onnode1ctdbCTDB - clustered TDB databaseonnoderun commands on CTDB cluster nodesonnodeOPTIONNODESCOMMANDDESCRIPTION
onnode is a utility to run commands on a specific node of a CTDB
cluster, or on all nodes.
NODES specifies which node(s) to run
a command on. See section NODES
SPECIFICATION for details.
COMMAND can be any shell command. The
onnode utility uses ssh or rsh to connect to the remote nodes
and run the command.
OPTIONS-c
Execute COMMAND in the current working directory on the
specified nodes.
-f FILENAME
Specify an alternative nodes FILENAME to use instead of
the default. See the discussion of
/usr/local/etc/ctdb/nodes in the
FILES section for more details.
-i
Keep standard input open, allowing data to be piped to
onnode. Normally onnode closes stdin to avoid surprises
when scripting. Note that this option is ignored when
using or if ONNODE_SSH
is set to anything other than "ssh".
-n
Allow nodes to be specified by name rather than node
numbers. These nodes don't need to be listed in the nodes
file. You can avoid the nodes file entirely by combining
this with -f /dev/null.
-o PREFIX
Causes standard output from each node to be saved into a
file with name PREFIX.IP.
-p
Run COMMAND in parallel on the specified nodes. The
default is to run COMMAND sequentially on each node.
-P
Push files to nodes. Names of files to push are specified
rather than the usual command. Quoting is fragile/broken
- filenames with whitespace in them are not supported.
-q
Do not print node addresses. Normally, onnode prints
informational node addresses if more than one node is
specified. This overrides -v.
-v
Print node addresses even if only one node is specified.
Normally, onnode prints informational node addresses when
more than one node is specified.
-h, --help
Show a short usage guide.
NODES SPECIFICATION
Nodes can be specified via numeric node numbers (from 0 to N-1)
or mnemonics. Multiple nodes are specified using lists of
nodes, separated by commas, and ranges of numeric node numbers,
separated by dashes. If nodes are specified multiple times then
the command will be executed multiple times on those nodes. The
order of nodes is significant.
The following mnemonics are available:
all
All nodes.
any
A node where ctdbd is running. This semi-random but
there is a bias towards choosing a low numbered node.
ok | healthy
All nodes that are not disconnected, banned, disabled or
unhealthy.
con | connected
All nodes that are not disconnected.
EXAMPLES
The following command would show the process ID of ctdbd on all nodes
onnode all ctdb getpid
The following command would show the last 5 lines of log on each
node, preceded by the node's hostname
onnode all "hostname; tail -5 /usr/local/var/log/log.ctdb"
The following command would restart the ctdb service on all
nodes, in parallel.
onnode -p all service ctdb restart
The following command would run ./foo in the current working
directory, in parallel, on nodes 0, 2, 3 and 4.
onnode -c -p 0,2-4 ./foo
FILES/usr/local/etc/ctdb/nodes
Default file containing a list of each node's IP address
or hostname.
As above, a file specified via the
is given precedence. If a
relative path is specified and no corresponding file
exists relative to the current directory then the file is
also searched for in the CTDB configuration directory.
Otherwise the default is
/usr/local/etc/ctdb/nodes.
/usr/local/etc/ctdb/onnode.conf
If this file exists it is sourced by onnode. The main
purpose is to allow the administrator to set
ONNODE_SSH to something other than "ssh".
In this case the -t option is ignored.
SEE ALSOctdb7,
This documentation was written by
Andrew Tridgell,
Martin Schwenke
2007Andrew TridgellRonnie Sahlberg2008Martin Schwenke
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of
the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be
useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied
warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public
License along with this program; if not, see
.