Tutorial

How To Set Up an Apache Active-Passive Cluster Using Pacemaker on CentOS 7

Published on September 8, 2015
How To Set Up an Apache Active-Passive Cluster Using Pacemaker on CentOS 7

Introduction

High availability is an important topic nowadays because service outages can be very costly. It’s prudent to take measures which will keep your your website or web application running in case of an outage. With the Pacemaker stack, you can configure a high availability cluster.

Pacemaker is a cluster resource manager. It manages all cluster services (resources) and uses the messaging and membership capabilities of the underlying cluster engine. We will use Corosync as our cluster engine. Resources have a resource agent, which is a external program that abstracts the service.

In an active-passive cluster, all services run on a primary system. If the primary system fails, all services get moved to the backup system. An active-passive cluster makes it possible to do maintenance work without interruption.

In this tutorial, you will learn how to build a high availability Apache active-passive cluster. The web cluster will get addressed by its virtual IP address and will automatically fail over if a node fails.

Your users will access your web application by the virtual IP address, which is managed by Pacemaker. The Apache service and the virtual IP are always located on the same host. When this host fails, they get migrated to the second host and your users will not notice the outage.

Prerequisites

Before you get started with this tutorial, you will need the following:

  • Two CentOS 7 Droplets, which will be the cluster nodes. We’ll refer to these as webnode01 (IP address: your_first_server_ip) and webnode02 (IP address: your_second_server_ip).

  • A user on both servers with root privileges. You can set this up by following this Initial Server Setup with CentOS 7 tutorial.

You’ll have to run some commands on both servers, and some commands on only one.

Step 1 — Configuring Name Resolution

First, we need to make sure that both hosts can resolve the hostname of the two cluster nodes. To accomplish that, we’ll add entries to the /etc/hosts file. Follow this step on both webnode01 and webnode02.

Open /etc/hosts with nano or your favorite text editor.

  1. sudo nano /etc/hosts

Add the following entries to the end of the file.

/etc/hosts
your_first_server_ip webnode01.example.com webnode01
your_second_server_ip webnode02.example.com webnode02

Save and close the file.

Step 2 — Installing Apache

In this section, we will install the Apache web server. You have to complete this step on both hosts.

First, install Apache.

  1. sudo yum install httpd

The Apache resource agent uses the Apache server status page for checking the health of the Apache service. You have to activate the status page by creating the file /etc/httpd/conf.d/status.conf.

  1. sudo nano /etc/httpd/conf.d/status.conf

Paste the following directive in this file. These directives allow the access to the status page from localhost but not from any other host.

/etc/httpd/conf.d/status.conf
<Location /server-status>
   SetHandler server-status
   Order Deny,Allow
   Deny from all
   Allow from 127.0.0.1
</Location>

Save and close the file.

Step 3 — Installing Pacemaker

Now we will install the Pacemaker stack. You have to complete this step on both hosts.

Install the Pacemaker stack and the pcs cluster shell. We’ll use the latter later to configure the cluster.

  1. sudo yum install pacemaker pcs

Now we have to start the pcs daemon, which is used for synchronizing the Corosync configuration across the nodes.

  1. sudo systemctl start pcsd.service

In order that the daemon gets started after every reboot, we will also enable the service.

  1. sudo systemctl enable pcsd.service

After you have installed these packages, there will be a new user on your system called hacluster. After the installation, remote login is disabled for this user. For tasks like synchronizing the configuration or starting services on other nodes, we have to set the same password for this user.

  1. sudo passwd hacluster

Step 4 — Configuring Pacemaker

Next, we’ll allow cluster traffic in FirewallD to allow our hosts to communicate.

First, check if FirewallD is running.

  1. sudo firewall-cmd --state

If it’s not running, start it.

  1. sudo systemctl start firewalld.service

You’ll need to do this on both hosts. Once it’s running, add the high-availability service to FirewallD.

  1. sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --add-service=high-availability

After this change, you need to reload FirewallD.

  1. sudo firewall-cmd --reload

If you want to learn more about FirewallD, you can read this guide about how to configure FirewallD on CentOS 7.

Now that our two hosts can talk to each other, we can set up the authentication between the two nodes by running this command on one host (in our case, webnode01).

  1. sudo pcs cluster auth webnode01 webnode02
  2. Username: hacluster

You should see the following output:

Output
webnode01: Authorized
webnode02: Authorized

Next, we’ll generate and synchronize the Corosync configuration on the same host. Here, we’ll name the cluster webcluster, but you can call it whatever you like.

  1. sudo pcs cluster setup --name webcluster webnode01 webnode02

You’ll see the following output:

Output
Shutting down pacemaker/corosync services...
Redirecting to /bin/systemctl stop  pacemaker.service
Redirecting to /bin/systemctl stop  corosync.service
Killing any remaining services...
Removing all cluster configuration files...
webnode01: Succeeded
webnode02: Succeeded

The corosync configuration is now created and distributed across all nodes. The configuration is stored in the file /etc/corosync/corosync.conf.

Step 5 — Starting the Cluster

The cluster can be started by running the following command on webnode01.

  1. sudo pcs cluster start --all

To ensure that Pacemaker and corosync starts at boot, we have to enable the services on both hosts.

  1. sudo systemctl enable corosync.service
  2. sudo systemctl enable pacemaker.service

We can now check the status of the cluster by running the following command on either host.

  1. sudo pcs status

Check that both hosts are marked as online in the output.

Output
. . .

Online: [ webnode01 webnode02 ]

Full list of resources:


PCSD Status:
  webnode01: Online
  webnode02: Online

Daemon Status:
  corosync: active/enabled
  pacemaker: active/enabled
  pcsd: active/enabled

Note: After the first setup, it can take some time before the nodes are marked as online.

Step 6 — Disabling STONITH and Ignoring Quorum

What is STONITH?

You will see a warning in the output of pcs status that no STONITH devices are configured and STONITH is not disabled:

Warning
. . .
WARNING: no stonith devices and stonith-enabled is not false
. . .

What does this mean and why should you care?

When the cluster resource manager cannot determine the state of a node or of a resource on a node, fencing is used to bring the cluster to a known state again.

Resource level fencing ensures mainly that there is no data corruption in case of an outage by configuring a resource. You can use resource level fencing, for instance, with DRBD (Distributed Replicated Block Device) to mark the disk on a node as outdated when the communication link goes down.

Node level fencing ensures that a node does not run any resources. This is done by resetting the node and the Pacemaker implementation of it is called STONITH (which stands for “shoot the other node in the head”). Pacemaker supports a great variety of fencing devices, e.g. an uninterruptible power supply or management interface cards for servers.

Because the node level fencing configuration depends heavily on your environment, we will disable it for this tutorial.

  1. sudo pcs property set stonith-enabled=false

Note: If you plan to use Pacemaker in a production environment, you should plan a STONITH implementation depending on your environment and keep it enabled.

What is Quorum?

A cluster has quorum when more than half of the nodes are online. Pacemaker’s default behavior is to stop all resources if the cluster does not have quorum. However, this does not make sense in a two-node cluster; the cluster will lose quorum if one node fails.

For this tutorial, we will tell Pacemaker to ignore quorum by setting the no-quorum-policy:

  1. sudo pcs property set no-quorum-policy=ignore

Step 7 — Configuring the Virtual IP address

From now on, we will interact with the cluster via the pcs shell, so all commands need only be executed on one host; it doesn’t matter which one.

The Pacemaker cluster is now up and running and we can add the first resource to it, which is the virtual IP address. To do this, we will configure the ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2 resource agent, but first, let’s cover some terminology.

Every resource agent name has either three or two fields that are separated by a colon:

  • The first field is the resource class, which is the standard the resource agent conforms to. It also tells Pacemaker where to find the script. The IPaddr2 resource agent conforms to the OCF (Open Cluster Framework) standard.

  • The second field depends on the standard. OCF resources use the second field for the OCF namespace.

  • The third field is the name of the resource agent.

Resources can have meta-attributes and instance attributes. Meta-attributes do not depend on the resource type; instance attributes are resource agent-specific. The only required instance attribute of this resource agent is ip (the virtual IP address), but for the sake of explicitness we will also set cidr_netmask (the subnetmask in CIDR notation).

Resource operations are actions the cluster can perform on a resource (e.g. start, stop, monitor). They are indicated by the keyword op. We will add the monitor operation with an interval of 20 seconds so that the cluster checks every 20 seconds if the resource is still healthy. What’s considered healthy depends on the resource agent.

First, we will create the virtual IP address resource. Here, we’ll use 127.0.0.2 as our virtual IP and Cluster_VIP for the name of the resource.

  1. sudo pcs resource create Cluster_VIP ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2 ip=127.0.0.2 cidr_netmask=24 op monitor interval=20s

Next, check the status of the resource.

  1. sudo pcs status

Look for the following line in the output:

Output
...
Full list of resources:

 Cluster_VIP	(ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2):	Started webnode01
...

The virtual IP address is active on the host webnode01.

Step 8 — Adding the Apache Resource

Now we can add the second resource to the cluster, which will the Apache service. The resource agent of the service is ocf:heartbeat:apache.

We will name the resource WebServer and set the instance attributes configfile (the location of the Apache configuration file) and statusurl (the URL of the Apache server status page). We will choose a monitor interval of 20 seconds again.

  1. sudo pcs resource create WebServer ocf:heartbeat:apache configfile=/etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf statusurl="http://127.0.0.1/server-status" op monitor interval=20s

We can query the status of the resource like before.

  1. sudo pcs status

You should see WebServer in the output running on webnode02.

Output
...
Full list of resources:

 Cluster_VIP	(ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2):	Started webnode01
 WebServer	(ocf::heartbeat:apache):	Started webnode02
...

As you can see, the resources run on different hosts. We did not yet tell Pacemaker that these resources must run on the same host, so they are evenly distributed across the nodes.

Note: You can restart the Apache resource by running sudo pcs resource restart WebServer (e.g. if you change the Apache configuration). Make sure not to use systemctl to manage the Apache service.

Step 9 — Configuring Colocation Constraints

Almost every decision in a Pacemaker cluster, like choosing where a resource should run, is done by comparing scores. Scores are calculated per resource, and the cluster resource manager chooses the node with the highest score for a particular resource. (If a node has a negative score for a resource, the resource cannot run on that node.)

We can manipulate the decisions of the cluster with constraints. Constraints have a score. If a constraint has a score lower than INFINITY, it is only a recommendation. A score of INFINITY means it is a must.

We want to ensure that both resources are run on the same host, so we will define a colocation constraint with a score of INFINITY.

  1. sudo pcs constraint colocation add WebServer Cluster_VIP INFINITY

The order of the resources in the constraint definition is important. Here, we specify that the Apache resource (WebServer) must run on the same hosts the virtual IP (Cluster_VIP) is active on. This also means that WebSite is not permitted to run anywhere if Cluster_VIP is not active.

It is also possible to define in which order the resources should run by creating ordering constraints or to prefer certain hosts for some resources by creating location constraints.

Verify that both resources run on the same host.

  1. sudo pcs status
Output
...
Full list of resources:

 Cluster_VIP	(ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2):	Started webnode01
 WebServer	(ocf::heartbeat:apache):	Started webnode01
...

Both resources are now on webnode01.

Conclusion

You have set up an Apache two node active-passive cluster which is accessible by the virtual IP address. You can now configure Apache further, but make sure to synchronize the configuration across the hosts. You can write a custom script for this (e.g. with rsync) or you can use something like csync2.

If you want to distribute the files of your web application among the hosts, you can set up a DRBD volume and integrate it with Pacemaker.

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About the authors

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staff technical writer

hi! i write do.co/docs now, but i used to be the senior tech editor publishing tutorials here in the community.


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I successful created a working cluster using the steps, it was explained well.

My only problem is the Apache WebServer doesn’t work there is no status page at the virtual IP 127.0.0.1 maybe I’m not understanding how it works. The status page at /etc/httpd/conf.d/status.conf was made. I even restarted Apache using the suggested command and not systemctl.

Anyone around in 2019 who can give me some hints?

edit: Why is there a warning to not uses systemctl to manage Apache/httpd? I noticed after writing the above Apache service is not started systemctl status httpd “vendor preset: disabled”. I used “sudo pcs resource restart WebServer” to restart it but the httpd service won’t start.

edit 2: I think it’s OK, I see now the WebServer runs on the active node. A “pcs status” shows the active node and that node is the one where you can view the website. I guess sort of like NIC Team or Round Robin where the two nodes alternately take the load. Or like the title at the top says Active-Passive cluster. Doh!

Hazel Virdó excellent tutorial congratulations, but when working with virtual host and adding this line “IncludeOptional sites-enabled / * .conf” to /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf the WebServer resource stops. Can you please help me solve it?

Thank you

Hey , Thanks for this tutorial.As we have setup a 2 node cluster now , could you please also explain (in the same way) how to test it in detail ?

at first i my 2 nodes were online.after i did sudo pcs property set no-quorum-policy=ignore only one node is online.can anyone plz help me

How to test failover?

hello, i have problem when i try to create virtual IP with IPv6, this is my command :

pcs resource create Cluster_VIP ocf:heartbeat:IPv6addr ipv6addr=2404:6d00:1:172:x:x::x cidr_netmask=112 op monitor interval=20s

and error : error:unable to create resource ‘ocf:heartbeat:IPv6addr’ it is not installed on this system.

can you help me please, to solve this problem. thanks.

Can u plz tell me how to configure yum in centos7!!! ?? I’ve tried it so many times but failing miserably !! Thank you

Hello, This was a really good tutorial, although I have noticed that the output of pcs status does not say full list of resources anymore, it shows “no resources!” if you haven’t added any yet.

To my question, now that i have both nodes clustered, shouldn’t I be able to see the apache welcome page “It works!” when I open the virtual IP in a browser?

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