>.
234 <term>CTDB_LOG_RINGBUF_SIZE=<parameter>NUM</parameter></term>
237 Default is 0. Corresponds to
238 <option>--log-ringbuf-size</option>.
244 <term>CTDB_LVS_PUBLIC_IP=<parameter>IPADDR</parameter></term>
247 No default. Corresponds to "<option>--lvs</option>
248 <option>--single-public-ip IPADDR"</option>.
254 <term>CTDB_NODES=<parameter>FILENAME</parameter></term>
257 Default is <varname>CTDB_BASE</varname>/nodes, so usually
258 <filename>/etc/ctdb/nodes</filename>. Corresponds to
259 <option>--nlist</option>.
265 <term>CTDB_NOTIFY_SCRIPT=<parameter>FILENAME</parameter></term>
269 <filename>/etc/ctdb/notify.sh</filename>. Corresponds to
270 <option>--notification-script</option>.
276 <term>CTDB_MAX_PERSISTENT_CHECK_ERRORS=<parameter>NUM</parameter></term>
279 Default 0. Corresponds to
280 <option>--max-persistent-check-errors</option>.
286 <term>CTDB_PUBLIC_ADDRESSES=<parameter>FILENAME</parameter></term>
290 <filename>/etc/ctdb/public_addresses</filename>.
291 Corresponds to <option>--public-addresses</option>.
297 <term>CTDB_PUBLIC_INTERFACE=<parameter>INTERFACE</parameter></term>
300 No default. Corresponds to
301 <option>--public-interface</option>.
307 <term>CTDB_RECOVERY_LOCK=<parameter>FILENAME</parameter></term>
311 <filename>/some/place/on/shared/storage</filename>, which
312 should be change to a useful value. Corresponds to
313 <option>--reclock</option>.
319 <term>CTDB_SCRIPT_LOG_LEVEL=<parameter>DEBUGLEVEL</parameter></term>
322 Defaults to ERR (0). Corresponds to
323 <option>--script-log-level</option>.
329 <term>CTDB_SOCKET=<parameter>FILENAME</parameter></term>
332 Defaults to <filename>/tmp/ctdb.socket</filename>.
333 Corresponds to <option>--socket</option>.
336 If you change this then you probably want to set this in
337 root's enviroment (perhaps in a file in
338 <filename>/etc/profile.d</filename>) so that you can use
339 the <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctdb</refentrytitle>
340 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> command in a
341 straightforward manner.
347 <term>CTDB_START_AS_DISABLED=yes|no</term>
350 Default is no. Corresponds to
351 <option>--start-as-disabled</option>.
357 <term>CTDB_START_AS_STOPPED=yes|no</term>
360 Default is no. Corresponds to
361 <option>--start-as-stopped</option>.
367 <term>CTDB_SYSLOG=yes|no</term>
370 Default is no. Corresponds to <option>--syslog</option>.
376 <term>CTDB_TRANSPORT=tcp|infiniband</term>
379 Defaults to tcp. Corresponds to
380 <option>--transport</option>.
388 While the following variables do not translate into daemon
389 options they are used by
390 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctdbd_wrapper</refentrytitle>
391 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> when starting and
392 stopping <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctdbd</refentrytitle>
393 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
399 <term>CTDB_SHUTDOWN_TIMEOUT=<parameter>NUM</parameter></term>
402 NUM is the number of seconds to wait for
403 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctdbd</refentrytitle>
404 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> to shut down
405 gracefully before giving up and killing it.
415 <term>CTDB_STARTUP_TIMEOUT=<parameter>NUM</parameter></term>
418 NUM is the number of seconds to wait for
419 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctdbd</refentrytitle>
420 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> complete early
421 initialisation up to a point where it is unlikely to
422 abort. If <command>ctdbd</command> doesn't complete the
423 "setup" event before this timeout then it is killed.
436 <title>NETWORK CONFIGURATION</title>
439 <title>NAT GATEWAY</title>
442 NAT gateway is used to configure fallback routing for nodes
443 when they do not host any public IP addresses. For example,
444 it allows unhealthy nodes to reliably communicate with
445 external infrastructure. One node in a NAT gateway group will
446 be designated as the NAT gateway master node and other (slave)
447 nodes will be configured with fallback routes via the NAT
448 gateway master node. For more information, see the
449 <citetitle>NAT GATEWAY</citetitle> section in
450 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctdb</refentrytitle>
451 <manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
457 <term>CTDB_NATGW_DEFAULT_GATEWAY=<parameter>IPADDR</parameter></term>
460 IPADDR is an alternate network gateway to use on the NAT
461 gateway master node. A fallback default route is added
462 via this network gateway.
471 <term>CTDB_NATGW_NODES=<parameter>FILENAME</parameter></term>
474 FILENAME contains the list of nodes that belong to the
475 same NAT gateway group.
480 <parameter>IPADDR</parameter>
485 <filename>/etc/ctdb/natgw_nodes</filename> when enabled.
491 <term>CTDB_NATGW_PRIVATE_NETWORK=<parameter>IPADDR/MASK</parameter></term>
494 IPADDR/MASK is the private sub-network that is
495 internally routed via the NAT gateway master node. This
496 is usually the private network that is used for node
506 <term>CTDB_NATGW_PUBLIC_IFACE=<parameter>IFACE</parameter></term>
509 IFACE is the network interface on which the
510 CTDB_NATGW_PUBLIC_IP will be configured.
519 <term>CTDB_NATGW_PUBLIC_IP=<parameter>IPADDR/MASK</parameter></term>
522 IPADDR/MASK indicates the IP address that is used for
523 outgoing traffic (originating from
524 CTDB_NATGW_PRIVATE_NETWORK) on the NAT gateway master
525 node. This <emphasis>must not</emphasis> be a
526 configured public IP address.
535 <term>CTDB_NATGW_SLAVE_ONLY=yes|no</term>
538 When set to "yes" a node can not be a NAT gateway master node.
549 <title>Example</title>
551 CTDB_NATGW_NODES=/etc/ctdb/natgw_nodes
552 CTDB_NATGW_PRIVATE_NETWORK=192.168.1.0/24
553 CTDB_NATGW_DEFAULT_GATEWAY=10.0.0.1
554 CTDB_NATGW_PUBLIC_IP=10.0.0.227/24
555 CTDB_NATGW_PUBLIC_IFACE=eth0
562 <title>POLICY ROUTING</title>
565 A node running CTDB may be a component of a complex network
566 topology. In particular, public addresses may be spread
567 across several different networks (or VLANs) and it may not be
568 possible to route packets from these public addresses via the
569 system's default route. Therefore, CTDB has support for
570 policy routing via the <filename>13.per_ip_routing</filename>
571 eventscript. This allows routing to be specified for packets
572 sourced from each public address. The routes are added and
573 removed as CTDB moves public addresses between nodes.
577 For more information, see the <citetitle>POLICY
578 ROUTING</citetitle> section in
579 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctdb</refentrytitle>
580 <manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>.
585 <term>CTDB_PER_IP_ROUTING_CONF=<parameter>FILENAME</parameter></term>
588 FILENAME contains elements for constructing the desired
589 routes for each source address.
593 The special FILENAME value
594 <constant>__auto_link_local__</constant> indicates that no
595 configuration file is provided and that CTDB should
596 generate reasonable link-local routes for each public IP
603 <parameter>IPADDR</parameter> <parameter>DEST-IPADDR/MASK</parameter> <optional><parameter>GATEWAY-IPADDR</parameter></optional>
609 <filename>/etc/ctdb/policy_routing</filename> when enabled.
615 <term>CTDB_PER_IP_ROUTING_RULE_PREF=<parameter>NUM</parameter></term>
618 NUM sets the priority (or preference) for the routing
619 rules that are added by CTDB.
623 This should be (strictly) greater than 0 and (strictly)
624 less than 32766. A priority of 100 is recommended, unless
625 this conflicts with a priority already in use on the
627 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ip</refentrytitle>
628 <manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry>, for more details.
635 CTDB_PER_IP_ROUTING_TABLE_ID_LOW=<parameter>LOW-NUM</parameter>,
636 CTDB_PER_IP_ROUTING_TABLE_ID_HIGH=<parameter>HIGH-NUM</parameter>
640 CTDB determines a unique routing table number to use for
641 the routing related to each public address. LOW-NUM and
642 HIGH-NUM indicate the minimum and maximum routing table
643 numbers that are used.
647 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ip</refentrytitle>
648 <manvolnum>8</manvolnum></citerefentry> uses some
649 reserved routing table numbers below 255. Therefore,
650 CTDB_PER_IP_ROUTING_TABLE_ID_LOW should be (strictly)
655 CTDB uses the standard file
656 <filename>/etc/iproute2/rt_tables</filename> to maintain
657 a mapping between the routing table numbers and labels.
658 The label for a public address
659 <replaceable>ADDR</replaceable> will look like
660 ctdb.<replaceable>addr</replaceable>. This means that
661 the associated rules and routes are easy to read (and
666 No default, usually 1000 and 9000.
673 <title>Example</title>
675 CTDB_PER_IP_ROUTING_CONF=/etc/ctdb/policy_routing
676 CTDB_PER_IP_ROUTING_RULE_PREF=100
677 CTDB_PER_IP_ROUTING_TABLE_ID_LOW=1000
678 CTDB_PER_IP_ROUTING_TABLE_ID_HIGH=9000
685 <title>MISCELLANEOUS NETWORK CONFIGURATION</title>
690 <term>CTDB_PARTIALLY_ONLINE_INTERFACES=yes|no</term>
693 Whether one or more offline interfaces should cause a
694 monitor event to fail if there are other interfaces that
695 are up. If this is "yes" and a node has some interfaces
696 that are down then <command>ctdb status</command> will
697 display the node as "PARTIALLYONLINE".
712 <title>SERVICE CONFIGURATION</title>
715 CTDB can be configured to manage and/or monitor various NAS (and
716 other) services via its eventscripts.
720 In the simplest case CTDB will manage a service. This means the
721 service will be started and stopped along with CTDB, CTDB will
722 monitor the service and CTDB will do any required
723 reconfiguration of the service when public IP addresses are
731 <title>Eventscripts</title>
734 <member><filename>49.winbind</filename></member>
735 <member><filename>50.samba</filename></member>
742 <term>CTDB_MANAGES_SAMBA=yes|no</term>
745 Should CTDB manage Samba?
754 <term>CTDB_MANAGES_WINBIND=yes|no</term>
757 Should CTDB manage Winbind?
766 <term>CTDB_SAMBA_CHECK_PORTS=<parameter>PORT-LIST</parameter></term>
769 When monitoring Samba, check TCP ports in
770 space-separated PORT-LIST.
773 Default is to monitor ports that Samba is configured to listen on.
779 <term>CTDB_SAMBA_SKIP_SHARE_CHECK=yes|no</term>
782 As part of monitoring, should CTDB skip the check for
783 the existence of each directory configured as share in
784 Samba. This may be desirable if there is a large number
794 <term>CTDB_SERVICE_NMB=<parameter>SERVICE</parameter></term>
797 Distribution specific SERVICE for managing nmbd.
800 Default is distribution-dependant.
805 <term>CTDB_SERVICE_SMB=<parameter>SERVICE</parameter></term>
808 Distribution specific SERVICE for managing smbd.
811 Default is distribution-dependant.
817 <term>CTDB_SERVICE_WINBIND=<parameter>SERVICE</parameter></term>
820 Distribution specific SERVICE for managing winbindd.
823 Default is "winbind".
836 This includes parameters for the kernel NFS server and the
838 <ulink url="https://github.com/nfs-ganesha/nfs-ganesha/wiki">NFS-Ganesha</ulink>
843 <title>Eventscripts</title>
846 <member><filename>60.nfs</filename></member>
847 <member><filename>60.ganesha</filename></member>
854 <term>CTDB_CLUSTER_FILESYSTEM_TYPE=gpfs</term>
857 The type of cluster filesystem to use with NFS-ganesha.
858 Currently only "gpfs" is supported.
867 <term>CTDB_MANAGES_NFS=yes|no</term>
870 Should CTDB manage NFS?
879 <term>CTDB_MONITOR_NFS_THREAD_COUNT=yes|no</term>
882 Whether to monitor the NFS kernel server thread count.
885 This works around a limitation in some NFS initscripts
886 where some threads can be stuck in host filesystem calls
887 (perhaps due to slow storage), a restart occurs, some
888 threads don't exit, the start only adds the missing
889 number of threads, the stuck threads exit, and the
890 result is a lower than expected thread count. Note that
891 if you must also set <varname>RPCNFSDCOUNT</varname>
892 (RedHat/Debian) or <varname>USE_KERNEL_NFSD_NUMBER</varname>
893 (SUSE) in your NFS configuration so the monitoring code
894 knows how many threads there should be - if neither of
895 these are set then this option will be ignored.
904 <term>CTDB_NFS_DUMP_STUCK_THREADS=<parameter>NUM</parameter></term>
907 NUM is the number of NFS kernel server threads to dump
908 stack traces for if some are still alive after stopping
909 NFS during a restart.
918 <term>CTDB_NFS_SERVER_MODE=kernel|ganesha</term>
921 Selects which NFS server to be managed.
924 This replaces the deprecated variable
925 <varname>NFS_SERVER_MODE</varname>.
934 <term>CTDB_NFS_SKIP_KNFSD_ALIVE_CHECK=yes|no</term>
937 During monitoring, should CTDB skip the
938 <command>rpcinfo</command> check that is used to see if
939 the NFS kernel server is functional.
948 <term>CTDB_NFS_SKIP_SHARE_CHECK=yes|no</term>
951 As part of monitoring, should CTDB skip the check for
952 the existence of each directory exported via NFS. This
953 may be desirable if there is a large number of exports.
962 <term>CTDB_RPCINFO_LOCALHOST=<parameter>IPADDR</parameter>|<parameter>HOSTNAME</parameter></term>
965 IPADDR or HOSTNAME indicates the address that
966 <command>rpcinfo</command> should connect to when doing
967 <command>rpcinfo</command> check on RPC service during
968 monitoring. Optimally this would be "localhost".
969 However, this can add some performance overheads.
972 Default is "127.0.0.1".
978 <term>CTDB_SKIP_GANESHA_NFSD_CHECK=yes|no</term>
981 As part of monitoring, should CTDB skip the check for
982 the existence of each directory exported via
983 NFS-Ganesha. This may be desirable if there is a large
997 <title>APACHE HTTPD</title>
1000 CTDB can manage the Apache web server.
1004 <title>Eventscript</title>
1007 <member><filename>41.httpd</filename></member>
1013 <term>CTDB_MANAGES_HTTPD=yes|no</term>
1016 Should CTDB manage the Apache web server?
1027 <title>CLAMAV</title>
1030 CTDB has support to manage the popular anti-virus daemon
1035 <title>Eventscript</title>
1038 <member><filename>31.clamd</filename></member>
1042 This eventscript is not enabled by default. Use
1043 <command>ctdb enablescript</command> to enable it.
1051 <term>CTDB_MANAGES_CLAMD=yes|no</term>
1054 Should CTDB manage ClamAV?
1063 <term>CTDB_CLAMD_SOCKET=<parameter>FILENAME</parameter></term>
1066 FILENAME is the socket to monitor ClamAV.
1079 <title>ISCSI</title>
1082 CTDB has support for managing the Linux iSCSI tgtd service.
1086 <title>Eventscript</title>
1089 <member><filename>70.iscsi</filename></member>
1096 <term>CTDB_MANAGES_ISCSI=yes|no</term>
1099 Should CTDB manage iSCSI tgtd?
1108 <term>CTDB_START_ISCSI_SCRIPTS=<parameter>DIRECTORY</parameter></term>
1111 DIRECTORY on shared storage containing scripts to start
1112 tgtd for each public IP address.
1123 <title>MULTIPATHD</title>
1126 CTDB can monitor multipath devices to ensure that active paths
1131 <title>Eventscript</title>
1134 <member><filename>20.multipathd</filename></member>
1138 This eventscript is not enabled by default. Use
1139 <command>ctdb enablescript</command> to enable it.
1145 <term>CTDB_MONITOR_MPDEVICES=<parameter>MP-DEVICE-LIST</parameter></term>
1148 MP-DEVICE-LIST is a list of multipath devices for CTDB to monitor?
1159 <title>VSFTPD</title>
1162 CTDB can manage the vsftpd FTP server.
1166 <title>Eventscript</title>
1169 <member><filename>40.vsftpd</filename></member>
1175 <term>CTDB_MANAGES_VSFTPD=yes|no</term>
1178 Should CTDB manage the vsftpd FTP server?
1190 SYSTEM RESOURCE MONITORING CONFIGURATION
1194 CTDB can experience seemingly random (performance and other)
1195 issues if system resources become too contrained. Options in
1196 this section can be enabled to allow certain system resources to
1201 <title>Eventscripts</title>
1204 <member><filename>00.ctdb</filename></member>
1205 <member><filename>40.fs_use</filename></member>
1209 Filesystem usage monitoring is in
1210 <filename>40.fs_use</filename>. This eventscript is not
1211 enabled by default. Use <command>ctdb
1212 enablescript</command> to enable it.
1219 <term>CTDB_CHECK_FS_USE=<parameter>FS-LIMIT-LIST</parameter></term>
1222 FS-LIMIT-LIST is a space-separated list of
1223 <parameter>FILESYSTEM</parameter>:<parameter>LIMIT</parameter>
1224 pairs indicating that a node should be flagged unhealthy
1225 if the space used on FILESYSTEM reaches LIMIT%.
1233 Note that this feature uses the
1234 <filename>40.fs_use</filename> eventscript, which is not
1235 enabled by default. Use <command>ctdb
1236 enablescript</command> to enable it.
1242 <term>CTDB_CHECK_SWAP_IS_NOT_USED=yes|no</term>
1245 Should a warning be logged if swap space is in use.
1254 <term>CTDB_MONITOR_FREE_MEMORY=<parameter>NUM</parameter></term>
1257 NUM is a lower limit on available system memory, expressed
1258 in megabytes. If this is set and the amount of available
1259 memory falls below this limit then some debug information
1260 will be logged, the node will be disabled and then CTDB
1270 <term>CTDB_MONITOR_FREE_MEMORY_WARN=<parameter>NUM</parameter></term>
1273 NUM is a lower limit on available system memory, expressed
1274 in megabytes. If this is set and the amount of available
1275 memory falls below this limit then a warning will be
1288 <title>MISCELLANEOUS SERVICE-RELATED CONFIGURATION</title>
1293 <term>CTDB_MANAGED_SERVICES=<parameter>SERVICE-LIST</parameter></term>
1296 SERVICE-LIST is a space-separated list of SERVICEs that
1297 CTDB should manage. This can be used as an alternative
1299 <varname>CTDB_MANAGES_<replaceable>SERVICE</replaceable></varname>
1309 <term>CTDB_SERVICE_AUTOSTARTSTOP=yes|no</term>
1312 When CTDB should start and stop services if they become
1313 managed or unmanaged.
1329 TUNABLES CONFIGURATION
1334 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctdbd-tunables</refentrytitle>
1335 <manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>) can be set from the
1336 configuration file. They are set as follows:
1339 CTDB_SET_<replaceable>TUNABLE</replaceable>=<replaceable>VALUE</replaceable>
1346 <screen format="linespecific">
1347 CTDB_SET_MonitorInterval=20
1358 Variable in this section are for debugging and testing CTDB.
1359 They should not generally be needed.
1365 <term>CTDB_DEBUG_HUNG_SCRIPT=<parameter>FILENAME</parameter></term>
1368 FILENAME is a script to run to log debug information when
1369 an event script times out.
1372 Default is <filename><varname>CTDB_BASE</varname>/debug-hung-script.sh</filename>.
1378 <term>CTDB_DEBUG_LOCKS=<parameter>FILENAME</parameter></term>
1381 FILENAME is a script to run to log debug information when
1382 an CTDB fails to freeze databases during recovery.
1386 <filename><varname>CTDB_BASE</varname>/debug_locks.sh</filename>.
1392 <term>CTDB_ETCDIR=<parameter>DIRECTORY</parameter></term>
1395 DIRECTORY containing system configuration files. This is
1396 used to provide alternate configuration when testing and
1397 should not need to be changed from the default.
1400 Default is <filename>/etc</filename>.
1406 <term>CTDB_INIT_STYLE=debian|redhat|suse</term>
1409 This is the init style used by the Linux distribution (or
1410 other operating system) being used. This is usually
1411 determined dynamically by checking the system. This
1412 variable is used by the initscript to determine which init
1413 system primitives to use. It is also used by some
1414 eventscripts to choose the name of initscripts for certain
1415 services, since these can vary between distributions.
1421 If this option needs to be changed from the calculated
1422 default for the initscript to function properly, then it
1423 must be set in the distribution-specific initscript
1424 configuration, such as
1425 <filename>/etc/sysconfig/ctdb</filename>
1431 <term>CTDB_MAX_CORRUPT_DB_BACKUPS=<parameter>NUM</parameter></term>
1434 NUM is the maximum number of volatile TDB database backups
1435 to be kept (for each database) when a corrupt database is
1436 found during startup. Volatile TDBs are zeroed during
1437 startup so backups are needed to debug any corruption that
1438 occurs before a restart.
1447 <term>CTDB_RC_LOCAL=<parameter>FILENAME</parameter></term>
1450 FILENAME is a script fragment to be sourced by the
1451 <filename>functions</filename> that is sourced by scripts.
1452 On example use would be to override function definitions
1453 in unit tests. As a sanity check, this file must be
1454 executable for it to be used.
1463 <term>CTDB_RUN_TIMEOUT_MONITOR=yes|no</term>
1466 Whether CTDB should simulate timing out monitor events.
1467 This uses the <filename>99.timeout</filename> eventscript.
1476 <term>CTDB_SCRIPT_DEBUGLEVEL=<parameter>NUM</parameter></term>
1479 NUM is the level debugging messages printed by CTDB
1480 scripts. Setting this to a higher number (e.g. 4) will
1481 cause some scripts to log more messages.
1490 <term>CTDB_SUPPRESS_COREFILE=yes|no</term>
1493 Whether CTDB core files should be suppressed.
1502 <term>CTDB_VALGRIND=yes|no|<parameter>COMMAND</parameter></term>
1505 If "yes", this causes
1506 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctdbd</refentrytitle>
1507 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> to be run under
1508 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>valgrind</refentrytitle>
1509 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> with logs going to
1510 <filename>/var/log/ctdb_valgrind</filename>. If neither
1511 "yes" nor "no" then the value is assumed to be a COMMAND
1512 (e.g. a <command>valgrind</command> variation, a
1513 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>gdb</refentrytitle>
1514 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry> command) that is
1515 used in place of the default <command>valgrind</command>
1516 command. In either case, the <option>--valgrind</option>
1517 option is passed to <command>ctdbd</command>.
1531 <title>FILES</title>
1534 <member><filename>/etc/ctdb/ctdbd.conf</filename></member>
1535 <member><filename>/etc/sysconfig/ctdb</filename></member>
1536 <member><filename>/etc/default/ctdb</filename></member>
1537 <member><filename>/etc/ctdb/sysconfig/ctdb</filename></member>
1542 <title>SEE ALSO</title>
1544 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctdbd</refentrytitle>
1545 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1547 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctdbd_wrapper</refentrytitle>
1548 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1550 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>onnode</refentrytitle>
1551 <manvolnum>1</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1553 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctdb</refentrytitle>
1554 <manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1556 <citerefentry><refentrytitle>ctdb-tunables</refentrytitle>
1557 <manvolnum>7</manvolnum></citerefentry>,
1559 <ulink url="http://ctdb.samba.org/"/>
1566 This documentation was written by
1574 <holder>Andrew Tridgell</holder>
1575 <holder>Ronnie Sahlberg</holder>
1579 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
1580 modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
1581 published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of
1582 the License, or (at your option) any later version.
1585 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be
1586 useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied
1587 warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
1588 PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
1591 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public
1592 License along with this program; if not, see
1593 <ulink url="http://www.gnu.org/licenses"/>.