This article describes how to create a three-node cluster on Linux using Pacemaker, and add a previously created availability group as a resource in the cluster. For high availability, an availability group on Linux requires three nodes - see High availability and data protection for availability group configurations.
SQL Server isn't as tightly integrated with Pacemaker on Linux as it is with Windows Server failover clustering (WSFC). A SQL Server instance isn't aware of the cluster, and all orchestration is from the outside in. Pacemaker provides cluster resource orchestration. Also, the virtual network name is specific to Windows Server failover clustering; there's no equivalent in Pacemaker. Availability group dynamic management views (DMVs) that query cluster information return empty rows on Pacemaker clusters. To create a listener for transparent reconnection after failover, manually register the listener name in DNS with the IP used to create the virtual IP resource.
The following sections walk through the steps to set up a Pacemaker cluster and add an availability group as resource in the cluster for high availability, for each supported Linux distribution.
The clustering layer is based on Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) HA add-on built on top of Pacemaker.
Note
Access to Red Hat full documentation requires a valid subscription.
For more information on cluster configuration, resource agents options, and management, visit RHEL reference documentation.
Roadmap
The steps to create an availability group on Linux servers for high availability are different from the steps on a Windows Server failover cluster. The following list describes the high-level steps:
Configure SQL Server on the cluster nodes.
Create the availability group.
Configure a cluster resource manager, like Pacemaker. These instructions are in this article.
The way to configure a cluster resource manager depends on the specific Linux distribution.
Important
Production environments require a fencing agent for high availability. The demonstrations in this documentation don't use fencing agents. The demonstrations are for testing and validation only.
A Linux cluster uses fencing to return the cluster to a known state. The way to configure fencing depends on the distribution and the environment. Currently, fencing isn't available in some cloud environments. For more information, see Support Policies for RHEL High Availability Clusters - Virtualization Platforms.
Add the availability group as a resource in the cluster.
To configure high availability for RHEL, enable the high availability subscription and then configure Pacemaker.
Enable the high availability subscription for RHEL
Each node in the cluster must have an appropriate subscription for RHEL and the High Availability Add on. Review the requirements at How to install High Availability cluster packages in Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Follow these steps to configure the subscription and repos:
Register the system.
sudo subscription-manager register
Provide your user name and password.
List the available pools for registration.
sudo subscription-manager list --available
From the list of available pools, note the pool ID for the high availability subscription.
Update the following script. Replace <pool id>
with the pool ID for high availability from the preceding step. Run the script to attach the subscription.
sudo subscription-manager attach --pool=<pool id>
Enable the repository.
RHEL 7
sudo subscription-manager repos --enable=rhel-ha-for-rhel-7-server-rpms
RHEL 8
sudo subscription-manager repos --enable=rhel-8-for-x86_64-highavailability-rpms
For more information, see Pacemaker - The Open Source, High Availability Cluster.
After you have configured the subscription, complete the following steps to configure Pacemaker:
After you register the subscription, complete the following steps to configure Pacemaker:
On all cluster nodes, open the Pacemaker firewall ports. To open these ports with firewalld
, run the following command:
sudo firewall-cmd --permanent --add-service=high-availability
sudo firewall-cmd --reload
If the firewall doesn't have a built-in high-availability configuration, open the following ports for Pacemaker.
- TCP: Ports 2224, 3121, 21064
- UDP: Port 5405
Install Pacemaker packages on all nodes.
sudo yum install pacemaker pcs fence-agents-all resource-agents
Set the password for the default user that is created when installing Pacemaker and Corosync packages. Use the same password on all nodes.
sudo passwd hacluster
To allow nodes to rejoin the cluster after the restart, enable and start pcsd
service and Pacemaker. Run the following command on all nodes.
sudo systemctl enable pcsd
sudo systemctl start pcsd
sudo systemctl enable pacemaker
Create the Cluster. To create the cluster, run the following command:
RHEL 7
sudo pcs cluster auth <node1> <node2> <node3> -u hacluster -p <password for hacluster>
sudo pcs cluster setup --name <clusterName> <node1> <node2> <node3>
sudo pcs cluster start --all
sudo pcs cluster enable --all
RHEL 8
For RHEL 8, you need to authenticate the nodes separately. Manually enter in the username and password for hacluster
when prompted.
sudo pcs host auth <node1> <node2> <node3>
sudo pcs cluster setup <clusterName> <node1> <node2> <node3>
sudo pcs cluster start --all
sudo pcs cluster enable --all
Note
If you previously configured a cluster on the same nodes, you need to use --force
option when running pcs cluster setup
. This option is equivalent to running pcs cluster destroy
. To re-enable Pacemaker, run sudo systemctl enable pacemaker
.
Install SQL Server resource agent for SQL Server. Run the following commands on all nodes.
sudo yum install mssql-server-ha
After Pacemaker is configured, use pcs
to interact with the cluster. Execute all commands on one node from the cluster.
Considerations for multiple network interfaces (NICs)
When setting up high availability with servers that have multiple NICs, follow these suggestions:
Make sure the hosts
file is set up so that the server IP addresses for the multiple NICs resolve to the hostname of the Linux server on each node.
When setting up the cluster using Pacemaker, using the hostname of the servers should configure Corosync to set the configuration for all of the NICs. We only want the Pacemaker/Corosync communication over a single NIC. Once the Pacemaker cluster is configured, modify the configuration in the corosync.conf
file, and update the IP address for the dedicated NIC you want to use for the Pacemaker/Corosync communication.
The <hostname>
given in the corosync.conf
file should be the same as the output given when doing a reverse lookup (ping -a <ip_address>
), and should be the short name configured on the host. Make sure the hosts
file also represents the proper IP address to name resolution.
The changes to the corosync.conf
file example are highlighted below:
nodelist {
node {
ring0_addr: <ip_address_of_node1_NIC1>
name: <hostname_of_node1>
nodeid: 1
}
node {
ring0_addr: <ip_address_of_node2_NIC1>
name: <hostname_of_node2>
nodeid: 2
}
node {
ring0_addr: <ip_address_of_node3_NIC1>
name: <hostname_of_node3>
nodeid: 3
}
}
Pacemaker cluster vendors require fencing a failed node, using a fencing device configured for a supported cluster setup. When the cluster resource manager can't determine the state of a node or of a resource on a node, fencing brings the cluster to a known state again.
A fencing device provides a fencing agent. Setting up Pacemaker on Red Hat Enterprise Linux in Azure provides an example of how to create a fencing device for this cluster in Azure. Modify the instructions for your environment.
Resource level fencing ensures that there's no data corruption in an outage by configuring a resource. For example, you can use resource level fencing to mark the disk on a node as outdated when the communication link goes down.
Node level fencing ensures that a node doesn't run any resources. This is done by resetting the node. Pacemaker supports a great variety of fencing devices. Examples include an uninterruptible power supply or management interface cards for servers.
For information about fencing a failed node, see the following articles:
Note
Because the node level fencing configuration depends heavily on your environment, disable it for this tutorial (it can be configured later). The following script disables node level fencing:
sudo pcs property set stonith-enabled=false
Disabling fencing is just for testing purposes. If you plan to use Pacemaker in a production environment, you should plan a fencing implementation depending on your environment and keep it enabled.
Set cluster property cluster-recheck-interval
cluster-recheck-interval
indicates the polling interval at which the cluster checks for changes in the resource parameters, constraints, or other cluster options. If a replica goes down, the cluster tries to restart the replica at an interval that is bound by the failure-timeout
value and the cluster-recheck-interval
value. For example, if failure-timeout
is set to 60 seconds and cluster-recheck-interval
is set to 120 seconds, the restart is tried at an interval that is greater than 60 seconds but less than 120 seconds. We recommend that you set failure-timeout to 60 seconds and cluster-recheck-interval
to a value that is greater than 60 seconds. Setting cluster-recheck-interval
to a small value isn't recommended.
To update the property value to 2 minutes
run:
sudo pcs property set cluster-recheck-interval=2min
If you already have an availability group resource managed by a Pacemaker cluster, Pacemaker package 1.1.18-11.el7 introduced a behavior change for the start-failure-is-fatal
cluster setting when its value is false
. This change affects the failover workflow. If a primary replica experiences an outage, the cluster is expected to fail over to one of the available secondary replicas. Instead, users notice that the cluster keeps trying to start the failed primary replica. If that primary never comes online (because of a permanent outage), the cluster never fails over to another available secondary replica. Because of this change, a previously recommended configuration to set start-failure-is-fatal
is no longer valid, and the setting needs to be reverted back to its default value of true
.
Additionally, the AG resource needs to be updated to include the failure-timeout
property.
To update the property value to true
run:
sudo pcs property set start-failure-is-fatal=true
To update the ag_cluster
resource property failure-timeout
to 60s
, run:
pcs resource update ag_cluster meta failure-timeout=60s
For information on Pacemaker cluster properties, see Pacemaker Clusters Properties.
Create a SQL Server login for Pacemaker
Caution
Your password should follow the SQL Server default password policy. By default, the password must be at least eight characters long and contain characters from three of the following four sets: uppercase letters, lowercase letters, base-10 digits, and symbols. Passwords can be up to 128 characters long. Use passwords that are as long and complex as possible.
On all SQL Server instances, create a server login for Pacemaker.
The following Transact-SQL creates a login. Replace <password>
with your own complex password.
USE [master];
GO
CREATE LOGIN [pacemakerLogin]
WITH PASSWORD = N'<password>';
ALTER SERVER ROLE [sysadmin] ADD MEMBER [pacemakerLogin];
At the time of availability group creation, the Pacemaker user requires ALTER
, CONTROL
, and VIEW DEFINITION
permissions on the availability group, after it's created but before any nodes are added to it.
On all SQL Server instances, save the credentials for the SQL Server login.
Replace <password>
with your own complex password.
echo 'pacemakerLogin' >> ~/pacemaker-passwd
echo '<password>' >> ~/pacemaker-passwd
sudo mv ~/pacemaker-passwd /var/opt/mssql/secrets/passwd
sudo chown root:root /var/opt/mssql/secrets/passwd
sudo chmod 400 /var/opt/mssql/secrets/passwd # Only readable by root
Create availability group resource
To create the availability group resource, use pcs resource create
command and set the resource properties. The following command creates a ocf:mssql:ag
master/subordinate type resource for availability group with name ag1
.
RHEL 7
sudo pcs resource create ag_cluster ocf:mssql:ag ag_name=ag1 meta failure-timeout=60s master notify=true
RHEL 8
With the availability of RHEL 8, the create syntax has changed. If you use RHEL 8, the terminology master
has changed to promotable
. Use the following create command instead of the above command:
sudo pcs resource create ag_cluster ocf:mssql:ag ag_name=ag1 meta failure-timeout=60s promotable notify=true
Note
When you create the resource, and periodically afterwards, the Pacemaker resource agent automatically sets the value of REQUIRED_SYNCHRONIZED_SECONDARIES_TO_COMMIT
on the availability group based on the availability group's configuration. For example, if the availability group has three synchronous replicas, the agent will set REQUIRED_SYNCHRONIZED_SECONDARIES_TO_COMMIT
to 1
. For details and additional configuration options, see High availability and data protection for availability group configurations.
Create virtual IP resource
To create the virtual IP address resource, run the following command on one node. Use an available static IP address from the network. Replace the IP address between <10.128.16.240>
with a valid IP address.
sudo pcs resource create virtualip ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2 ip=<10.128.16.240>
There's no virtual server name equivalent in Pacemaker. To use a connection string that points to a string server name instead of an IP address, register the virtual IP resource address and desired virtual server name in DNS. For DR configurations, register the desired virtual server name and IP address with the DNS servers on both primary and DR site.
Add colocation constraint
Almost every decision in a Pacemaker cluster, like choosing where a resource should run, is done by comparing scores. Scores are calculated per resource. 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 can't run on that node.
On a pacemaker cluster, you can manipulate the decisions of the cluster with constraints. Constraints have a score. If a constraint has a score lower than INFINITY
, Pacemaker regards it as recommendation. A score of INFINITY
is mandatory.
To ensure that primary replica and the virtual ip resources run on the same host, define a colocation constraint with a score of INFINITY. To add the colocation constraint, run the following command on one node.
RHEL 7
When you create the ag_cluster
resource in RHEL 7, it creates the resource as ag_cluster-master
. Use the following command for RHEL 7:
sudo pcs constraint colocation add virtualip ag_cluster-master INFINITY with-rsc-role=Master
RHEL 8
When you create the ag_cluster
resource in RHEL 8, it creates the resource as ag_cluster-clone
. Use the following command for RHEL 8:
sudo pcs constraint colocation add virtualip with master ag_cluster-clone INFINITY with-rsc-role=Master
Add ordering constraint
The colocation constraint has an implicit ordering constraint. It moves the virtual IP resource before it moves the availability group resource. By default the sequence of events is:
User issues pcs resource move
to the availability group primary from node1 to node2.
The virtual IP resource stops on node 1.
The virtual IP resource starts on node 2.
Note
At this point, the IP address temporarily points to node 2 while node 2 is still a pre-failover secondary.
The availability group primary on node 1 is demoted to secondary.
The availability group secondary on node 2 is promoted to primary.
To prevent the IP address from temporarily pointing to the node with the pre-failover secondary, add an ordering constraint.
To add an ordering constraint, run the following command on one node:
RHEL 7
sudo pcs constraint order promote ag_cluster-master then start virtualip
RHEL 8
sudo pcs constraint order promote ag_cluster-clone then start virtualip
Important
After you configure the cluster and add the availability group as a cluster resource, you can't use Transact-SQL to fail over the availability group resources. SQL Server cluster resources on Linux aren't coupled as tightly with the operating system as they are on a Windows Server Failover Cluster (WSFC). SQL Server service isn't aware of the presence of the cluster. All orchestration is done through the cluster management tools. In RHEL or Ubuntu use pcs
and in SLES use crm
tools.
Manually fail over the availability group with pcs
. Don't initiate failover with Transact-SQL. For instructions, see Failover.
Related content
The clustering layer is based on SUSE High Availability Extension (HAE) built on top of Pacemaker.
For more information on cluster configuration, resource agent options, management, best practices, and recommendations, see SUSE Linux Enterprise High Availability Extension.
Roadmap
The procedure for creating an availability group for high availability differs between Linux servers and a Windows Server failover cluster. The following list describes the high-level steps:
Configure SQL Server on the cluster nodes.
Create the availability group.
Configure a cluster resource manager, like Pacemaker. These instructions are in this article.
The way to configure a cluster resource manager depends on the specific Linux distribution.
Important
Production environments require a fencing agent for high availability. The examples in this article don't use fencing agents. They are for testing and validation only.
A Linux cluster uses fencing to return the cluster to a known state. The way to configure fencing depends on the distribution and the environment. Currently, fencing isn't available in some cloud environments. For more information, see SUSE Linux Enterprise High Availability Extension.
Add the availability group as a resource in the cluster
Prerequisites
To complete the following end-to-end scenario, you need three machines to deploy the three nodes cluster. The following steps outline how to configure these servers.
The first step is to configure the operating system on the cluster nodes. For this walk through, use SLES 12 SP3 with a valid subscription for the HA add-on.
Install and setup SQL Server service on all nodes. For detailed instructions, see Installation guidance for SQL Server on Linux.
Designate one node as primary and other nodes as secondaries. Use these terms throughout this guide.
Make sure nodes that are going to be part of the cluster can communicate with each other.
The following example shows /etc/hosts
with additions for three nodes named SLES1, SLES2, and SLES3.
127.0.0.1 localhost
10.128.16.33 SLES1
10.128.16.77 SLES2
10.128.16.22 SLES3
All cluster nodes must be able to access each other via SSH. Tools like hb_report
or crm_report
(for troubleshooting) and Hawk's History Explorer require passwordless SSH access between the nodes, otherwise they can only collect data from the current node. In case you use a non-standard SSH port, use the -X option (see man
page). For example, if your SSH port is 3479, invoke a crm_report
with:
sudo crm_report -X "-p 3479" [...]
For more information, see the SLES Administration Guide - Miscellaneous section.
Create a SQL Server login for Pacemaker
Caution
Your password should follow the SQL Server default password policy. By default, the password must be at least eight characters long and contain characters from three of the following four sets: uppercase letters, lowercase letters, base-10 digits, and symbols. Passwords can be up to 128 characters long. Use passwords that are as long and complex as possible.
On all SQL Server instances, create a server login for Pacemaker.
The following Transact-SQL creates a login. Replace <password>
with your own complex password.
USE [master];
GO
CREATE LOGIN [pacemakerLogin]
WITH PASSWORD = N'<password>';
ALTER SERVER ROLE [sysadmin] ADD MEMBER [pacemakerLogin];
At the time of availability group creation, the Pacemaker user requires ALTER
, CONTROL
, and VIEW DEFINITION
permissions on the availability group, after it's created but before any nodes are added to it.
On all SQL Server instances, save the credentials for the SQL Server login.
Replace <password>
with your own complex password.
echo 'pacemakerLogin' >> ~/pacemaker-passwd
echo '<password>' >> ~/pacemaker-passwd
sudo mv ~/pacemaker-passwd /var/opt/mssql/secrets/passwd
sudo chown root:root /var/opt/mssql/secrets/passwd
sudo chmod 400 /var/opt/mssql/secrets/passwd # Only readable by root
On Linux servers, configure the availability group and then configure the cluster resources. To configure the availability group, see Configure SQL Server Always On Availability Group for high availability on Linux
Install the High Availability extension
For reference, see Installing SUSE Linux Enterprise Server and High Availability Extension.
Install SQL Server resource agent package on both nodes.
sudo zypper install mssql-server-ha
Set up the first node
Refer to SLES installation instructions.
Sign in as root
to the physical or virtual machine you want to use as cluster node.
Start the bootstrap script by executing:
sudo ha-cluster-init
If NTP hasn't been configured to start at boot time, a message appears.
If you decide to continue anyway, the script automatically generates keys for SSH access and the Csync2 synchronization tool, and starts the services needed for both.
To configure the cluster communication layer (Corosync):
Enter a network address to bind to. By default, the script proposes the network address of eth0. Alternatively, enter a different network address, for example the address of bond0.
Enter a multicast address. The script proposes a random address that you can use as default.
Enter a multicast port. The script proposes 5405 as default.
To configure SBD ()
, enter a persistent path to the partition of your block device that you want to use for SBD. The path must be consistent across all nodes in the cluster.
Finally, the script will start the Pacemaker service to bring the one-node cluster online and enable the Web management interface Hawk2. The URL to use for Hawk2 is displayed on the screen.
For any details of the setup process, check /var/log/sleha-bootstrap.log
. You now have a running one-node cluster. Check the cluster status with crm status:
sudo crm status
You can also see cluster configuration with crm configure show xml
or crm configure show
.
The bootstrap procedure creates a Linux user named hacluster
with the password linux
. Replace the default password with a secure one as soon as possible:
sudo passwd hacluster
Add nodes to the existing cluster
If you have a cluster running with one or more nodes, add more cluster nodes with the ha-cluster-join bootstrap script. The script only needs access to an existing cluster node and will complete the basic setup on the current machine automatically. Use the following steps:
If you have configured the existing cluster nodes with the YaST
cluster module, make sure the following prerequisites are fulfilled before you run ha-cluster-join
:
The root user on the existing nodes has SSH keys in place for passwordless login.
Csync2
is configured on the existing nodes. For more information, see Configuring Csync2 with YaST.
Sign in as root
to the physical or virtual machine supposed to join the cluster.
Start the bootstrap script by executing:
sudo ha-cluster-join
If NTP hasn't been configured to start at boot time, a message appears.
If you decide to continue anyway, you're prompted for the IP address of an existing node. Enter the IP address.
If you haven't already configured a passwordless SSH access between both machines, you're also prompted for the root password of the existing node.
After logging in to the specified node, the script copies the Corosync configuration, configures SSH and Csync2
, and brings the current machine online as new cluster node. Apart from that, it starts the service needed for Hawk. If you have configured shared storage with OCFS2
, it also automatically creates the mountpoint directory for the OCFS2
file system.
Repeat the previous steps for all machines you want to add to the cluster.
For details of the process, check /var/log/ha-cluster-bootstrap.log
.
Check the cluster status with sudo crm status
. If you have successfully added a second node, the output is similar to the following:
sudo crm status
You see output similar to the following example.
3 nodes configured
1 resource configured
Online: [ SLES1 SLES2 SLES3]
Full list of resources:
admin_addr (ocf::heartbeat:IPaddr2): Started node1
Note
admin_addr
is the virtual IP cluster resource which is configured during initial one-node cluster setup.
After adding all nodes, check if you need to adjust the no-quorum-policy in the global cluster options. This is especially important for two-node clusters.
Set cluster property cluster-recheck-interval
cluster-recheck-interval
indicates the polling interval at which the cluster checks for changes in the resource parameters, constraints, or other cluster options. If a replica goes down, the cluster tries to restart the replica at an interval that is bound by the failure-timeout
value and the cluster-recheck-interval
value. For example, if failure-timeout
is set to 60 seconds and cluster-recheck-interval
is set to 120 seconds, the restart is tried at an interval that is greater than 60 seconds but less than 120 seconds. We recommend that you set failure-timeout to 60 seconds and cluster-recheck-interval
to a value that is greater than 60 seconds. Setting cluster-recheck-interval
to a small value isn't recommended.
To update the property value to 2 minutes
run:
crm configure property cluster-recheck-interval=2min
If you already have an availability group resource managed by a Pacemaker cluster, Pacemaker package 1.1.18-11.el7 introduced a behavior change for the start-failure-is-fatal
cluster setting when its value is false
. This change affects the failover workflow. If a primary replica experiences an outage, the cluster is expected to fail over to one of the available secondary replicas. Instead, users notice that the cluster keeps trying to start the failed primary replica. If that primary never comes online (because of a permanent outage), the cluster never fails over to another available secondary replica. Because of this change, a previously recommended configuration to set start-failure-is-fatal
is no longer valid, and the setting needs to be reverted back to its default value of true
.
Additionally, the AG resource needs to be updated to include the failure-timeout
property.
To update the property value to true
run:
crm configure property start-failure-is-fatal=true
Update your existing AG resource property failure-timeout
to 60s
run (replace ag1
with the name of your availability group resource):
crm configure edit ag1
In the text editor, add meta failure-timeout=60s
after any param
s and before any op
s.
For more information on Pacemaker cluster properties, see Configuring Cluster Resources.
Considerations for multiple network interfaces (NICs)
When setting up high availability with servers that have multiple NICs, follow these suggestions:
Make sure the hosts
file is set up so that the server IP addresses for the multiple NICs resolve to the hostname of the Linux server on each node.
When setting up the cluster using Pacemaker, using the hostname of the servers should configure Corosync to set the configuration for all of the NICs. We only want the Pacemaker/Corosync communication over a single NIC. Once the Pacemaker cluster is configured, modify the configuration in the corosync.conf
file, and update the IP address for the dedicated NIC you want to use for the Pacemaker/Corosync communication.
The <hostname>
given in the corosync.conf
file should be the same as the output given when doing a reverse lookup (ping -a <ip_address>
), and should be the short name configured on the host. Make sure the hosts
file also represents the proper IP address to name resolution.
The changes to the corosync.conf
file example are highlighted below:
nodelist {
node {
ring0_addr: <ip_address_of_node1_NIC1>
name: <hostname_of_node1>
nodeid: 1
}
node {
ring0_addr: <ip_address_of_node2_NIC1>
name: <hostname_of_node2>
nodeid: 2
}
node {
ring0_addr: <ip_address_of_node3_NIC1>
name: <hostname_of_node3>
nodeid: 3
}
}
Pacemaker cluster vendors require fencing a failed node, using a fencing device configured for a supported cluster setup. When the cluster resource manager can't determine the state of a node or of a resource on a node, fencing brings the cluster to a known state again.
Resource level fencing ensures mainly that there's no data corruption during 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 doesn't run any resources. This is done by resetting the node, and the Pacemaker implementation is called STONITH. Pacemaker supports a great variety of fencing devices, such as an uninterruptible power supply or management interface cards for servers.
For more information, see:
At cluster initialization time, fencing is disabled if no configuration is detected. It can be enabled later by running following command:
sudo crm configure property stonith-enabled=true
Important
Disabling fencing is just for testing purposes. If you plan to use Pacemaker in a production environment, you should plan a fencing implementation depending on your environment and keep it enabled. SUSE doesn't provide fencing agents for any cloud environments (including Azure) or Hyper-V. Consequentially, the cluster vendor doesn't offer support for running production clusters in these environments. We are working on a solution for this gap that will be available in future releases.
Refer to the SLES Administration Guide.
Enable Pacemaker
Enable Pacemaker so that it automatically starts.
Run the following command on every node in the cluster.
systemctl enable pacemaker
Create availability group resource
The following command creates and configures the availability group resource for three replicas of availability group [ag1]. The monitor operations and timeouts have to be specified explicitly in SLES based on the fact that timeouts are highly workload-dependent and need to be carefully adjusted for each deployment.
Run the command on one of the nodes in the cluster:
Run crm configure
to open the crm prompt:
sudo crm configure
In the crm prompt, run the following command to configure the resource properties.
primitive ag_cluster \
ocf:mssql:ag \
params ag_name="ag1" \
meta failure-timeout=60s \
op start timeout=60s \
op stop timeout=60s \
op promote timeout=60s \
op demote timeout=10s \
op monitor timeout=60s interval=10s \
op monitor timeout=60s interval=11s role="Master" \
op monitor timeout=60s interval=12s role="Slave" \
op notify timeout=60s
ms ms-ag_cluster ag_cluster \
meta master-max="1" master-node-max="1" clone-max="3" \
clone-node-max="1" notify="true" \
commit
Note
When you create the resource, and periodically afterwards, the Pacemaker resource agent automatically sets the value of REQUIRED_SYNCHRONIZED_SECONDARIES_TO_COMMIT
on the availability group based on the availability group's configuration. For example, if the availability group has three synchronous replicas, the agent will set REQUIRED_SYNCHRONIZED_SECONDARIES_TO_COMMIT
to 1
. For details and additional configuration options, see High availability and data protection for availability group configurations.
Create virtual IP resource
If you didn't create the virtual IP resource when you ran ha-cluster-init
, you can create this resource now. The following command creates a virtual IP resource. Replace <0.0.0.0>
with an available address from your network and <24>
with the number of bits in the CIDR subnet mask. Run on one node.
crm configure \
primitive admin_addr \
ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2 \
params ip=<0.0.0.0> \
cidr_netmask=<24>
Add colocation constraint
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 can't 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's only a recommendation. A score of INFINITY means it's a must. We want to ensure that primary of the availability group and the virtual ip resource are run on the same host, so we define a colocation constraint with a score of INFINITY.
To set colocation constraint for the virtual IP to run on same node as the primary node, run the following command on one node:
crm configure
colocation vip_on_master inf: \
admin_addr ms-ag_cluster:Master
commit
Add ordering constraint
The colocation constraint has an implicit ordering constraint. It moves the virtual IP resource before it moves the availability group resource. By default the sequence of events is:
- User issues
resource migrate
to the availability group primary from node1 to node2.
- The virtual IP resource stops on node 1.
- The virtual IP resource starts on node 2. At this point, the IP address temporarily points to node 2 while node 2 is still a pre-failover secondary.
- The availability group master on node 1 is demoted.
- The availability group on node 2 is promoted to master.
To prevent the IP address from temporarily pointing to the node with the pre-failover secondary, add an ordering constraint.
To add an ordering constraint, run the following command on one node:
sudo crm configure \
order ag_first inf: ms-ag_cluster:promote admin_addr:start
Important
After you configure the cluster and add the availability group as a cluster resource, you can't use Transact-SQL to fail over the availability group resources. SQL Server cluster resources on Linux aren't coupled as tightly with the operating system as they are on a Windows Server Failover Cluster (WSFC). SQL Server service isn't aware of the presence of the cluster. All orchestration is done through the cluster management tools. In SLES use crm
.
Manually fail over the availability group with crm
. Don't initiate failover with Transact-SQL. For more information, see Failover.
For more information, see:
Related content
Roadmap
The steps to create an availability group on Linux servers for high availability are different from the steps on a Windows Server failover cluster. The following list describes the high-level steps:
Installation guidance for SQL Server on Linux.
Configure SQL Server Always On Availability Group for high availability on Linux.
Configure a cluster resource manager, like Pacemaker. These instructions are in this article.
The way to configure a cluster resource manager depends on the specific Linux distribution.
Important
Production environments require a fencing agent for high availability. The examples in this article don't use fencing agents. They are for testing and validation only.
A Linux cluster uses fencing to return the cluster to a known state. The way to configure fencing depends on the distribution and the environment. Currently, fencing isn't available in some cloud environments.
Fencing is normally implemented at the operating system and is dependent on the environment. Find instructions for fencing in the operating system distributor documentation.
Add the availability group as a resource in the cluster.
On all nodes, open the firewall ports. Open the port for the Pacemaker high-availability service, SQL Server instance, and the availability group endpoint. The default TCP port for server running SQL Server is 1433
.
sudo ufw allow 2224/tcp
sudo ufw allow 3121/tcp
sudo ufw allow 21064/tcp
sudo ufw allow 5405/udp
sudo ufw allow 1433/tcp # Replace with TDS endpoint
sudo ufw allow 5022/tcp # Replace with DATA_MIRRORING endpoint
sudo ufw reload
Alternatively, you can disable the firewall, but this isn't recommended in a production environment:
sudo ufw disable
Install Pacemaker packages. On all nodes, run the following commands for Ubuntu 20.04. For more information about installing on previous versions, see Ubuntu HA - MS SQL Server on Azure.
sudo apt-get install -y pacemaker pacemaker-cli-utils crmsh resource-agents fence-agents corosync python3-azure
Set the password for the default user that is created when installing Pacemaker and Corosync packages. Use the same password on all nodes.
sudo passwd hacluster
Create the cluster
Before creating a cluster, you must create an authentication key on the primary server, and copy it to the other servers participating in the AG.
Use the following script to create an authentication key on the primary server:
sudo corosync-keygen
You can use scp
to copy the generated key to other servers:
sudo scp /etc/corosync/authkey dbadmin@server-02:/etc/corosync
sudo scp /etc/corosync/authkey dbadmin@server-03:/etc/corosync
To create the cluster, edit the /etc/corosync/corosync.conf
file on the primary server:
sudo vim /etc/corosync/corosync.conf
The corosync.conf
file should look similar to the following example:
totem {
version: 2
cluster_name: agclustername
transport: udpu
crypto_cipher: none
crypto_hash: none
}
logging {
fileline: off
to_stderr: yes
to_logfile: yes
logfile: /var/log/corosync/corosync.log
to_syslog: yes
debug: off
logger_subsys {
subsys: QUORUM
debug: off
}
}
quorum {
provider: corosync_votequorum
}
nodelist {
node {
name: server-01
nodeid: 1
ring0_addr: 10.0.0.4
}
node {
name: server-02
nodeid: 2
ring0_addr: 10.0.0.5
}
node {
name: server-03
nodeid: 3
ring0_addr: 10.0.0.6
}
}
Replace the corosync.conf
file on other nodes:
sudo scp /etc/corosync/corosync.conf dbadmin@server-02:/etc/corosync
sudo scp /etc/corosync/corosync.conf dbadmin@server-03:/etc/corosync
Restart the pacemaker
and corosync
services:
sudo systemctl restart pacemaker corosync
Confirm the status of cluster and verify the configuration:
sudo crm status
Considerations for multiple network interfaces (NICs)
When setting up high availability with servers that have multiple NICs, follow these suggestions:
Make sure the hosts
file is set up so that the server IP addresses for the multiple NICs resolve to the hostname of the Linux server on each node.
When setting up the cluster using Pacemaker, using the hostname of the servers should configure Corosync to set the configuration for all of the NICs. We only want the Pacemaker/Corosync communication over a single NIC. Once the Pacemaker cluster is configured, modify the configuration in the corosync.conf
file, and update the IP address for the dedicated NIC you want to use for the Pacemaker/Corosync communication.
The <hostname>
given in the corosync.conf
file should be the same as the output given when doing a reverse lookup (ping -a <ip_address>
), and should be the short name configured on the host. Make sure the hosts
file also represents the proper IP address to name resolution.
The changes to the corosync.conf
file example are highlighted below:
nodelist {
node {
ring0_addr: <ip_address_of_node1_NIC1>
name: <hostname_of_node1>
nodeid: 1
}
node {
ring0_addr: <ip_address_of_node2_NIC1>
name: <hostname_of_node2>
nodeid: 2
}
node {
ring0_addr: <ip_address_of_node3_NIC1>
name: <hostname_of_node3>
nodeid: 3
}
}
Pacemaker cluster vendors require fencing a failed node, using a fencing device configured for a supported cluster setup. When the cluster resource manager can't determine the state of a node or of a resource on a node, fencing brings the cluster to a known state again.
Resource level fencing ensures that no data corruption occurs if there's an outage. 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 doesn't run any resources. This is done by resetting the node, and the Pacemaker implementation is called STONITH. Pacemaker supports a great variety of fencing devices, for example, an uninterruptible power supply or management interface cards for servers.
For more information, see Pacemaker Clusters from Scratch and Fencing and Stonith.
Because the node level fencing configuration depends heavily on your environment, we disable it for this tutorial (it can be configured at a later time). Run the following script on the primary node:
sudo crm configure property stonith-enabled=false
In this example, disabling fencing is just for testing purposes. If you plan to use Pacemaker in a production environment, you should plan a fencing implementation depending on your environment and keep it enabled. Contact the operating system vendor for information about fencing agents for any specific distribution.
Set cluster property cluster-recheck-interval
The cluster-recheck-interval
property indicates the polling interval at which the cluster checks for changes in the resource parameters, constraints, or other cluster options. If a replica goes down, the cluster tries to restart the replica at an interval that is bound by the failure-timeout
value and the cluster-recheck-interval
value. For example, if failure-timeout
is set to 60 seconds and cluster-recheck-interval
is set to 120 seconds, the restart is tried at an interval that is greater than 60 seconds but less than 120 seconds. You should set failure-timeout
to 60 seconds, and cluster-recheck-interval
to a value that is greater than 60 seconds. Setting cluster-recheck-interval
to a smaller value isn't recommended.
To update the property value to 2 minutes
run:
sudo crm configure property cluster-recheck-interval=2min
If you already have an availability group resource managed by a Pacemaker cluster, Pacemaker package 1.1.18-11.el7 introduced a behavior change for the start-failure-is-fatal
cluster setting when its value is false
. This change affects the failover workflow. If a primary replica experiences an outage, the cluster is expected to fail over to one of the available secondary replicas. Instead, users notice that the cluster keeps trying to start the failed primary replica. If that primary never comes online (because of a permanent outage), the cluster never fails over to another available secondary replica. Because of this change, a previously recommended configuration to set start-failure-is-fatal
is no longer valid, and the setting needs to be reverted back to its default value of true
.
Additionally, the AG resource needs to be updated to include the failure-timeout
property.
To update the property value to true
run:
sudo crm configure property start-failure-is-fatal=true
Update your existing AG resource property failure-timeout
to 60s
run (replace ag1
with the name of your availability group resource):
sudo crm configure meta failure-timeout=60s
Install SQL Server resource agent for integration with Pacemaker
Run the following commands on all nodes.
sudo apt-get install mssql-server-ha
Create a SQL Server login for Pacemaker
Caution
Your password should follow the SQL Server default password policy. By default, the password must be at least eight characters long and contain characters from three of the following four sets: uppercase letters, lowercase letters, base-10 digits, and symbols. Passwords can be up to 128 characters long. Use passwords that are as long and complex as possible.
On all SQL Server instances, create a server login for Pacemaker.
The following Transact-SQL creates a login. Replace <password>
with your own complex password.
USE [master];
GO
CREATE LOGIN [pacemakerLogin]
WITH PASSWORD = N'<password>';
ALTER SERVER ROLE [sysadmin] ADD MEMBER [pacemakerLogin];
At the time of availability group creation, the Pacemaker user requires ALTER
, CONTROL
, and VIEW DEFINITION
permissions on the availability group, after it's created but before any nodes are added to it.
On all SQL Server instances, save the credentials for the SQL Server login.
Replace <password>
with your own complex password.
echo 'pacemakerLogin' >> ~/pacemaker-passwd
echo '<password>' >> ~/pacemaker-passwd
sudo mv ~/pacemaker-passwd /var/opt/mssql/secrets/passwd
sudo chown root:root /var/opt/mssql/secrets/passwd
sudo chmod 400 /var/opt/mssql/secrets/passwd # Only readable by root
Create availability group resource
To create the availability group resource, use the sudo crm configure
command to set the resource properties. The following example creates a primary/replica type resource ocf:mssql:ag
for an availability group with name ag1
.
~$ sudo crm
configure
primitive ag1_cluster \
ocf:mssql:ag \
params ag_name="ag1" \
meta failure-timeout=60s \
op start timeout=60s \
op stop timeout=60s \
op promote timeout=60s \
op demote timeout=10s \
op monitor timeout=60s interval=10s \
op monitor timeout=60s on-fail=demote interval=11s role="Master" \
op monitor timeout=60s interval=12s role="Slave" \
op notify timeout=60s
ms ms-ag1 ag1_cluster \
meta master-max="1" master-node-max="1" clone-max="3" \
clone-node-max="1" notify="true"
commit
Note
When you create the resource, and periodically afterwards, the Pacemaker resource agent automatically sets the value of REQUIRED_SYNCHRONIZED_SECONDARIES_TO_COMMIT
on the availability group based on the availability group's configuration. For example, if the availability group has three synchronous replicas, the agent will set REQUIRED_SYNCHRONIZED_SECONDARIES_TO_COMMIT
to 1
. For details and additional configuration options, see High availability and data protection for availability group configurations.
Create virtual IP resource
To create the virtual IP address resource, run the following command on one node. Use an available static IP address from the network. Before you run the script, replace the values between < ... >
with a valid IP address.
sudo crm configure primitive virtualip \
ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2 \
params ip=10.128.16.240
There's no virtual server name equivalent in Pacemaker. To use a connection string that points to a string server name and not use the IP address, register the IP resource address and desired virtual server name in DNS. For DR configurations, register the desired virtual server name and IP address with the DNS servers on both primary and DR site.
Add colocation constraint
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 can't run on that node.)
Use constraints to configure the decisions of the cluster. Constraints have a score. If a constraint has a score lower than INFINITY, it's only a recommendation. A score of INFINITY means it's mandatory.
To ensure that primary replica and the virtual ip resource are on the same host, define a colocation constraint with a score of INFINITY. To add the colocation constraint, run the following command on one node.
sudo crm configure colocation ag-with-listener INFINITY: virtualip-group ms-ag1:Master
Add ordering constraint
The colocation constraint has an implicit ordering constraint. It moves the virtual IP resource before it moves the availability group resource. By default the sequence of events is:
User issues pcs resource move
to the availability group primary from node1
to node2
.
The virtual IP resource stops on node1
.
The virtual IP resource starts on node2
.
At this point, the IP address temporarily points to node2
while node2
is still a pre-failover secondary.
The availability group primary on node1
is demoted to secondary.
The availability group secondary on node2
is promoted to primary.
To prevent the IP address from temporarily pointing to the node with the pre-failover secondary, add an ordering constraint.
To add an ordering constraint, run the following command on one node:
sudo crm configure order ag-before-listener Mandatory: ms-ag1:promote virtualip-group:start
After you configure the cluster and add the availability group as a cluster resource, you can't use Transact-SQL to fail over the availability group resources. SQL Server cluster resources on Linux aren't coupled as tightly with the operating system as they are on a Windows Server Failover Cluster (WSFC). The SQL Server service isn't aware of the presence of the cluster. All orchestration is done through the cluster management tools.
Related content