Awesome
locksmith
locksmith is a reboot manager for the CoreOS update engine which is able to use
etcd to ensure that only a subset of a cluster of machines are rebooting
at any given time. locksmithd
runs as a daemon on CoreOS machines and is
responsible for controlling the reboot behaviour after updates.
Configuration
There are three different strategies that locksmithd
can use after the update
engine has successfully applied an update:
etcd-lock
- reboot after first taking a lock in etcd.reboot
- reboot without taking a lock.off
- causes locksmithd to exit and do nothing.
These strategies will either be followed immediately after an update, or during the next available reboot window if one has been configured.
These strategies can be configured via /etc/coreos/update.conf
with a line that looks like:
REBOOT_STRATEGY=reboot
The reboot strategy can also be configured through a Container Linux Config.
The default strategy is to follow the etcd-lock
strategy if etcd is running,
and to otherwise follow the reboot
strategy.
Usage
locksmithctl
is a simple client that can be use to introspect and control the
lock used by locksmith. It is installed by default on CoreOS.
Run locksmithctl -help
for a list of command-line options.
All command-line options can also be specified using environment variables with
a LOCKSMITHCTL_
prefix. For example, the -endpoint
argument can be set
using LOCKSMITHCTL_ENDPOINT
.
Connecting to multiple endpoints
Multiple endpoints can be specified by passing the -endpoint=<url>
option for
each endpoint, or by passing a comma-separated list of endpoints, e.g.:
-endpoint=<url>,<url>
Specifying multiple endpoints using an environment variable is supported by passing a comma-delimited list, e.g.:
LOCKSMITHCTL_ENDPOINT=<url>,<url>
Listing the Holders
$ locksmithctl status
Available: 0
Max: 1
MACHINE ID
69d27b356a94476da859461d3a3bc6fd
Unlock Holders
In some cases a machine may go away permanently or semi-permanently while holding a reboot lock. A system administrator can clear the lock of a specific machine using the unlock command:
$ locksmithctl unlock 69d27b356a94476da859461d3a3bc6fd
Maximum Semaphore
By default the reboot lock only allows a single holder. However, a user may want more than a single machine to be upgrading at a time. This can be done by increasing the semaphore count.
$ locksmithctl set-max 4
Old: 1
New: 4
Groups
locksmithd
coordinates the reboot lock in groups of machines. The default
group is "", or the empty string. locksmithd
will only coordinate the reboot
lock with other machines in the same group.
The purpose of groups is to allow faster updating of certain sets of machines
while maintaining availability of certain services. For example, in a cluster
of 5 CoreOS machines with all machines in the default group, if you have 2 load
balancers and run locksmithctl set-max 2
, then it is possible that both load
balancers would be rebooted at the same time, interrupting the service they
provide. However, if the load balancers are put into their own group named "lb",
and both the default group and the "lb" group have a max holder of 1, two
reboots can occur at once, but both load balancers will never reboot at the same
time.
Configuring groups
To place machines in a group other than the default, locksmithd
must be started
with the -group=groupname
flag or set the LOCKSMITHD_GROUP=groupname
environment
variable.
To control the semaphore of a group other than the default, you must invoke
locksmithctl
with the -group=groupname
flag or set the LOCKSMITHCTL_GROUP=groupname
environment variable.
Reboot windows
locksmithd
can be configured to only reboot during certain timeframes. These
reboot windows work with any reboot strategy.
The reboot window is configured through two environment variables,
LOCKSMITHD_REBOOT_WINDOW_START
and LOCKSMITHD_REBOOT_WINDOW_LENGTH
. Note that
REBOOT_WINDOW_START
and REBOOT_WINDOW_LENGTH
are also acceptable. Here is
an example configuration:
LOCKSMITHD_REBOOT_WINDOW_START=14:00
LOCKSMITHD_REBOOT_WINDOW_LENGTH=1h
This would configure locksmithd
to only reboot between 2pm and 3pm. Optionally,
a day of week may be specified for the start of the window:
LOCKSMITHD_REBOOT_WINDOW_START="Thu 23:00"
LOCKSMITHD_REBOOT_WINDOW_LENGTH=1h30m
This would configure locksmithd
to only reboot the system on Thursday after 11pm,
or on Friday before 12:30am.
Currently, the only supported values for the day of week are short day names,
e.g. Sun
, Mon
, Tue
, Wed
, Thu
, Fri
, and Sat
, but the day of week can
be upper or lower case. The time of day must be specified in 24-hour time format.
The window length is expressed as input to go's time.ParseDuration
function.
Implementation details
The following section describes how locksmith works under the hood.
Semaphore
locksmith uses a semaphore in etcd, located at the key
coreos.com/updateengine/rebootlock/semaphore
, to coordinate the reboot lock.
If a non-default group name is used, the etcd key will be
coreos.com/updateengine/rebootlock/groups/$groupname/semaphore
.
The semaphore is a JSON document, describing a simple semaphore, that clients swap to take the lock.
When it is first created it will be initialized like so:
{
"semaphore": 1,
"max": 1,
"holders": []
}
For a client to take the lock, the document is swapped with this:
{
"semaphore": 0,
"max": 1,
"holders": [
"69d27b356a94476da859461d3a3bc6fd"
]
}
Bugs
Please use the CoreOS issue tracker to report all bugs, issues, and feature requests.