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Scale up a Service Fabric cluster non-primary node type

This article describes how to scale up a Service Fabric cluster non-primary node type with minimal downtime. In-place SKU upgrades aren't supported on Service Fabric cluster nodes, as such operations potentially involve data and availability loss. The safest, most reliable, and recommended method for scaling up a Service Fabric node type is to:

  1. Add a new node type to your Service Fabric cluster, backed by your upgraded (or modified) virtual machine scale set SKU and configuration. This step also involves setting up a new load balancer, subnet, and public IP for the scale set.

  2. Once both the original and upgraded scale sets are running side by side, migrate the workload by setting placement constraints for applications to the new node type.

  3. Verify the cluster is healthy, then remove the original scale set (and related resources) and node state for the deleted nodes.

The following will walk you through the process for updating the VM size and operating system of non-primary node type VMs of a sample cluster with Silver durability, backed by a single scale set with five nodes used as a secondary node type. The primary node type with Service Fabric system services will remain untouched. We'll be upgrading the non-primary node type:

  • From VM size Standard_D2_V2 to Standard D4_V2, and
  • From VM operating system Windows Server 2019 Datacenter to Windows Server 2022 Datacenter.

Warning

Before attempting this procedure on a production cluster, we recommend that you study the sample templates and verify the process against a test cluster.

Do not attempt a non-primary node type scale up procedure if the cluster status is unhealthy, as this will only destabilize the cluster further. We'll make use of the step-by-step Azure deployment templates used in the Scale up a Service Fabric cluster primary node type guide. However, we'll modify them so they aren't specific to primary node types. The templates are available on GitHub.

Set up the test cluster

Let's set up the initial Service Fabric test cluster. First, download the Azure Resource Manager sample templates that we'll use to complete this scenario.

Next, sign in to your Azure account.

# Sign in to your Azure account
Login-AzAccount -SubscriptionId "<subscription ID>"

Next open the parameters.json file and update the value for clusterName to something unique (within Azure).

The following commands will guide you through generating a new self-signed certificate and deploying the test cluster. If you already have a certificate you'd like to use, skip to Use an existing certificate to deploy the cluster.

Generate a self-signed certificate and deploy the cluster

First, assign the variables you'll need for Service Fabric cluster deployment. Adjust the values for resourceGroupName, certSubjectName, parameterFilePath, and templateFilePath for your specific account and environment:

# Assign deployment variables
$resourceGroupName = "sftestupgradegroup"
$certOutputFolder = "c:\certificates"
$certPassword = "Password!1" | ConvertTo-SecureString -AsPlainText -Force
$certSubjectName = "sftestupgrade.southcentralus.cloudapp.azure.com"
$parameterFilePath = "C:\parameters.json"
$templateFilePath = "C:\Initial-TestClusterSetup.json"

Note

Ensure that the certOutputFolder location exists on your local machine before running the command to deploy a new Service Fabric cluster. Then deploy the Service Fabric test cluster:

# Deploy the initial test cluster
New-AzServiceFabricCluster `
    -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName `
    -CertificateOutputFolder $certOutputFolder `
    -CertificatePassword $certPassword `
    -CertificateSubjectName $certSubjectName `
    -TemplateFile $templateFilePath `
    -ParameterFile $parameterFilePath

Once the deployment is complete, locate the .pfx file ($certPfx) on your local machine and import it to your certificate store:

cd c:\certificates
$certPfx = ".\sftestupgradegroup20200312121003.pfx"
Import-PfxCertificate `
     -FilePath $certPfx `
     -CertStoreLocation Cert:\CurrentUser\My `
     -Password (ConvertTo-SecureString Password!1 -AsPlainText -Force)

The operation will return the certificate thumbprint, which you can now use to connect to the new cluster and check its health status. (Skip the following section, which is an alternate approach to cluster deployment.)

Use an existing certificate to deploy the cluster

Alternately, you can use an existing Azure Key Vault certificate to deploy the test cluster. To do this, you'll need to obtain references to your Key Vault and certificate thumbprint.

# Key Vault variables
$certUrlValue = "https://sftestupgradegroup.vault.azure.net/secrets/sftestupgradegroup20200309235308/dac0e7b7f9d4414984ccaa72bfb2ea39"
$sourceVaultValue = "/subscriptions/########-####-####-####-############/resourceGroups/sftestupgradegroup/providers/Microsoft.KeyVault/vaults/sftestupgradegroup"
$thumb = "BB796AA33BD9767E7DA27FE5182CF8FDEE714A70"

Next, designate a resource group name for the cluster and set the templateFilePath and parameterFilePath locations:

Note

The designated resource group must already exist and be located in the same region as your Key Vault.

$resourceGroupName = "sftestupgradegroup"
$templateFilePath = "C:\Initial-TestClusterSetup.json"
$parameterFilePath = "C:\parameters.json"

Finally, run the following command to deploy the initial test cluster:

# Deploy the initial test cluster
New-AzResourceGroupDeployment `
    -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName `
    -TemplateFile $templateFilePath `
    -TemplateParameterFile $parameterFilePath `
    -CertificateThumbprint $thumb `
    -CertificateUrlValue $certUrlValue `
    -SourceVaultValue $sourceVaultValue `
    -Verbose

Connect to the new cluster and check health status

Connect to the cluster and ensure that all five of its nodes are healthy (substitute the clusterName and thumb variables with your own values):

# Connect to the cluster
$clusterName = "sftestupgrade.southcentralus.cloudapp.azure.com:19000"
$thumb = "BB796AA33BD9767E7DA27FE5182CF8FDEE714A70"
Connect-ServiceFabricCluster `
    -ConnectionEndpoint $clusterName `
    -KeepAliveIntervalInSec 10 `
    -X509Credential `
    -ServerCertThumbprint $thumb  `
    -FindType FindByThumbprint `
    -FindValue $thumb `
    -StoreLocation CurrentUser `
    -StoreName My
# Check cluster health
Get-ServiceFabricClusterHealth

With that, we're ready to begin the upgrade procedure.

Deploy a new non-primary node type with an upgraded scale set

In order to upgrade (vertically scale) a node type, we'll first need to deploy a new node type backed by a new scale set and supporting resources. The new scale set will be marked as non-primary (isPrimary: false), just like the original scale set. If you want to scale up a primary node type, see Scale up a Service Fabric cluster primary node type. The resources created in the following section will ultimately become the new node type in your cluster, and the original node type resources will be deleted.

Update the cluster template with the upgraded scale set

Here are the section-by-section modifications of the original cluster deployment template for adding a new node type and supporting resources.

Most of the required changes for this step have already been made for you in the Step1-AddPrimaryNodeType.json template file. However, an additional change must be made so the template file works for non-primary node types. The following sections will explain these changes in detail, and call outs will be made when you must make a change.

Note

Ensure that you use names that are unique from the original node type, scale set, load balancer, public IP, and subnet of the original non-primary node type, as these resources will be deleted at a later step in the process.

Create a new subnet in the existing virtual network

{
    "name": "[variables('subnet1Name')]",
    "properties": {
        "addressPrefix": "[variables('subnet1Prefix')]"
    }
}

Create a new public IP with a unique domainNameLabel

{
    "apiVersion": "[variables('publicIPApiVersion')]",
    "type": "Microsoft.Network/publicIPAddresses",
    "name": "[concat(variables('lbIPName'),'-',variables('vmNodeType1Name'))]",
    "location": "[variables('computeLocation')]",
    "properties": {
        "dnsSettings": {
            "domainNameLabel": "[concat(variables('dnsName'),'-','nt1')]"
        },
        "publicIPAllocationMethod": "Dynamic"
    },
    "tags": {
        "resourceType": "Service Fabric",
        "clusterName": "[parameters('clusterName')]"
    }
}

Create a new load balancer for the public IP

"dependsOn": [
    "[concat('Microsoft.Network/publicIPAddresses/',concat(variables('lbIPName'),'-',variables('vmNodeType1Name')))]"
]

Create a new virtual machine scale set (with upgraded VM and OS SKUs)

Node Type Ref

"nodeTypeRef": "[variables('vmNodeType1Name')]"

VM SKU

"sku": {
    "name": "[parameters('vmNodeType1Size')]",
    "capacity": "[parameters('nt1InstanceCount')]",
    "tier": "Standard"
}

OS SKU

"imageReference": {
    "publisher": "[parameters('vmImagePublisher1')]",
    "offer": "[parameters('vmImageOffer1')]",
    "sku": "[parameters('vmImageSku1')]",
    "version": "[parameters('vmImageVersion1')]"
}

Also, ensure you include any additional extensions that are required for your workload.

Add a new non-primary node type to the cluster

Now that the new node type (vmNodeType1Name) has its own name, subnet, IP, load balancer, and scale set, it can reuse all other variables from the original node type (such as nt0applicationEndPort, nt0applicationStartPort, and nt0fabricTcpGatewayPort).

In the existing template file, the isPrimary parameter is set to true for the Scale up a Service Fabric cluster primary node type guide. Change isPrimary to false for your non-primary node type:

"name": "[variables('vmNodeType1Name')]",
"applicationPorts": {
    "endPort": "[variables('nt0applicationEndPort')]",
    "startPort": "[variables('nt0applicationStartPort')]"
},
"clientConnectionEndpointPort": "[variables('nt0fabricTcpGatewayPort')]",
"durabilityLevel": "Bronze",
"ephemeralPorts": {
    "endPort": "[variables('nt0ephemeralEndPort')]",
    "startPort": "[variables('nt0ephemeralStartPort')]"
},
"httpGatewayEndpointPort": "[variables('nt0fabricHttpGatewayPort')]",
"isPrimary": false,
"reverseProxyEndpointPort": "[variables('nt0reverseProxyEndpointPort')]",
"vmInstanceCount": "[parameters('nt1InstanceCount')]"

Once you've implemented all the changes in your template and parameters files, proceed to the next section to acquire your Key Vault references and deploy the updates to your cluster.

Obtain your Key Vault references

To deploy the updated configuration, you'll need several references to the cluster certificate stored in your Key Vault. The easiest way to find these values is through Azure portal. You'll need:

  • The Key Vault URL of your cluster certificate. From your Key Vault in Azure portal, select Certificates > Your desired certificate > Secret Identifier:

    $certUrlValue="https://sftestupgradegroup.vault.azure.net/secrets/sftestupgradegroup20200309235308/dac0e7b7f9d4414984ccaa72bfb2ea39"
    
  • The thumbprint of your cluster certificate. (You probably already have this if you connected to the initial cluster to check its health status.) From the same certificate blade (Certificates > Your desired certificate) in Azure portal, copy X.509 SHA-1 Thumbprint (in hex):

    $thumb = "BB796AA33BD9767E7DA27FE5182CF8FDEE714A70"
    
  • The Resource ID of your Key Vault. From your Key Vault in Azure portal, select Properties > Resource ID:

    $sourceVaultValue = "/subscriptions/########-####-####-####-############/resourceGroups/sftestupgradegroup/providers/Microsoft.KeyVault/vaults/sftestupgradegroup"
    

Deploy the updated template

Adjust the templateFilePath as needed and run the following command:

# Deploy the new node type and its resources
$templateFilePath = "C:\Step1-AddPrimaryNodeType.json"
New-AzResourceGroupDeployment `
    -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName `
    -TemplateFile $templateFilePath `
    -TemplateParameterFile $parameterFilePath `
    -CertificateThumbprint $thumb `
    -CertificateUrlValue $certUrlValue `
    -SourceVaultValue $sourceVaultValue `
    -Verbose

When the deployment completes, check the cluster health again and ensure all nodes on both node types are healthy.

Get-ServiceFabricClusterHealth

Migrate workloads to the new node type

Wait till all applications moved to the new node type and are healthy.

Disable the nodes in the original node type scale set

Once all seed nodes have migrated to the new scale set, you can disable the nodes of the original scale set.

# Disable the nodes in the original scale set.
$nodeType = "nt0vm"
$nodes = Get-ServiceFabricNode
Write-Host "Disabling nodes..."
foreach($node in $nodes)
{
  if ($node.NodeType -eq $nodeType)
  {
    $node.NodeName
    Disable-ServiceFabricNode -Intent RemoveNode -NodeName $node.NodeName -Force
  }
}

Use Service Fabric Explorer to monitor the progression of nodes in the original scale set from Disabling to Disabled status. Wait for all nodes to reach Disabled state.

Stop data on the disabled nodes

Now you can stop data on the disabled nodes.

# Stop data on the disabled nodes.
foreach($node in $nodes)
{
  if ($node.NodeType -eq $nodeType)
  {
    $node.NodeName
    Start-ServiceFabricNodeTransition -Stop -OperationId (New-Guid) -NodeInstanceId $node.NodeInstanceId -NodeName $node.NodeName -StopDurationInSeconds 10000
  }
}

Remove the original node type and clean up its resources

We're ready to remove the original node type and its associated resources to conclude the vertical scaling procedure.

Remove the original scale set

First remove the node type's backing scale set.

$scaleSetName = "nt0vm"
$scaleSetResourceType = "Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachineScaleSets"
Remove-AzResource -ResourceName $scaleSetName -ResourceType $scaleSetResourceType -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName -Force

Delete the original IP and load balancer resources

You can now delete the original IP, and load balancer resources. In this step, you'll also update the DNS name.

Note

This step is optional if you're already using a Standard SKU public IP and load balancer. In this case you could have multiple scale sets / node types under the same load balancer. Run the following commands, modifying the $lbname value as needed.

# Delete the original IP and load balancer resources
$lbName = "LB-sftestupgrade-nt0vm"
$lbResourceType = "Microsoft.Network/loadBalancers"
$ipResourceType = "Microsoft.Network/publicIPAddresses"
$oldPublicIpName = "PublicIP-LB-FE-nt0vm"
$newPublicIpName = "PublicIP-LB-FE-nt1vm"
$oldPublicIP = Get-AzPublicIpAddress -Name $oldPublicIpName  -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName
$nonPrimaryDNSName = $oldNonPrimaryPublicIP.DnsSettings.DomainNameLabel
$nonPrimaryDNSFqdn = $oldNonPrimaryPublicIP.DnsSettings.Fqdn
Remove-AzResource -ResourceName $lbName -ResourceType $lbResourceType -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName -Force
Remove-AzResource -ResourceName $oldPublicIpName -ResourceType $ipResourceType -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName -Force
$PublicIP = Get-AzPublicIpAddress -Name $newPublicIpName  -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName
$PublicIP.DnsSettings.DomainNameLabel = $nonPrimaryDNSName
$PublicIP.DnsSettings.Fqdn = $nonPrimaryDNSFqdn
Set-AzPublicIpAddress -PublicIpAddress $PublicIP

Remove node state from the original node type

The original node type nodes will now show Error for their Health State. Remove their node state from the cluster.

# Remove state of the obsolete nodes from the cluster
$nodeType = "nt0vm"
$nodes = Get-ServiceFabricNode
Write-Host "Removing node state..."
foreach($node in $nodes)
{
  if ($node.NodeType -eq $nodeType)
  {
    $node.NodeName
    Remove-ServiceFabricNodeState -NodeName $node.NodeName -Force
  }
}

Service Fabric Explorer should now reflect only the five nodes of the new node type (nt1vm), all with Health State values of OK. We'll remediate that next by updating the template to reflect the latest changes and redeploying.

Update the deployment template to reflect the newly scaled-up non-primary node type

Most of the required changes for this step have already been made for you in the Step3-CleanupOriginalPrimaryNodeType.json template file. However, an additional change must be made so the template file works for non-primary node types. The following sections will explain these changes in detail, and call outs will be made when you must make a change.

Update the cluster management endpoint

Update the cluster managementEndpoint on the deployment template to reference the new IP (by updating vmNodeType0Name with vmNodeType1Name).

  "managementEndpoint": "[concat('https://',reference(concat(variables('lbIPName'),'-',variables('vmNodeType1Name'))).dnsSettings.fqdn,':',variables('nt0fabricHttpGatewayPort'))]",

Remove the original node type reference

Remove the original node type reference from the Service Fabric resource in the deployment template.

In the existing template file, the isPrimary parameter is set to true for the Scale up a Service Fabric cluster primary node type guide. Change isPrimary to false for your non-primary node type:

"name": "[variables('vmNodeType0Name')]",
"applicationPorts": {
    "endPort": "[variables('nt0applicationEndPort')]",
    "startPort": "[variables('nt0applicationStartPort')]"
},
"clientConnectionEndpointPort": "[variables('nt0fabricTcpGatewayPort')]",
"durabilityLevel": "Bronze",
"ephemeralPorts": {
    "endPort": "[variables('nt0ephemeralEndPort')]",
    "startPort": "[variables('nt0ephemeralStartPort')]"
},
"httpGatewayEndpointPort": "[variables('nt0fabricHttpGatewayPort')]",
"isPrimary": false,
"reverseProxyEndpointPort": "[variables('nt0reverseProxyEndpointPort')]",
"vmInstanceCount": "[parameters('nt0InstanceCount')]"

Configure health policies to ignore existing errors

Only for Silver and higher durability clusters, update the cluster resource in the template and configure health policies to ignore fabric:/System application health by adding applicationDeltaHealthPolicies under cluster resource properties as given below. The below policy will ignore existing errors but not allow new health errors.

"upgradeDescription":  
{ 
 "forceRestart": false, 
 "upgradeReplicaSetCheckTimeout": "10675199.02:48:05.4775807", 
 "healthCheckWaitDuration": "00:05:00", 
 "healthCheckStableDuration": "00:05:00", 
 "healthCheckRetryTimeout": "00:45:00", 
 "upgradeTimeout": "12:00:00", 
 "upgradeDomainTimeout": "02:00:00", 
 "healthPolicy": { 
   "maxPercentUnhealthyNodes": 100, 
   "maxPercentUnhealthyApplications": 100 
 }, 
 "deltaHealthPolicy":  
 { 
   "maxPercentDeltaUnhealthyNodes": 0, 
   "maxPercentUpgradeDomainDeltaUnhealthyNodes": 0, 
   "maxPercentDeltaUnhealthyApplications": 0, 
   "applicationDeltaHealthPolicies":  
   { 
       "fabric:/System":  
       { 
           "defaultServiceTypeDeltaHealthPolicy":  
           { 
                   "maxPercentDeltaUnhealthyServices": 0 
           } 
       } 
   } 
 } 
}

Remove supporting resources for the original node type

Remove all other resources related to the original node type from the ARM template and the parameters file. Delete the following:

    "vmImagePublisher": {
      "value": "MicrosoftWindowsServer"
    },
    "vmImageOffer": {
      "value": "WindowsServer"
    },
    "vmImageSku": {
      "value": "2019-Datacenter"
    },
    "vmImageVersion": {
      "value": "latest"
    },

Deploy the finalized template

Finally, deploy the modified Azure Resource Manager template.

# Deploy the updated template file
$templateFilePath = "C:\Step3-CleanupOriginalPrimaryNodeType"
New-AzResourceGroupDeployment `
    -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName `
    -TemplateFile $templateFilePath `
    -TemplateParameterFile $parameterFilePath `
    -CertificateThumbprint $thumb `
    -CertificateUrlValue $certUrlValue `
    -SourceVaultValue $sourceVaultValue `
    -Verbose

Note

This step will take a while, usually up to two hours. The upgrade will change settings to the InfrastructureService; therefore, a node restart is needed. In this case, forceRestart is ignored. The parameter upgradeReplicaSetCheckTimeout specifies the maximum time that Service Fabric waits for a partition to be in a safe state, if not already in a safe state. Once safety checks pass for all partitions on a node, Service Fabric proceeds with the upgrade on that node. The value for the parameter upgradeTimeout can be reduced to 6 hours, but for maximal safety 12 hours should be used.

Once the deployment has completed, verify in Azure portal that the Service Fabric resource Status is Ready. Verify you can reach the new Service Fabric Explorer endpoint, the Cluster Health State is OK, and any deployed applications function properly.

With that, you've vertically scaled a cluster non-primary node type!

Next steps