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Revision as of 14:33, 11 August 2009 by Lon (talk | contribs)

It has been requested that this page be deleted.
Except for pacemaker inclusion, this Feature page is just a repeat of the cluster capabilities in Fedora 11 and is not needed.


Cluster

Summary

Update the corosync/openais/cluster/clvm stack to the latest stable releases. The new upstream versions brings a new and more powerful cluster stack to the end user.

Owner

Current status

  • Targeted release: Fedora 42
  • Last updated: 9 Jul 2009
  • Percentage of completion: 99%

Detailed Description

Upstream has been developing the new version of the stack with several goals in mind, including better scalability, higher performance, increased reliability, more hardware support. The updated release lays down the path of better integration with other cluster solutions (such as heartbeat, OCFS2, and pacemaker) by sharing the same core components.

Benefit to Fedora

The increased reliability and versatility of the cluster components included in Fedora 12 allow administrators to deploy Fedora in environments where greater availability and clustered file systems are required.

Scope

How To Test

User Experience

Dependencies

  • lvm2-cluster
  • asterisk (openais plugin)
  • qpidc (corosync libcpg user)
  • pacemaker
  • cluster-glue

All packagers and upstreams have been informed upfront and worked together to achieve this goal.

All packages are already part of Fedora rawhide.

Contingency Plan

None necessary

Documentation

Release Notes

In addition to the cluster features present in Fedora 11, Fedora 12 includes the following enhancements:

  • The update to version 1.0 (flatiron) of the Corosync Cluster Engine offers (on top of Fedora 11's features):
    • Plugin ABI & API stability guarantees for the duration of Corosync 1.0's lifetime
    • High performance, cluster-wide messaging
    • Ultra-high performance IPC subsystem available to other components and developers
    • Rolling upgrade compatibility with 0.80.z releases of OpenAIS
  • The update to version 3.0 of the Linux-Cluster Project offers:
    • Reduced code and operational complexity compared to version 2 leading to greater reliability
    • Pluggable, simplified configuration management framework with plugins for XML and LDAP (experimental), including schemas for both classes
    • Improved code quality due to stricter coding guidelines
  • The inclusion of pacemaker 1.0 offers (note: packages awaiting reviews):
    • Improved resource & failover management over rgmanager
      • Resource-dependency model allows for flexible placement of cluster resources
      • Can run rgmanager's resource agents with minimal changes, offering an upgrade path for users of rgmanager
    • Fine-grained resource management: administrators may operate on one resource instead of operating at the resource group level

Comments and Discussion