To use Heartbeat in combination with MySQL you should be using DRBD (see Section 14.1, “Using MySQL with DRBD”) or another solution that allows for sharing of the MySQL database files in event of a system failure. In these examples, DRBD is used as the data sharing solution.
Heartbeat manages the configuration of different resources to manage the switching between two servers in the event of a failure. The resource configuration defines the individual services that should be brought up (or taken down) in the event of a failure.
The haresources
file within
/etc/ha.d
defines the resources that should
be managed, and the individual resource mentioned in this file in
turn relates to scripts located within
/etc/ha.d/resource.d
. The resource definition
is defined all on one line:
drbd1 drbddisk Filesystem::/dev/drbd0::/drbd::ext3 mysql 10.0.0.100
The line is notionally split by whitespace. The first entry
(drbd1
) is the name of the preferred host; that
is the server that is normally responsible for handling the
service. The last field is virtual IP address or name that should
be used to share the service. This is the IP address that should
be used to connect to the MySQL server. It will automatically be
allocated to the server that is active when Heartbeat starts.
The remaining fields between these two fields define the resources
that should be managed. Each Field should contain the name of the
resource (and each name should refer to a script within
/etc/ha.d/resource.d
). In the event of a
failure, these resources are started on the backup server by
calling the corresponding script (with a single argument,
start
), in order from left to right. If there
are additional arguments to the script, you can use a double colon
to separate each additional argument.
In the above example, we manage the following resources:
drbddisk
— the DRBD resource script,
this will switch the DRBD disk on the secondary host into
primary mode, making the device read/write.
Filesystem
— manages the Filesystem
resource. In this case we have supplied additional arguments
to specify the DRBD device, mount point and file system type.
When executed this should mount the specified file system.
mysql
— manages the MySQL instances
and starts the MySQL server. You should copy the
mysql.resource
file from the
support-files
directory from any MySQL
release into the /etc/ha.d/resources.d
directory.
If this file is not available in your distribution, you can
use the following as the contents of the
/etc/ha.d/resource.d/mysql.resource
file:
#!/bin/bash # # This script is inteded to be used as resource script by heartbeat # # Mar 2006 by Monty Taylor # ### . /etc/ha.d/shellfuncs case "$1" in start) res=`/etc/init.d/mysql start` ret=$? ha_log $res exit $ret ;; stop) res=`/etc/init.d/mysql stop` ret=$? ha_log $res exit $ret ;; status) if [[ `ps -ef | grep '[m]ysqld'` > 1 ]] ; then echo "running" else echo "stopped" fi ;; *) echo "Usage: mysql {start|stop|status}" exit 1 ;; esac exit 0
If you want to be notified of the failure by email, you can add
another line to the haresources
file with the
address for warnings and the warning text:
MailTo::youremail@address.com::DRBDFailure
With the Heartbeat configuration in place, copy the
haresources
, authkeys
and ha.cf
files from your primary and
secondary servers to make sure that the configuration is
identical. Then start the Heartbeat service, either by calling
/etc/init.d/heartbeat start
or by rebooting
both primary and secondary servers.
You can test the configuration by running a manual failover, connect to the primary node and run:
root-shell> /usr/lib64/heartbeat/hb_standby
This will cause the current node to relinquish its resources cleanly to the other node.
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