corrected errors in statuses.rst Change-Id: I906277408aac8a7b33f4a33465525ebf0423bc0c Closes-Bug: #1386404
4.2 KiB
Sahara Cluster Statuses Overview
All Sahara Cluster operations are performed in multiple steps. A
Cluster object has a Status
attribute which changes when
Sahara finishes one step of operations and starts another one.
- Sahara supports three types of Cluster operations:
-
- Create a new Cluster
- Scale/Shrink an existing Cluster
- Delete an existing Cluster
Creating a new Cluster
1. Validating
Before performing any operations with OpenStack environment, Sahara validates user input.
- There are two types of validations, that are done:
-
- Check that a request contains all necessary fields and that the request does not violate
- any constraints like unique naming, etc.
-
- Plugin check (optional). The provisioning Plugin may also perform any specific checks like Cluster topology validation.
If any of the validations fails, the Cluster will still be kept in
the database with an Error
status.
2. InfraUpdating
This status means that the Provisioning plugin performs some infrastructural updates.
3. Spawning
- Sahara sends requests to OpenStack for all resources to be created:
-
- VMs
- Volumes
- Floating IPs (if Sahara is configured to use Floating IPs)
It takes some time for OpenStack to schedule all the required VMs and
Volumes, so Sahara will wait until all of them are in an
Active
state.
4. Waiting
Sahara waits while VMs' operating systems boot up and all internal infrastructure components like networks and volumes are attached and ready to use.
5. Preparing
Sahara prepares a Cluster for starting. This step includes generating
the /etc/hosts
file, so that all instances can access each
other by a hostname. Also Sahara updates the
authorized_keys
file on each VM, so that communication can
be done without passwords.
6. Configuring
Sahara pushes service configurations to VMs. Both XML based configurations and environmental variables are set on this step.
7. Starting
Sahara is starting Hadoop services on Cluster's VMs.
8. Active
Active status means that a Cluster has started successfully and is ready to run Jobs.
Scaling/Shrinking an existing Cluster
1. Validating
Sahara checks the scale/shrink request for validity. The Plugin method called for performing Plugin specific checks is different from creation validation method.
2. Scaling
Sahara performs database operations updating all affected existing Node Groups and creating new ones.
3. Adding Instances
State similar to Spawning
while Custer creation. Sahara
adds required amount of VMs to existing Node Groups and creates new Node
Groups.
4. Configuring
State similar to Configuring
while Cluster creation. New
instances are being configured in the same manner as already existing
ones. Existing Cluster VMs are also updated with a new
/etc/hosts
file.
5. Decommissioning
Sahara stops Hadoop services on VMs that will be deleted from a Cluster. Decommissioning a Data Node may take some time because Hadoop rearranges data replicas around the Cluster, so that no data will be lost after that VM is deleted.
6. Deleting Instances
- Sahara sends requests to OpenStack to release unneeded resources:
-
- VMs
- Volumes
- Floating IPs (if they are used)
7. Active
The same Active
as after Cluster creation.
Deleting an existing Cluster
1. Deleting
The only step, that releases all Cluster's resources and removes it from the database.
Error State
If the Cluster creation fails, the Cluster will get into an
Error
state. This state means the Cluster may not be able
to perform any operations normally. This cluster will stay in the
database until it is manually deleted. The reason for failure may be
found in the Sahara logs.
If an error occurs during the Adding Instances
operation, Sahara will first try to rollback this operation. If a
rollback is impossible or fails itself, then the Cluster will also go
into an Error
state.