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PCS

NAME

pcs - pacemaker/corosync configuration system

SYNOPSIS

pcs [-f file] [-h] [commands]...

DESCRIPTION

Control and configure pacemaker and corosync.

OPTIONS

-h, --help

Display usage and exit.

-f file

Perform actions on file instead of active CIB.
Commands supporting the option use the initial state of the specified file as their input and then overwrite the file with the state reflecting the requested operation(s).
A few commands only use the specified file in read-only mode since their effect is not a CIB modification.

--debug

Print all network traffic and external commands run.

--version

Print pcs version information. List pcs capabilities if --full is specified.

--request-timeout=<timeout>

Timeout for each outgoing request to another node in seconds. Default is 60s.

Commands:
cluster

Configure cluster options and nodes.

resource

Manage cluster resources.

stonith

Manage fence devices.

constraint

Manage resource constraints.

property

Manage pacemaker properties.

acl

Manage pacemaker access control lists.

qdevice

Manage quorum device provider on the local host.

quorum

Manage cluster quorum settings.

booth

Manage booth (cluster ticket manager).

status

View cluster status.

config

View and manage cluster configuration.

pcsd

Manage pcs daemon.

host

Manage hosts known to pcs/pcsd.

node

Manage cluster nodes.

alert

Manage pacemaker alerts.

client

Manage pcsd client configuration.

dr

Manage disaster recovery configuration.

tag

Manage pacemaker tags.

resource
[status [<resource id | tag id>] [node=<node>] [--hide-inactive]]

Show status of all currently configured resources. If --hide-inactive is specified, only show active resources. If a resource or tag id is specified, only show status of the specified resource or resources in the specified tag. If node is specified, only show status of resources configured for the specified node.

config [--output-format text|cmd|json] [<resource id>]...

Show options of all currently configured resources or if resource ids are specified show the options for the specified resource ids. There are 3 formats of output available: ’cmd’, ’json’ and ’text’, default is ’text’. Format ’text’ is a human friendly output. Format ’cmd’ prints pcs commands which can be used to recreate the same configuration. Format ’json’ is a machine oriented output of the configuration.

list [filter] [--nodesc]

Show list of all available resource agents (if filter is provided then only resource agents matching the filter will be shown). If --nodesc is used then descriptions of resource agents are not printed.

describe [<standard>:[<provider>:]]<type> [--full]

Show options for the specified resource. If --full is specified, all options including advanced and deprecated ones are shown.

create <resource id> [<standard>:[<provider>:]]<type> [resource
options] [op <operation action> <operation options> [<operation action>
<operation options>]...] [meta <meta options>...] [clone [<clone id>]
[<clone options>] | promotable [<clone id>] [<promotable options>] |
--group
<group id> [--before <resource id> | --after <resource id>] |
bundle
<bundle id>] [--disabled] [--no-default-ops] [--wait[=n]]

Create specified resource. If clone is used a clone resource is created. If promotable is used a promotable clone resource is created. If --group is specified the resource is added to the group named. You can use --before or --after to specify the position of the added resource relatively to some resource already existing in the group. If bundle is specified, resource will be created inside of the specified bundle. If --disabled is specified the resource is not started automatically. If --no-default-ops is specified, only monitor operations are created for the resource and all other operations use default settings. If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the resource to start and then return 0 if the resource is started, or 1 if the resource has not yet started. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

Example: Create a new resource called ’VirtualIP’ with IP address 192.168.0.99, netmask of 32, monitored everything 30 seconds, on eth2: pcs resource create VirtualIP ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2 ip=192.168.0.99 cidr_netmask=32 nic=eth2 op monitor interval=30s

delete <resource id|group id|bundle id|clone id>

Deletes the resource, group, bundle or clone (and all resources within the group/bundle/clone).

remove <resource id|group id|bundle id|clone id>

Deletes the resource, group, bundle or clone (and all resources within the group/bundle/clone).

enable <resource id | tag id>... [--wait[=n]]

Allow the cluster to start the resources. Depending on the rest of the configuration (constraints, options, failures, etc), the resources may remain stopped. If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the resources to start and then return 0 if the resources are started, or 1 if the resources have not yet started. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

disable <resource id | tag id>... [--safe [--brief] [--no-strict]]
[--simulate [--brief]] [--wait[=n]]

Attempt to stop the resources if they are running and forbid the cluster from starting them again. Depending on the rest of the configuration (constraints, options, failures, etc), the resources may remain started.
If --safe is specified, no changes to the cluster configuration will be made if other than specified resources would be affected in any way. If --brief is also specified, only errors are printed.
If --no-strict is specified, no changes to the cluster configuration will be made if other than specified resources would get stopped or demoted. Moving resources between nodes is allowed.
If --simulate is specified, no changes to the cluster configuration will be made and the effect of the changes will be printed instead. If --brief is also specified, only a list of affected resources will be printed.
If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the resources to stop and then return 0 if the resources are stopped or 1 if the resources have not stopped. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

safe-disable <resource id | tag id>... [--brief] [--no-strict]
[--simulate [--brief]] [--wait[=n]] [--force]

Attempt to stop the resources if they are running and forbid the cluster from starting them again. Depending on the rest of the configuration (constraints, options, failures, etc), the resources may remain started. No changes to the cluster configuration will be made if other than specified resources would be affected in any way.
If --brief is specified, only errors are printed.
If --no-strict is specified, no changes to the cluster configuration will be made if other than specified resources would get stopped or demoted. Moving resources between nodes is allowed.
If --simulate is specified, no changes to the cluster configuration will be made and the effect of the changes will be printed instead. If --brief is also specified, only a list of affected resources will be printed.
If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the resources to stop and then return 0 if the resources are stopped or 1 if the resources have not stopped. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.
If --force is specified, checks for safe disable will be skipped.

restart <resource id> [node] [--wait=n]

Restart the resource specified. If a node is specified and if the resource is a clone or bundle it will be restarted only on the node specified. If --wait is specified, then we will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the resource to be restarted and return 0 if the restart was successful or 1 if it was not.

debug-start <resource id> [--full]

This command will force the specified resource to start on this node ignoring the cluster recommendations and print the output from starting the resource. Using --full will give more detailed output. This is mainly used for debugging resources that fail to start.

debug-stop <resource id> [--full]

This command will force the specified resource to stop on this node ignoring the cluster recommendations and print the output from stopping the resource. Using --full will give more detailed output. This is mainly used for debugging resources that fail to stop.

debug-promote <resource id> [--full]

This command will force the specified resource to be promoted on this node ignoring the cluster recommendations and print the output from promoting the resource. Using --full will give more detailed output. This is mainly used for debugging resources that fail to promote.

debug-demote <resource id> [--full]

This command will force the specified resource to be demoted on this node ignoring the cluster recommendations and print the output from demoting the resource. Using --full will give more detailed output. This is mainly used for debugging resources that fail to demote.

debug-monitor <resource id> [--full]

This command will force the specified resource to be monitored on this node ignoring the cluster recommendations and print the output from monitoring the resource. Using --full will give more detailed output. This is mainly used for debugging resources that fail to be monitored.

move <resource id> [destination node] [--promoted] [--strict]
[--wait[=n]]

Move the resource off the node it is currently running on. This is achieved by creating a -INFINITY location constraint to ban the node. If destination node is specified the resource will be moved to that node by creating an INFINITY location constraint to prefer the destination node. The constraint needed for moving the resource will be automatically removed once the resource is running on it’s new location. The command will fail in case it is not possible to verify that the resource will not be moved back after deleting the constraint.

If --strict is specified, the command will also fail if other resources would be affected.

If --promoted is used the scope of the command is limited to the Promoted role and promotable clone id must be used (instead of the resource id).

If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the resource to move and then return 0 on success or 1 on error. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

NOTE: This command has been changed in pcs-0.11. It is equivalent to command ’resource move <resource id> --autodelete’ from pcs-0.10.9. Legacy functionality of the ’resource move’ command is still available as ’resource move-with-constraint <resource id>’.

If you want the resource to preferably avoid running on some nodes but be able to failover to them use ’pcs constraint location avoids’.

move-with-constraint <resource id> [destination node]
[lifetime=<lifetime>] [--promoted] [--wait[=n]]

Move the resource off the node it is currently running on by creating a -INFINITY location constraint to ban the node. If destination node is specified the resource will be moved to that node by creating an INFINITY location constraint to prefer the destination node.

If lifetime is specified then the constraint will expire after that time, otherwise it defaults to infinity and the constraint can be cleared manually with ’pcs resource clear’ or ’pcs constraint delete’. Lifetime is expected to be specified as ISO 8601 duration (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601#Durations).

If --promoted is used the scope of the command is limited to the Promoted role and promotable clone id must be used (instead of the resource id).

If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the resource to move and then return 0 on success or 1 on error. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

If you want the resource to preferably avoid running on some nodes but be able to failover to them use ’pcs constraint location avoids’.

ban <resource id> [node] [--promoted] [lifetime=<lifetime>]
[--wait[=n]]

Prevent the resource id specified from running on the node (or on the current node it is running on if no node is specified) by creating a -INFINITY location constraint.

If --promoted is used the scope of the command is limited to the Promoted role and promotable clone id must be used (instead of the resource id).

If lifetime is specified then the constraint will expire after that time, otherwise it defaults to infinity and the constraint can be cleared manually with ’pcs resource clear’ or ’pcs constraint delete’. Lifetime is expected to be specified as ISO 8601 duration (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601#Durations).

If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the resource to move and then return 0 on success or 1 on error. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

If you want the resource to preferably avoid running on some nodes but be able to failover to them use ’pcs constraint location avoids’.

clear <resource id> [node] [--promoted] [--expired] [--wait[=n]]

Remove constraints created by move and/or ban on the specified resource (and node if specified).

If --promoted is used the scope of the command is limited to the Promoted role and promotable clone id must be used (instead of the resource id).

If --expired is specified, only constraints with expired lifetimes will be removed.

If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the operation to finish (including starting and/or moving resources if appropriate) and then return 0 on success or 1 on error. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

standards

List available resource agent standards supported by this installation (OCF, LSB, etc.).

providers

List available OCF resource agent providers.

agents [standard[:provider]]

List available agents optionally filtered by standard and provider.

update <resource id> [resource options] [op [<operation action>
<operation options>]...] [meta <meta operations>...] [--wait[=n]]

Add, remove or change options of specified resource, clone or multi-state resource. Unspecified options will be kept unchanged. If you wish to remove an option, set it to empty value, i.e. ’option_name=’.

If an operation (op) is specified it will update the first found operation with the same action on the specified resource. If no operation with that action exists then a new operation will be created. (WARNING: all existing options on the updated operation will be reset if not specified.) If you want to create multiple monitor operations you should use the ’op add’ & ’op remove’ commands.

If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the changes to take effect and then return 0 if the changes have been processed or 1 otherwise. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

op add <resource id> <operation action> [operation properties]

Add operation for specified resource.

op delete <resource id> <operation action> [<operation properties>...]

Remove specified operation (note: you must specify the exact operation properties to properly remove an existing operation).

op delete <operation id>

Remove the specified operation id.

op remove <resource id> <operation action> [<operation properties>...]

Remove specified operation (note: you must specify the exact operation properties to properly remove an existing operation).

op remove <operation id>

Remove the specified operation id.

op defaults [config] [--all] [--full] [--no-check-expired]

List currently configured default values for operations. If --all is specified, also list expired sets of values. If --full is specified, also list ids. If --no-expire-check is specified, do not evaluate whether sets of values are expired.

op defaults <name>=<value>...

Set default values for operations.
NOTE: Defaults do not apply to resources / stonith devices which override them with their own defined values.

op defaults set create [<set options>] [meta [<name>=<value>]...] [rule
[<expression>]]

Create a new set of default values for resource / stonith device operations. You may specify a rule describing resources / stonith devices and / or operations to which the set applies.

Set options are: id, score

Expression looks like one of the following:
op <operation name> [interval=<interval>]
resource [<standard>]:[<provider>]:[<type>]
defined|not_defined <node attribute>
<node attribute> lt|gt|lte|gte|eq|ne [string|integer|number|version] <value>
date gt|lt <date>
date in_range [<date>] to <date>
date in_range <date> to duration <duration options>
date-spec <date-spec options>
<expression> and|or <expression>
(<expression>)

You may specify all or any of ’standard’, ’provider’ and ’type’ in a resource expression. For example: ’resource ocf::’ matches all resources of ’ocf’ standard, while ’resource ::Dummy’ matches all resources of ’Dummy’ type regardless of their standard and provider.

Dates are expected to conform to ISO 8601 format.

Duration options are: hours, monthdays, weekdays, yearsdays, months, weeks, years, weekyears, moon. Value for these options is an integer.

Date-spec options are: hours, monthdays, weekdays, yearsdays, months, weeks, years, weekyears, moon. Value for these options is an integer or a range written as integer-integer.

NOTE: Defaults do not apply to resources / stonith devices which override them with their own defined values.

op defaults set delete [<set id>]...

Delete specified options sets.

op defaults set remove [<set id>]...

Delete specified options sets.

op defaults set update <set id> [meta [<name>=<value>]...]

Add, remove or change values in specified set of default values for resource / stonith device operations. Unspecified options will be kept unchanged. If you wish to remove an option, set it to empty value, i.e. ’option_name=’.

NOTE: Defaults do not apply to resources / stonith devices which override them with their own defined values.

op defaults update <name>=<value>...

Add, remove or change default values for operations. This is a simplified command useful for cases when you only manage one set of default values. Unspecified options will be kept unchanged. If you wish to remove an option, set it to empty value, i.e. ’option_name=’.

NOTE: Defaults do not apply to resources / stonith devices which override them with their own defined values.

meta <resource id | group id | clone id> <meta options> [--wait[=n]]

Add specified options to the specified resource, group or clone. Meta options should be in the format of name=value, options may be removed by setting an option without a value. If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the changes to take effect and then return 0 if the changes have been processed or 1 otherwise. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.
Example: pcs resource meta TestResource failure-timeout=50 resource-stickiness=

group list

Show all currently configured resource groups and their resources.

group add <group id> <resource id> [resource id] ... [resource id]
[--before <resource id> | --after <resource id>] [--wait[=n]]

Add the specified resource to the group, creating the group if it does not exist. If the resource is present in another group it is moved to the new group. If the group remains empty after move, it is deleted (for cloned groups, the clone is deleted as well). The delete operation may fail in case the group is referenced within the configuration, e.g. by constraints. In that case, use ’pcs resource ungroup’ command prior to moving all resources out of the group.

You can use --before or --after to specify the position of the added resources relatively to some resource already existing in the group. By adding resources to a group they are already in and specifying --after or --before you can move the resources in the group.

If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the operation to finish (including moving resources if appropriate) and then return 0 on success or 1 on error. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

group delete <group id> [resource id]... [--wait[=n]]

Remove the group (note: this does not remove any resources from the cluster) or if resources are specified, remove the specified resources from the group. If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the operation to finish (including moving resources if appropriate) and the return 0 on success or 1 on error. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

group remove <group id> [resource id]... [--wait[=n]]

Remove the group (note: this does not remove any resources from the cluster) or if resources are specified, remove the specified resources from the group. If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the operation to finish (including moving resources if appropriate) and the return 0 on success or 1 on error. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

ungroup <group id> [resource id]... [--wait[=n]]

Remove the group (note: this does not remove any resources from the cluster) or if resources are specified, remove the specified resources from the group. If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the operation to finish (including moving resources if appropriate) and the return 0 on success or 1 on error. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

clone <resource id | group id> [<clone id>] [clone options]...
[--wait[=n]]

Set up the specified resource or group as a clone. If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the operation to finish (including starting clone instances if appropriate) and then return 0 on success or 1 on error. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

promotable <resource id | group id> [<clone id>] [clone options]...
[--wait[=n]]

Set up the specified resource or group as a promotable clone. This is an alias for ’pcs resource clone <resource id> promotable=true’.

unclone <clone id | resource id | group id> [--wait[=n]]

Remove the specified clone or the clone which contains the specified group or resource (the resource or group will not be removed). If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the operation to finish (including stopping clone instances if appropriate) and then return 0 on success or 1 on error. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

bundle create <bundle id> container <container type> [<container
options>] [network <network options>] [port-map <port options>]...
[storage-map <storage options>]... [meta <meta options>] [--disabled]
[--wait[=n]]

Create a new bundle encapsulating no resources. The bundle can be used either as it is or a resource may be put into it at any time. If --disabled is specified, the bundle is not started automatically. If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the bundle to start and then return 0 on success or 1 on error. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

bundle reset <bundle id> [container <container options>] [network
<network options>] [port-map <port options>]... [storage-map <storage
options>]... [meta <meta options>] [--disabled] [--wait[=n]]

Configure specified bundle with given options. Unlike bundle update, this command resets the bundle according given options - no previous options are kept. Resources inside the bundle are kept as they are. If --disabled is specified, the bundle is not started automatically. If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the bundle to start and then return 0 on success or 1 on error. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

bundle update <bundle id> [container <container options>] [network
<network options>] [port-map (add <port options>) | (delete | remove
<id>...)]... [storage-map (add <storage options>) | (delete | remove
<id>...)]... [meta <meta options>] [--wait[=n]]

Add, remove or change options of specified bundle. Unspecified options will be kept unchanged. If you wish to remove an option, set it to empty value, i.e. ’option_name=’.

If you wish to update a resource encapsulated in the bundle, use the ’pcs resource update’ command instead and specify the resource id.

If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the operation to finish (including moving resources if appropriate) and then return 0 on success or 1 on error. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

manage <resource id | tag id>... [--monitor]

Set resources listed to managed mode (default). If --monitor is specified, enable all monitor operations of the resources.

unmanage <resource id | tag id>... [--monitor]

Set resources listed to unmanaged mode. When a resource is in unmanaged mode, the cluster is not allowed to start nor stop the resource. If --monitor is specified, disable all monitor operations of the resources.

defaults [config] [--all] [--full] [--no-check-expired]

List currently configured default values for resources / stonith devices. If --all is specified, also list expired sets of values. If --full is specified, also list ids. If --no-expire-check is specified, do not evaluate whether sets of values are expired.

defaults <name>=<value>...

Set default values for resources / stonith devices.
NOTE: Defaults do not apply to resources / stonith devices which override them with their own defined values.

defaults set create [<set options>] [meta [<name>=<value>]...] [rule
[<expression>]]

Create a new set of default values for resources / stonith devices. You may specify a rule describing resources / stonith devices to which the set applies.

Set options are: id, score

Expression looks like one of the following:
resource [<standard>]:[<provider>]:[<type>]
date gt|lt <date>
date in_range [<date>] to <date>
date in_range <date> to duration <duration options>
date-spec <date-spec options>
<expression> and|or <expression>
(<expression>)

You may specify all or any of ’standard’, ’provider’ and ’type’ in a resource expression. For example: ’resource ocf::’ matches all resources of ’ocf’ standard, while ’resource ::Dummy’ matches all resources of ’Dummy’ type regardless of their standard and provider.

Dates are expected to conform to ISO 8601 format.

Duration options are: hours, monthdays, weekdays, yearsdays, months, weeks, years, weekyears, moon. Value for these options is an integer.

Date-spec options are: hours, monthdays, weekdays, yearsdays, months, weeks, years, weekyears, moon. Value for these options is an integer or a range written as integer-integer.

NOTE: Defaults do not apply to resources / stonith devices which override them with their own defined values.

defaults set delete [<set id>]...

Delete specified options sets.

defaults set remove [<set id>]...

Delete specified options sets.

defaults set update <set id> [meta [<name>=<value>]...]

Add, remove or change values in specified set of default values for resources / stonith devices. Unspecified options will be kept unchanged. If you wish to remove an option, set it to empty value, i.e. ’option_name=’.

NOTE: Defaults do not apply to resources / stonith devices which override them with their own defined values.

defaults update <name>=<value>...

Add, remove or change default values for resources / stonith devices. This is a simplified command useful for cases when you only manage one set of default values. Unspecified options will be kept unchanged. If you wish to remove an option, set it to empty value, i.e. ’option_name=’.

NOTE: Defaults do not apply to resources / stonith devices which override them with their own defined values.

cleanup [<resource id | stonith id>] [node=<node>]
[operation=<operation> [interval=<interval>]] [--strict]

Make the cluster forget failed operations from history of the resource / stonith device and re-detect its current state. This can be useful to purge knowledge of past failures that have since been resolved.

If the named resource is part of a group, or one numbered instance of a clone or bundled resource, the clean-up applies to the whole collective resource unless --strict is given.

If a resource id / stonith id is not specified then all resources / stonith devices will be cleaned up.

If a node is not specified then resources / stonith devices on all nodes will be cleaned up.

refresh [<resource id | stonith id>] [node=<node>] [--strict]

Make the cluster forget the complete operation history (including failures) of the resource / stonith device and re-detect its current state. If you are interested in forgetting failed operations only, use the ’pcs resource cleanup’ command.

If the named resource is part of a group, or one numbered instance of a clone or bundled resource, the refresh applies to the whole collective resource unless --strict is given.

If a resource id / stonith id is not specified then all resources / stonith devices will be refreshed.

If a node is not specified then resources / stonith devices on all nodes will be refreshed.

failcount [show [<resource id | stonith id>] [node=<node>]
[operation=<operation> [interval=<interval>]]] [--full]

Show current failcount for resources and stonith devices, optionally filtered by a resource / stonith device, node, operation and its interval. If --full is specified do not sum failcounts per resource / stonith device and node. Use ’pcs resource cleanup’ or ’pcs resource refresh’ to reset failcounts.

relocate dry-run [resource1] [resource2] ...

The same as ’relocate run’ but has no effect on the cluster.

relocate run [resource1] [resource2] ...

Relocate specified resources to their preferred nodes. If no resources are specified, relocate all resources. This command calculates the preferred node for each resource while ignoring resource stickiness. Then it creates location constraints which will cause the resources to move to their preferred nodes. Once the resources have been moved the constraints are deleted automatically. Note that the preferred node is calculated based on current cluster status, constraints, location of resources and other settings and thus it might change over time.

relocate show

Display current status of resources and their optimal node ignoring resource stickiness.

relocate clear

Remove all constraints created by the ’relocate run’ command.

utilization [<resource id> [<name>=<value> ...]]

Add specified utilization options to specified resource. If resource is not specified, shows utilization of all resources. If utilization options are not specified, shows utilization of specified resource. Utilization option should be in format name=value, value has to be integer. Options may be removed by setting an option without a value. Example: pcs resource utilization TestResource cpu= ram=20

relations <resource id> [--full]

Display relations of a resource specified by its id with other resources in a tree structure. Supported types of resource relations are: ordering constraints, ordering set constraints, relations defined by resource hierarchy (clones, groups, bundles). If --full is used, more verbose output will be printed.

cluster
setup <cluster name> (<node name> [addr=<node address>]...)...
[transport knet|udp|udpu [<transport options>] [link <link options>]...
[compression <compression options>] [crypto <crypto options>]] [totem
<totem options>] [quorum <quorum options>] [--no-cluster-uuid]
([--enable] [--start [--wait[=<n>]]] [--no-keys-sync]) |
[--corosync_conf <path>]

Create a cluster from the listed nodes and synchronize cluster configuration files to them. If --corosync_conf is specified, do not connect to other nodes and save corosync.conf to the specified path; see ’Local only mode’ below for details.

Nodes are specified by their names and optionally their addresses. If no addresses are specified for a node, pcs will configure corosync to communicate with that node using an address provided in ’pcs host auth’ command. Otherwise, pcs will configure corosync to communicate with the node using the specified addresses.

Transport knet:
This is the default transport. It allows configuring traffic encryption and compression as well as using multiple addresses (links) for nodes.
Transport options are: ip_version, knet_pmtud_interval, link_mode
Link options are: link_priority, linknumber, mcastport, ping_interval, ping_precision, ping_timeout, pong_count, transport (udp or sctp)
Each ’link’ followed by options sets options for one link in the order the links are defined by nodes’ addresses. You can set link options for a subset of links using a linknumber. See examples below.
Compression options are: level, model, threshold
Crypto options are: cipher, hash, model
By default, encryption is enabled with cipher=aes256 and hash=sha256. To disable encryption, set cipher=none and hash=none.

Transports udp and udpu:
These transports are limited to one address per node. They do not support traffic encryption nor compression.
Transport options are: ip_version, netmtu
Link options are: bindnetaddr, broadcast, mcastaddr, mcastport, ttl

Totem and quorum can be configured regardless of used transport.
Totem options are: block_unlisted_ips, consensus, downcheck, fail_recv_const, heartbeat_failures_allowed, hold, join, max_messages, max_network_delay, merge, miss_count_const, send_join, seqno_unchanged_const, token, token_coefficient, token_retransmit, token_retransmits_before_loss_const, window_size
Quorum options are: auto_tie_breaker, last_man_standing, last_man_standing_window, wait_for_all

Transports and their options, link, compression, crypto and totem options are all documented in corosync.conf(5) man page; knet link options are prefixed ’knet_’ there, compression options are prefixed ’knet_compression_’ and crypto options are prefixed ’crypto_’. Quorum options are documented in votequorum(5) man page.

--no-cluster-uuid will not generate a unique ID for the cluster. --enable will configure the cluster to start on nodes boot. --start will start the cluster right after creating it. --wait will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the cluster to start. --no-keys-sync will skip creating and distributing pcsd SSL certificate and key and corosync and pacemaker authkey files. Use this if you provide your own certificates and keys.

Local only mode:
By default, pcs connects to all specified nodes to verify they can be used in the new cluster and to send cluster configuration files to them. If this is not what you want, specify --corosync_conf option followed by a file path. Pcs will save corosync.conf to the specified file and will not connect to cluster nodes. These are the tasks that pcs skips in that case:
* make sure the nodes are not running or configured to run a cluster already
* make sure cluster packages are installed on all nodes and their versions are compatible
* make sure there are no cluster configuration files on any node (run ’pcs cluster destroy’ and remove pcs_settings.conf file on all nodes)
* synchronize corosync and pacemaker authkeys, /etc/corosync/authkey and /etc/pacemaker/authkey respectively, and the corosync.conf file
* authenticate the cluster nodes against each other (’pcs cluster auth’ or ’pcs host auth’ command)
* synchronize pcsd certificates (so that pcs web UI can be used in an HA mode)

Examples:
Create a cluster with default settings:
pcs cluster setup newcluster node1 node2
Create a cluster using two links:
pcs cluster setup newcluster node1 addr=10.0.1.11 addr=10.0.2.11 node2 addr=10.0.1.12 addr=10.0.2.12
Set link options for all links. Link options are matched to the links in order. The first link (link 0) has sctp transport, the second link (link 1) has mcastport 55405:
pcs cluster setup newcluster node1 addr=10.0.1.11 addr=10.0.2.11 node2 addr=10.0.1.12 addr=10.0.2.12 transport knet link transport=sctp link mcastport=55405
Set link options for the second and fourth links only. Link options are matched to the links based on the linknumber option (the first link is link 0):
pcs cluster setup newcluster node1 addr=10.0.1.11 addr=10.0.2.11 addr=10.0.3.11 addr=10.0.4.11 node2 addr=10.0.1.12 addr=10.0.2.12 addr=10.0.3.12 addr=10.0.4.12 transport knet link linknumber=3 mcastport=55405 link linknumber=1 transport=sctp
Create a cluster using udp transport with a non-default port:
pcs cluster setup newcluster node1 node2 transport udp link mcastport=55405

config [show] [--output-format cmd|json|text] [--corosync_conf <path>]

Show cluster configuration. There are 3 formats of output available: ’cmd’, ’json’ and ’text’, default is ’text’. Format ’text’ is a human friendly output. Format ’cmd’ prints pcs commands which can be used to recreate the same configuration. Format ’json’ is a machine oriented output of the configuration. If --corosync_conf is specified, configuration file specified by <path> is used instead of the current cluster configuration.

config update [transport <transport options>] [compression <compression
options>] [crypto <crypto options>] [totem <totem options>]
[--corosync_conf <path>]

Update cluster configuration. Unspecified options will be kept unchanged. If you wish to remove an option, set it to empty value, i.e. ’option_name=’.

If --corosync_conf is specified, update cluster configuration in a file specified by <path>.

All options are documented in corosync.conf(5) man page. There are different transport options for transport types. Compression and crypto options are only available for knet transport. Totem options can be set regardless of the transport type.
Transport options for knet transport are: ip_version, knet_pmtud_interval, link_mode
Transport options for udp and updu transports are: ip_version, netmtu
Compression options are: level, model, threshold
Crypto options are: cipher, hash, model
Totem options are: block_unlisted_ips, consensus, downcheck, fail_recv_const, heartbeat_failures_allowed, hold, join, max_messages, max_network_delay, merge, miss_count_const, send_join, seqno_unchanged_const, token, token_coefficient, token_retransmit, token_retransmits_before_loss_const, window_size

config uuid generate [--corosync_conf <path>] [--force]

Generate a new cluster UUID and distribute it to all cluster nodes. Cluster UUID is not used by the cluster stack in any way, it is provided to easily distinguish between multiple clusters in a multi-cluster environment since the cluster name does not have to be unique.

If --corosync_conf is specified, update cluster configuration in file specified by <path>.

If --force is specified, existing UUID will be overwritten.

authkey corosync [<path>]

Generate a new corosync authkey and distribute it to all cluster nodes. If <path> is specified, do not generate a key and use key from the file.

start [--all | <node>... ] [--wait[=<n>]] [--request-timeout=<seconds>]

Start a cluster on specified node(s). If no nodes are specified then start a cluster on the local node. If --all is specified then start a cluster on all nodes. If the cluster has many nodes then the start request may time out. In that case you should consider setting --request-timeout to a suitable value. If --wait is specified, pcs waits up to ’n’ seconds for the cluster to get ready to provide services after the cluster has successfully started.

stop [--all | <node>... ] [--request-timeout=<seconds>]

Stop a cluster on specified node(s). If no nodes are specified then stop a cluster on the local node. If --all is specified then stop a cluster on all nodes. If the cluster is running resources which take long time to stop then the stop request may time out before the cluster actually stops. In that case you should consider setting --request-timeout to a suitable value.

kill

Force corosync and pacemaker daemons to stop on the local node (performs kill -9). Note that init system (e.g. systemd) can detect that cluster is not running and start it again. If you want to stop cluster on a node, run pcs cluster stop on that node.

enable [--all | <node>... ]

Configure cluster to run on node boot on specified node(s). If node is not specified then cluster is enabled on the local node. If --all is specified then cluster is enabled on all nodes.

disable [--all | <node>... ]

Configure cluster to not run on node boot on specified node(s). If node is not specified then cluster is disabled on the local node. If --all is specified then cluster is disabled on all nodes.

auth [-u <username>] [-p <password>]

Authenticate pcs/pcsd to pcsd on nodes configured in the local cluster.

status

View current cluster status (an alias of ’pcs status cluster’).

sync

Sync cluster configuration (files which are supported by all subcommands of this command) to all cluster nodes.

sync corosync

Sync corosync configuration to all nodes found from current corosync.conf file.

cib [filename] [scope=<scope> | --config]

Get the raw xml from the CIB (Cluster Information Base). If a filename is provided, we save the CIB to that file, otherwise the CIB is printed. Specify scope to get a specific section of the CIB. Valid values of the scope are: acls, alerts, configuration, constraints, crm_config, fencing-topology, nodes, op_defaults, resources, rsc_defaults, tags. --config is the same as scope=configuration. Do not specify a scope if you want to edit the saved CIB using pcs (pcs -f <command>).

cib-push <filename> [--wait[=<n>]] [diff-against=<filename_original> |
scope=<scope> | --config]

Push the raw xml from <filename> to the CIB (Cluster Information Base). You can obtain the CIB by running the ’pcs cluster cib’ command, which is recommended first step when you want to perform desired modifications (pcs -f <command>) for the one-off push.
If diff-against is specified, pcs diffs contents of filename against contents of filename_original and pushes the result to the CIB.
Specify scope to push a specific section of the CIB. Valid values of the scope are: acls, alerts, configuration, constraints, crm_config, fencing-topology, nodes, op_defaults, resources, rsc_defaults, tags. --config is the same as scope=configuration. Use of --config is recommended. Do not specify a scope if you need to push the whole CIB or be warned in the case of outdated CIB.
If --wait is specified wait up to ’n’ seconds for changes to be applied.
WARNING:
the selected scope of the CIB will be overwritten by the current content of the specified file.

Example:
pcs cluster cib > original.xml
cp original.xml new.xml
pcs -f new.xml constraint location apache prefers node2
pcs cluster cib-push new.xml diff-against=original.xml

cib-upgrade

Upgrade the CIB to conform to the latest version of the document schema.

edit [scope=<scope> | --config]

Edit the cib in the editor specified by the $EDITOR environment variable and push out any changes upon saving. Specify scope to edit a specific section of the CIB. Valid values of the scope are: acls, alerts, configuration, constraints, crm_config, fencing-topology, nodes, op_defaults, resources, rsc_defaults, tags. --config is the same as scope=configuration. Use of --config is recommended. Do not specify a scope if you need to edit the whole CIB or be warned in the case of outdated CIB.

node add <node name> [addr=<node address>]... [watchdog=<watchdog
path>] [device=<SBD device path>]... [--start [--wait[=<n>]]]
[--enable] [--no-watchdog-validation]

Add the node to the cluster and synchronize all relevant configuration files to the new node. This command can only be run on an existing cluster node.

The new node is specified by its name and optionally its addresses. If no addresses are specified for the node, pcs will configure corosync to communicate with the node using an address provided in ’pcs host auth’ command. Otherwise, pcs will configure corosync to communicate with the node using the specified addresses.

Use ’watchdog’ to specify a path to a watchdog on the new node, when SBD is enabled in the cluster. If SBD is configured with shared storage, use ’device’ to specify path to shared device(s) on the new node.

If --start is specified also start cluster on the new node, if --wait is specified wait up to ’n’ seconds for the new node to start. If --enable is specified configure cluster to start on the new node on boot. If --no-watchdog-validation is specified, validation of watchdog will be skipped.

WARNING: By default, it is tested whether the specified watchdog is supported. This may cause a restart of the system when a watchdog with no-way-out-feature enabled is present. Use --no-watchdog-validation to skip watchdog validation.

node delete <node name> [<node name>]...

Shutdown specified nodes and remove them from the cluster.

node remove <node name> [<node name>]...

Shutdown specified nodes and remove them from the cluster.

node add-remote <node name> [<node address>] [options] [op <operation
action> <operation options> [<operation action> <operation
options>]...] [meta <meta options>...] [--wait[=<n>]]

Add the node to the cluster as a remote node. Sync all relevant configuration files to the new node. Start the node and configure it to start the cluster on boot. Options are port and reconnect_interval. Operations and meta belong to an underlying connection resource (ocf:pacemaker:remote). If node address is not specified for the node, pcs will configure pacemaker to communicate with the node using an address provided in ’pcs host auth’ command. Otherwise, pcs will configure pacemaker to communicate with the node using the specified addresses. If --wait is specified, wait up to ’n’ seconds for the node to start.

node delete-remote <node identifier>

Shutdown specified remote node and remove it from the cluster. The node-identifier can be the name of the node or the address of the node.

node remove-remote <node identifier>

Shutdown specified remote node and remove it from the cluster. The node-identifier can be the name of the node or the address of the node.

node add-guest <node name> <resource id> [options] [--wait[=<n>]]

Make the specified resource a guest node resource. Sync all relevant configuration files to the new node. Start the node and configure it to start the cluster on boot. Options are remote-addr, remote-port and remote-connect-timeout. If remote-addr is not specified for the node, pcs will configure pacemaker to communicate with the node using an address provided in ’pcs host auth’ command. Otherwise, pcs will configure pacemaker to communicate with the node using the specified addresses. If --wait is specified, wait up to ’n’ seconds for the node to start.

node delete-guest <node identifier>

Shutdown specified guest node and remove it from the cluster. The node-identifier can be the name of the node or the address of the node or id of the resource that is used as the guest node.

node remove-guest <node identifier>

Shutdown specified guest node and remove it from the cluster. The node-identifier can be the name of the node or the address of the node or id of the resource that is used as the guest node.

node clear <node name>

Remove specified node from various cluster caches. Use this if a removed node is still considered by the cluster to be a member of the cluster.

link add <node_name>=<node_address>... [options <link options>]

Add a corosync link. One address must be specified for each cluster node. If no linknumber is specified, pcs will use the lowest available linknumber.
Link options (documented in corosync.conf(5) man page) are: link_priority, linknumber, mcastport, ping_interval, ping_precision, ping_timeout, pong_count, transport (udp or sctp)

link delete <linknumber> [<linknumber>]...

Remove specified corosync links.

link remove <linknumber> [<linknumber>]...

Remove specified corosync links.

link update <linknumber> [<node_name>=<node_address>...] [options <link
options>]

Add, remove or change node addresses / link options of an existing corosync link. Use this if you cannot add / remove links which is the preferred way. Unspecified options will be kept unchanged. If you wish to remove an option, set it to empty value, i.e. ’option_name=’.
Link options (documented in corosync.conf(5) man page) are:
for knet transport: link_priority, mcastport, ping_interval, ping_precision, ping_timeout, pong_count, transport (udp or sctp)
for udp and udpu transports: bindnetaddr, broadcast, mcastaddr, mcastport, ttl

uidgid

List the current configured uids and gids of users allowed to connect to corosync.

uidgid add [uid=<uid>] [gid=<gid>]

Add the specified uid and/or gid to the list of users/groups allowed to connect to corosync.

uidgid delete [uid=<uid>] [gid=<gid>]

Remove the specified uid and/or gid from the list of users/groups allowed to connect to corosync.

uidgid remove [uid=<uid>] [gid=<gid>]

Remove the specified uid and/or gid from the list of users/groups allowed to connect to corosync.

corosync [node]

Get the corosync.conf from the specified node or from the current node if node not specified.

reload corosync

Reload the corosync configuration on the current node.

destroy [--all] [--force]

Permanently destroy the cluster on the current node, killing all cluster processes and removing all cluster configuration files. Using --all will attempt to destroy the cluster on all nodes in the local cluster.

WARNING: This command permanently removes any cluster configuration that has been created. It is recommended to run ’pcs cluster stop’ before destroying the cluster. To prevent accidental running of this command, --force or interactive user response is required in order to proceed.

verify [--full] [-f <filename>]

Checks the pacemaker configuration (CIB) for syntax and common conceptual errors. If no filename is specified the check is performed on the currently running cluster. If --full is used more verbose output will be printed.

report [--from "YYYY-M-D H:M:S" [--to "YYYY-M-D H:M:S"]] <dest>

Create a tarball containing everything needed when reporting cluster problems. If --from and --to are not used, the report will include the past 24 hours.

stonith
[status [<resource id | tag id>] [node=<node>] [--hide-inactive]]

Show status of all currently configured stonith devices. If --hide-inactive is specified, only show active stonith devices. If a resource or tag id is specified, only show status of the specified resource or resources in the specified tag. If node is specified, only show status of resources configured for the specified node.

config [--output-format text|cmd|json] [<stonith id>]...

Show options of all currently configured stonith devices or if stonith device ids are specified show the options for the specified stonith device ids. There are 3 formats of output available: ’cmd’, ’json’ and ’text’, default is ’text’. Format ’text’ is a human friendly output. Format ’cmd’ prints pcs commands which can be used to recreate the same configuration. Format ’json’ is a machine oriented output of the configuration.

list [filter] [--nodesc]

Show list of all available stonith agents (if filter is provided then only stonith agents matching the filter will be shown). If --nodesc is used then descriptions of stonith agents are not printed.

describe <stonith agent> [--full]

Show options for specified stonith agent. If --full is specified, all options including advanced and deprecated ones are shown.

create <stonith id> <stonith device type> [stonith device options] [op
<operation action> <operation options> [<operation action> <operation
options>]...] [meta <meta options>...] [--group <group id> [--before
<stonith id> | --after <stonith id>]] [--disabled] [--wait[=n]]

Create stonith device with specified type and options. If --group is specified the stonith device is added to the group named. You can use --before or --after to specify the position of the added stonith device relatively to some stonith device already existing in the group. If--disabled is specified the stonith device is not used. If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the stonith device to start and then return 0 if the stonith device is started, or 1 if the stonith device has not yet started. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

Example: Create a device for nodes node1 and node2
pcs stonith create MyFence fence_virt pcmk_host_list=node1,node2
Example: Use port p1 for node n1 and ports p2 and p3 for node n2
pcs stonith create MyFence fence_virt ’pcmk_host_map=n1:p1;n2:p2,p3’

update <stonith id> [stonith options] [op [<operation action>
<operation options>]...] [meta <meta operations>...] [--wait[=n]]

Add, remove or change options of specified stonith device. Unspecified options will be kept unchanged. If you wish to remove an option, set it to empty value, i.e. ’option_name=’.

If an operation (op) is specified it will update the first found operation with the same action on the specified stonith device. If no operation with that action exists then a new operation will be created. (WARNING: all existing options on the updated operation will be reset if not specified.) If you want to create multiple monitor operations you should use the ’op add’ & ’op remove’ commands.

If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the changes to take effect and then return 0 if the changes have been processed or 1 otherwise. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

update-scsi-devices <stonith id> (set <device-path> [<device-path>...])
| (add <device-path> [<device-path>...] delete|remove <device-path>
[<device-path>...] )

Update scsi fencing devices without affecting other resources. You must specify either list of set devices or at least one device for add or delete/remove devices. Stonith resource must be running on one cluster node. Each device will be unfenced on each cluster node running cluster. Supported fence agents: fence_scsi, fence_mpath.

delete <stonith id>

Remove stonith id from configuration.

remove <stonith id>

Remove stonith id from configuration.

op add <stonith id> <operation action> [operation properties]

Add operation for specified stonith device.

op delete <stonith id> <operation action> [<operation properties>...]

Remove specified operation (note: you must specify the exact operation properties to properly remove an existing operation).

op delete <operation id>

Remove the specified operation id.

op remove <stonith id> <operation action> [<operation properties>...]

Remove specified operation (note: you must specify the exact operation properties to properly remove an existing operation).

op remove <operation id>

Remove the specified operation id.

op defaults [config] [--all] [--full] [--no-check-expired]

This command is an alias of ’resource op defaults [config]’ command.

List currently configured default values for operations. If --all is specified, also list expired sets of values. If --full is specified, also list ids. If --no-expire-check is specified, do not evaluate whether sets of values are expired.

op defaults <name>=<value>...

This command is an alias of ’resource op defaults’ command.

Set default values for operations.
NOTE: Defaults do not apply to resources / stonith devices which override them with their own defined values.

op defaults set create [<set options>] [meta [<name>=<value>]...] [rule
[<expression>]]

This command is an alias of ’resource op defaults set create’ command.

Create a new set of default values for resource / stonith device operations. You may specify a rule describing resources / stonith devices and / or operations to which the set applies.

Set options are: id, score

Expression looks like one of the following:
op <operation name> [interval=<interval>]
resource [<standard>]:[<provider>]:[<type>]
defined|not_defined <node attribute>
<node attribute> lt|gt|lte|gte|eq|ne [string|integer|number|version] <value>
date gt|lt <date>
date in_range [<date>] to <date>
date in_range <date> to duration <duration options>
date-spec <date-spec options>
<expression> and|or <expression>
(<expression>)

You may specify all or any of ’standard’, ’provider’ and ’type’ in a resource expression. For example: ’resource ocf::’ matches all resources of ’ocf’ standard, while ’resource ::Dummy’ matches all resources of ’Dummy’ type regardless of their standard and provider.

Dates are expected to conform to ISO 8601 format.

Duration options are: hours, monthdays, weekdays, yearsdays, months, weeks, years, weekyears, moon. Value for these options is an integer.

Date-spec options are: hours, monthdays, weekdays, yearsdays, months, weeks, years, weekyears, moon. Value for these options is an integer or a range written as integer-integer.

NOTE: Defaults do not apply to resources / stonith devices which override them with their own defined values.

op defaults set delete [<set id>]...

This command is an alias of ’resource op defaults set delete’ command.

Delete specified options sets.

op defaults set remove [<set id>]...

This command is an alias of ’resource op defaults set delete’ command.

Delete specified options sets.

op defaults set update <set id> [meta [<name>=<value>]...]

This command is an alias of ’resource op defaults set update’ command.

Add, remove or change values in specified set of default values for resource / stonith device operations. Unspecified options will be kept unchanged. If you wish to remove an option, set it to empty value, i.e. ’option_name=’.

NOTE: Defaults do not apply to resources / stonith devices which override them with their own defined values.

op defaults update <name>=<value>...

This command is an alias of ’resource op defaults update’ command.

Add, remove or change default values for operations. This is a simplified command useful for cases when you only manage one set of default values. Unspecified options will be kept unchanged. If you wish to remove an option, set it to empty value, i.e. ’option_name=’.

NOTE: Defaults do not apply to resources / stonith devices which override them with their own defined values.

meta <stonith id> <meta options> [--wait[=n]]

Add specified options to the specified stonith device. Meta options should be in the format of name=value, options may be removed by setting an option without a value. If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the changes to take effect and then return 0 if the changes have been processed or 1 otherwise. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

Example: pcs stonith meta test_stonith failure-timeout=50 resource-stickiness=

defaults [config] [--all] [--full] [--no-check-expired]

This command is an alias of ’resource defaults [config]’ command.

List currently configured default values for resources / stonith devices. If --all is specified, also list expired sets of values. If --full is specified, also list ids. If --no-expire-check is specified, do not evaluate whether sets of values are expired.

defaults <name>=<value>...

This command is an alias of ’resource defaults’ command.

Set default values for resources / stonith devices.
NOTE: Defaults do not apply to resources / stonith devices which override them with their own defined values.

defaults set create [<set options>] [meta [<name>=<value>]...] [rule
[<expression>]]

This command is an alias of ’resource defaults set create’ command.

Create a new set of default values for resources / stonith devices. You may specify a rule describing resources / stonith devices to which the set applies.

Set options are: id, score

Expression looks like one of the following:
resource [<standard>]:[<provider>]:[<type>]
date gt|lt <date>
date in_range [<date>] to <date>
date in_range <date> to duration <duration options>
date-spec <date-spec options>
<expression> and|or <expression>
(<expression>)

You may specify all or any of ’standard’, ’provider’ and ’type’ in a resource expression. For example: ’resource ocf::’ matches all resources of ’ocf’ standard, while ’resource ::Dummy’ matches all resources of ’Dummy’ type regardless of their standard and provider.

Dates are expected to conform to ISO 8601 format.

Duration options are: hours, monthdays, weekdays, yearsdays, months, weeks, years, weekyears, moon. Value for these options is an integer.

Date-spec options are: hours, monthdays, weekdays, yearsdays, months, weeks, years, weekyears, moon. Value for these options is an integer or a range written as integer-integer.

NOTE: Defaults do not apply to resources / stonith devices which override them with their own defined values.

defaults set delete [<set id>]...

This command is an alias of ’resource defaults set delete’ command.

Delete specified options sets.

defaults set remove [<set id>]...

This command is an alias of ’resource defaults set delete’ command.

Delete specified options sets.

defaults set update <set id> [meta [<name>=<value>]...]

This command is an alias of ’resource defaults set update’ command.

Add, remove or change values in specified set of default values for resources / stonith devices. Unspecified options will be kept unchanged. If you wish to remove an option, set it to empty value, i.e. ’option_name=’.

NOTE: Defaults do not apply to resources / stonith devices which override them with their own defined values.

defaults update <name>=<value>...

This command is an alias of ’resource defaults update’ command.

Add, remove or change default values for resources / stonith devices. This is a simplified command useful for cases when you only manage one set of default values. Unspecified options will be kept unchanged. If you wish to remove an option, set it to empty value, i.e. ’option_name=’.

NOTE: Defaults do not apply to resources / stonith devices which override them with their own defined values.

cleanup [<resource id | stonith id>] [node=<node>]
[operation=<operation> [interval=<interval>]] [--strict]

This command is an alias of ’resource cleanup’ command.

Make the cluster forget failed operations from history of the resource / stonith device and re-detect its current state. This can be useful to purge knowledge of past failures that have since been resolved.

If the named resource is part of a group, or one numbered instance of a clone or bundled resource, the clean-up applies to the whole collective resource unless --strict is given.

If a resource id / stonith id is not specified then all resources / stonith devices will be cleaned up.

If a node is not specified then resources / stonith devices on all nodes will be cleaned up.

refresh [<resource id | stonith id>] [node=<node>] [--strict]

This command is an alias of ’resource refresh’ command.

Make the cluster forget the complete operation history (including failures) of the resource / stonith device and re-detect its current state. If you are interested in forgetting failed operations only, use the ’pcs resource cleanup’ command.

If the named resource is part of a group, or one numbered instance of a clone or bundled resource, the refresh applies to the whole collective resource unless --strict is given.

If a resource id / stonith id is not specified then all resources / stonith devices will be refreshed.

If a node is not specified then resources / stonith devices on all nodes will be refreshed.

failcount [show [<resource id | stonith id>] [node=<node>]
[operation=<operation> [interval=<interval>]]] [--full]

This command is an alias of ’resource failcount show’ command.

Show current failcount for resources and stonith devices, optionally filtered by a resource / stonith device, node, operation and its interval. If --full is specified do not sum failcounts per resource / stonith device and node. Use ’pcs resource cleanup’ or ’pcs resource refresh’ to reset failcounts.

enable <stonith id>... [--wait[=n]]

Allow the cluster to use the stonith devices. If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the stonith devices to start and then return 0 if the stonith devices are started, or 1 if the stonith devices have not yet started. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

disable <stonith id>... [--wait[=n]]

Attempt to stop the stonith devices if they are running and disallow the cluster to use them. If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the stonith devices to stop and then return 0 if the stonith devices are stopped or 1 if the stonith devices have not stopped. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

level [config]

Lists all of the fencing levels currently configured.

level add <level> <target> <stonith id> [stonith id]...

Add the fencing level for the specified target with the list of stonith devices to attempt for that target at that level. Fence levels are attempted in numerical order (starting with 1). If a level succeeds (meaning all devices are successfully fenced in that level) then no other levels are tried, and the target is considered fenced. Target may be a node name <node_name> or %<node_name> or node%<node_name>, a node name regular expression regexp%<node_pattern> or a node attribute value attrib%<name>=<value>.

level delete <level> [target <target>] [stonith <stonith id>...]

Removes the fence level for the level, target and/or devices specified. If no target or devices are specified then the fence level is removed. Target may be a node name <node_name> or %<node_name> or node%<node_name>, a node name regular expression regexp%<node_pattern> or a node attribute value attrib%<name>=<value>.

level remove <level> [target <target>] [stonith <stonith id>...]

Removes the fence level for the level, target and/or devices specified. If no target or devices are specified then the fence level is removed. Target may be a node name <node_name> or %<node_name> or node%<node_name>, a node name regular expression regexp%<node_pattern> or a node attribute value attrib%<name>=<value>.

level clear [target <target> | stonith <stonith id>...]

Clears the fence levels on the target (or stonith id) specified or clears all fence levels if a target/stonith id is not specified. Target may be a node name <node_name> or %<node_name> or node%<node_name>, a node name regular expression regexp%<node_pattern> or a node attribute value attrib%<name>=<value>. Example: pcs stonith level clear stonith dev_a dev_b

level verify

Verifies all fence devices and nodes specified in fence levels exist.

fence <node> [--off]

Fence the node specified (if --off is specified, use the ’off’ API call to stonith which will turn the node off instead of rebooting it).

confirm <node> [--force]

Confirm to the cluster that the specified node is powered off. This allows the cluster to recover from a situation where no stonith device is able to fence the node. This command should ONLY be used after manually ensuring that the node is powered off and has no access to shared resources.

WARNING: If this node is not actually powered off or it does have access to shared resources, data corruption/cluster failure can occur. To prevent accidental running of this command, --force or interactive user response is required in order to proceed.

NOTE: It is not checked if the specified node exists in the cluster in order to be able to work with nodes not visible from the local cluster partition.

history [show [<node>]]

Show fencing history for the specified node or all nodes if no node specified.

history cleanup [<node>]

Cleanup fence history of the specified node or all nodes if no node specified.

history update

Update fence history from all nodes.

sbd enable [watchdog=<path>[@<node>]]... [device=<path>[@<node>]]...
[<SBD_OPTION>=<value>]... [--no-watchdog-validation]

Enable SBD in cluster. Default path for watchdog device is /dev/watchdog. Allowed SBD options: SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT (default: 5), SBD_DELAY_START (default: no), SBD_STARTMODE (default: always) and SBD_TIMEOUT_ACTION. SBD options are documented in sbd(8) man page. It is possible to specify up to 3 devices per node. If --no-watchdog-validation is specified, validation of watchdogs will be skipped.

WARNING: Cluster has to be restarted in order to apply these changes.

WARNING: By default, it is tested whether the specified watchdog is supported. This may cause a restart of the system when a watchdog with no-way-out-feature enabled is present. Use --no-watchdog-validation to skip watchdog validation.

Example of enabling SBD in cluster with watchdogs on node1 will be /dev/watchdog2, on node2 /dev/watchdog1, /dev/watchdog0 on all other nodes, device /dev/sdb on node1, device /dev/sda on all other nodes and watchdog timeout will bet set to 10 seconds:

pcs stonith sbd enable watchdog=/dev/watchdog2@node1 watchdog=/dev/watchdog1@node2 watchdog=/dev/watchdog0 device=/dev/sdb@node1 device=/dev/sda SBD_WATCHDOG_TIMEOUT=10

sbd disable

Disable SBD in cluster.

WARNING: Cluster has to be restarted in order to apply these changes.

sbd device setup device=<path> [device=<path>]...
[watchdog-timeout=<integer>] [allocate-timeout=<integer>]
[loop-timeout=<integer>] [msgwait-timeout=<integer>]

Initialize SBD structures on device(s) with specified timeouts.

WARNING: All content on device(s) will be overwritten.

sbd device message <device-path> <node> <message-type>

Manually set a message of the specified type on the device for the node. Possible message types (they are documented in sbd(8) man page): test, reset, off, crashdump, exit, clear

sbd status [--full]

Show status of SBD services in cluster and local device(s) configured. If --full is specified, also dump of SBD headers on device(s) will be shown.

sbd config

Show SBD configuration in cluster.

sbd watchdog list

Show all available watchdog devices on the local node.

WARNING: Listing available watchdogs may cause a restart of the system when a watchdog with no-way-out-feature enabled is present.

sbd watchdog test [<watchdog-path>]

This operation is expected to force-reboot the local system without following any shutdown procedures using a watchdog. If no watchdog is specified, available watchdog will be used if only one watchdog device is available on the local system.

acl
[config]

List all current access control lists.

enable

Enable access control lists.

disable

Disable access control lists.

role create <role id> [description=<description>] [((read | write |
deny) (xpath <query> | id <id>))...]

Create a role with the id and (optional) description specified. Each role can also have an unlimited number of permissions (read/write/deny) applied to either an xpath query or the id of a specific element in the cib.
Permissions are applied to the selected XML element’s entire XML subtree (all elements enclosed within it). Write permission grants the ability to create, modify, or remove the element and its subtree, and also the ability to create any "scaffolding" elements (enclosing elements that do not have attributes other than an ID). Permissions for more specific matches (more deeply nested elements) take precedence over more general ones. If multiple permissions are configured for the same match (for example, in different roles applied to the same user), any deny permission takes precedence, then write, then lastly read.
An xpath may include an attribute expression to select only elements that match the expression, but the permission still applies to the entire element (and its subtree), not to the attribute alone. For example, using the xpath "//*[@name]" to give write permission would allow changes to the entirety of all elements that have a "name" attribute and everything enclosed by those elements. There is no way currently to give permissions for just one attribute of an element. That is to say, you can not define an ACL that allows someone to read just the dc-uuid attribute of the cib tag - that would select the cib element and give read access to the entire CIB.

role delete <role id>

Delete the role specified and remove it from any users/groups it was assigned to.

role remove <role id>

Delete the role specified and remove it from any users/groups it was assigned to.

role assign <role id> [to] [user|group] <username/group>

Assign a role to a user or group already created with ’pcs acl user/group create’. If there is user and group with the same id and it is not specified which should be used, user will be prioritized. In cases like this specify whenever user or group should be used.

role unassign <role id> [from] [user|group] <username/group>

Remove a role from the specified user. If there is user and group with the same id and it is not specified which should be used, user will be prioritized. In cases like this specify whenever user or group should be used.

user create <username> [<role id>]...

Create an ACL for the user specified and assign roles to the user.

user delete <username>

Remove the user specified (and roles assigned will be unassigned for the specified user).

user remove <username>

Remove the user specified (and roles assigned will be unassigned for the specified user).

group create <group> [<role id>]...

Create an ACL for the group specified and assign roles to the group.

group delete <group>

Remove the group specified (and roles assigned will be unassigned for the specified group).

group remove <group>

Remove the group specified (and roles assigned will be unassigned for the specified group).

permission add <role id> ((read | write | deny) (xpath <query> | id
<id>))...

Add the listed permissions to the role specified. Permissions are applied to either an xpath query or the id of a specific element in the CIB.
Permissions are applied to the selected XML element’s entire XML subtree (all elements enclosed within it). Write permission grants the ability to create, modify, or remove the element and its subtree, and also the ability to create any "scaffolding" elements (enclosing elements that do not have attributes other than an ID). Permissions for more specific matches (more deeply nested elements) take precedence over more general ones. If multiple permissions are configured for the same match (for example, in different roles applied to the same user), any deny permission takes precedence, then write, then lastly read.
An xpath may include an attribute expression to select only elements that match the expression, but the permission still applies to the entire element (and its subtree), not to the attribute alone. For example, using the xpath "//*[@name]" to give write permission would allow changes to the entirety of all elements that have a "name" attribute and everything enclosed by those elements. There is no way currently to give permissions for just one attribute of an element. That is to say, you can not define an ACL that allows someone to read just the dc-uuid attribute of the cib tag - that would select the cib element and give read access to the entire CIB.

permission delete <permission id>

Remove the permission id specified (permission id’s are listed in parenthesis after permissions in ’pcs acl’ output).

permission remove <permission id>

Remove the permission id specified (permission id’s are listed in parenthesis after permissions in ’pcs acl’ output).

property
[config [<property> | --all | --defaults]] | [--all | --defaults]

List property settings (default: lists configured properties). If --defaults is specified will show all property defaults, if --all is specified, current configured properties will be shown with unset properties and their defaults. See pacemaker-controld(7) and pacemaker-schedulerd(7) man pages for a description of the properties.

set <property>=[<value>] ... [--force]

Set specific pacemaker properties (if the value is blank then the property is removed from the configuration). If a property is not recognized by pcs the property will not be created unless the --force is used. See pacemaker-controld(7) and pacemaker-schedulerd(7) man pages for a description of the properties.

unset <property> ...

Remove property from configuration. See pacemaker-controld(7) and pacemaker-schedulerd(7) man pages for a description of the properties.

constraint
[config] [--full] [--all]

List all current constraints that are not expired. If --all is specified also show expired constraints. If --full is specified also list the constraint ids.

location <resource> prefers <node>[=<score>] [<node>[=<score>]]...

Create a location constraint on a resource to prefer the specified node with score (default score: INFINITY). Resource may be either a resource id <resource_id> or %<resource_id> or resource%<resource_id>, or a resource name regular expression regexp%<resource_pattern>.

location <resource> avoids <node>[=<score>] [<node>[=<score>]]...

Create a location constraint on a resource to avoid the specified node with score (default score: INFINITY). Resource may be either a resource id <resource_id> or %<resource_id> or resource%<resource_id>, or a resource name regular expression regexp%<resource_pattern>.

location <resource> rule [id=<rule id>] [resource-discovery=<option>]
[role=Promoted|Unpromoted] [constraint-id=<id>] [score=<score> |
score-attribute=<attribute>] <expression>

Creates a location constraint with a rule on the specified resource where expression looks like one of the following:
defined|not_defined <node attribute>
<node attribute> lt|gt|lte|gte|eq|ne [string|integer|number|version] <value>
date gt|lt <date>
date in_range <date> to <date>
date in_range <date> to duration <duration options>...
date-spec <date spec options>...
<expression> and|or <expression>
( <expression> )
where duration options and date spec options are: hours, monthdays, weekdays, yeardays, months, weeks, years, weekyears, moon. Resource may be either a resource id <resource_id> or %<resource_id> or resource%<resource_id>, or a resource name regular expression regexp%<resource_pattern>. If score is omitted it defaults to INFINITY. If id is omitted one is generated from the resource id. If resource-discovery is omitted it defaults to ’always’.

location [config [resources [<resource>...]] | [nodes [<node>...]]]
[--full] [--all]

List all the current location constraints that are not expired. If ’resources’ is specified, location constraints are displayed per resource (default). If ’nodes’ is specified, location constraints are displayed per node. If specific nodes or resources are specified then we only show information about them. Resource may be either a resource id <resource_id> or %<resource_id> or resource%<resource_id>, or a resource name regular expression regexp%<resource_pattern>. If --full is specified show the internal constraint id’s as well. If --all is specified show the expired constraints.

location add <id> <resource> <node> <score>
[resource-discovery=<option>]

Add a location constraint with the appropriate id for the specified resource, node name and score. Resource may be either a resource id <resource_id> or %<resource_id> or resource%<resource_id>, or a resource name regular expression regexp%<resource_pattern>.

location delete <id>

Remove a location constraint with the appropriate id.

location remove <id>

Remove a location constraint with the appropriate id.

order [config] [--full]

List all current ordering constraints (if --full is specified show the internal constraint id’s as well).

order [action] <resource id> then [action] <resource id> [options]

Add an ordering constraint specifying actions (start, stop, promote, demote) and if no action is specified the default action will be start. Available options are kind=Optional/Mandatory/Serialize, symmetrical=true/false, require-all=true/false and id=<constraint-id>.

order set <resource1> [resourceN]... [options] [set <resourceX> ...
[options]] [setoptions [constraint_options]]

Create an ordered set of resources. Available options are sequential=true/false, require-all=true/false and action=start/promote/demote/stop. Available constraint_options are id=<constraint-id>, kind=Optional/Mandatory/Serialize and symmetrical=true/false.

order delete <resource1> [resourceN]...

Remove resource from any ordering constraint

order remove <resource1> [resourceN]...

Remove resource from any ordering constraint

colocation [config] [--full]

List all current colocation constraints (if --full is specified show the internal constraint id’s as well).

colocation add [<role>] <source resource id> with [<role>] <target
resource id> [score] [options] [id=constraint-id]

Request <source resource> to run on the same node where pacemaker has determined <target resource> should run. Positive values of score mean the resources should be run on the same node, negative values mean the resources should not be run on the same node. Specifying ’INFINITY’ (or ’-INFINITY’) for the score forces <source resource> to run (or not run) with <target resource> (score defaults to "INFINITY"). A role can be: ’Promoted’, ’Unpromoted’, ’Started’, ’Stopped’ (if no role is specified, it defaults to ’Started’).

colocation set <resource1> [resourceN]... [options] [set <resourceX>
... [options]] [setoptions [constraint_options]]

Create a colocation constraint with a resource set. Available options are sequential=true/false and role=Stopped/Started/Promoted/Unpromoted. Available constraint_options are id and either of: score, score-attribute, score-attribute-mangle.

colocation delete <source resource id> <target resource id>

Remove colocation constraints with specified resources.

colocation remove <source resource id> <target resource id>

Remove colocation constraints with specified resources.

ticket [config] [--full]

List all current ticket constraints (if --full is specified show the internal constraint id’s as well).

ticket add <ticket> [<role>] <resource id> [<options>]
[id=<constraint-id>]

Create a ticket constraint for <resource id>. Available option is loss-policy=fence/stop/freeze/demote. A role can be Promoted, Unpromoted, Started or Stopped.

ticket set <resource1> [<resourceN>]... [<options>] [set <resourceX>
... [<options>]] setoptions <constraint_options>

Create a ticket constraint with a resource set. Available options are role=Stopped/Started/Promoted/Unpromoted. Required constraint option is ticket=<ticket>. Optional constraint options are id=<constraint-id> and loss-policy=fence/stop/freeze/demote.

ticket delete <ticket> <resource id>

Remove all ticket constraints with <ticket> from <resource id>.

ticket remove <ticket> <resource id>

Remove all ticket constraints with <ticket> from <resource id>.

delete <constraint id>...

Remove constraint(s) or constraint rules with the specified id(s).

remove <constraint id>...

Remove constraint(s) or constraint rules with the specified id(s).

ref <resource>...

List constraints referencing specified resource.

rule add <constraint id> [id=<rule id>] [role=Promoted|Unpromoted]
[score=<score>|score-attribute=<attribute>] <expression>

Add a rule to a location constraint specified by ’constraint id’ where the expression looks like one of the following:
defined|not_defined <node attribute>
<node attribute> lt|gt|lte|gte|eq|ne [string|integer|number|version] <value>
date gt|lt <date>
date in_range <date> to <date>
date in_range <date> to duration <duration options>...
date-spec <date spec options>...
<expression> and|or <expression>
( <expression> )
where duration options and date spec options are: hours, monthdays, weekdays, yeardays, months, weeks, years, weekyears, moon. If score is omitted it defaults to INFINITY. If id is omitted one is generated from the constraint id.

rule delete <rule id>

Remove a rule from its location constraint and if it’s the last rule, the constraint will also be removed.

rule remove <rule id>

Remove a rule from its location constraint and if it’s the last rule, the constraint will also be removed.

qdevice
status <device model> [--full] [<cluster name>]

Show runtime status of specified model of quorum device provider. Using --full will give more detailed output. If <cluster name> is specified, only information about the specified cluster will be displayed.

setup model <device model> [--enable] [--start]

Configure specified model of quorum device provider. Quorum device then can be added to clusters by running "pcs quorum device add" command in a cluster. --start will also start the provider. --enable will configure the provider to start on boot.

destroy <device model>

Disable and stop specified model of quorum device provider and delete its configuration files.

start <device model>

Start specified model of quorum device provider.

stop <device model>

Stop specified model of quorum device provider.

kill <device model>

Force specified model of quorum device provider to stop (performs kill -9). Note that init system (e.g. systemd) can detect that the qdevice is not running and start it again. If you want to stop the qdevice, run "pcs qdevice stop" command.

enable <device model>

Configure specified model of quorum device provider to start on boot.

disable <device model>

Configure specified model of quorum device provider to not start on boot.

quorum
[config]

Show quorum configuration.

status

Show quorum runtime status.

device add [<generic options>] model <device model> [<model options>]
[heuristics <heuristics options>]

Add a quorum device to the cluster. Quorum device should be configured first with "pcs qdevice setup". It is not possible to use more than one quorum device in a cluster simultaneously.
Currently the only supported model is ’net’. It requires model options ’algorithm’ and ’host’ to be specified. Options are documented in corosync-qdevice(8) man page; generic options are ’sync_timeout’ and ’timeout’, for model net options check the quorum.device.net section, for heuristics options see the quorum.device.heuristics section. Pcs automatically creates and distributes TLS certificates and sets the ’tls’ model option to the default value ’on’.
Example: pcs quorum device add model net algorithm=lms host=qnetd.internal.example.com

device heuristics delete

Remove all heuristics settings of the configured quorum device.

device heuristics remove

Remove all heuristics settings of the configured quorum device.

device delete

Remove a quorum device from the cluster.

device remove

Remove a quorum device from the cluster.

device status [--full]

Show quorum device runtime status. Using --full will give more detailed output.

device update [<generic options>] [model <model options>] [heuristics
<heuristics options>]

Add, remove or change quorum device options. Unspecified options will be kept unchanged. If you wish to remove an option, set it to empty value, i.e. ’option_name=’. Requires the cluster to be stopped. Model and options are all documented in corosync-qdevice(8) man page; for heuristics options check the quorum.device.heuristics subkey section, for model options check the quorum.device.<device model> subkey sections.

WARNING: If you want to change "host" option of qdevice model net, use "pcs quorum device remove" and "pcs quorum device add" commands to set up configuration properly unless old and new host is the same machine.

expected-votes <votes>

Set expected votes in the live cluster to specified value. This only affects the live cluster, not changes any configuration files.

unblock [--force]

Cancel waiting for all nodes when establishing quorum. Useful in situations where you know the cluster is inquorate, but you are confident that the cluster should proceed with resource management regardless. This command should ONLY be used when nodes which the cluster is waiting for have been confirmed to be powered off and to have no access to shared resources.

WARNING: If the nodes are not actually powered off or they do have access to shared resources, data corruption/cluster failure can occur. To prevent accidental running of this command, --force or interactive user response is required in order to proceed.

update [auto_tie_breaker=[0|1]] [last_man_standing=[0|1]]
[last_man_standing_window=[<time in ms>]] [wait_for_all=[0|1]]

Add, remove or change quorum options. At least one option must be specified. Unspecified options will be kept unchanged. If you wish to remove an option, set it to empty value, i.e. ’option_name=’. Options are documented in corosync’s votequorum(5) man page. Requires the cluster to be stopped.

booth
setup sites <address> <address> [<address>...] [arbitrators <address>
...] [--force]

Write new booth configuration with specified sites and arbitrators. Total number of peers (sites and arbitrators) must be odd. When the configuration file already exists, command fails unless --force is specified.

destroy

Remove booth configuration files.

ticket add <ticket> [<name>=<value> ...]

Add new ticket to the current configuration. Ticket options are specified in booth manpage.

ticket delete <ticket>

Remove the specified ticket from the current configuration.

ticket remove <ticket>

Remove the specified ticket from the current configuration.

config [<node>]

Show booth configuration from the specified node or from the current node if node not specified.

create ip <address>

Make the cluster run booth service on the specified ip address as a cluster resource. Typically this is used to run booth site.

delete

Remove booth resources created by the "pcs booth create" command.

remove

Remove booth resources created by the "pcs booth create" command.

restart

Restart booth resources created by the "pcs booth create" command.

ticket grant <ticket> [<site address>]

Grant the ticket to the site specified by the address, hence to the booth formation this site is a member of. When this specification is omitted, site address that has been specified with ’pcs booth create’ command is used. Specifying site address is therefore mandatory when running this command at a host in an arbitrator role.
Note that the ticket must not be already granted in given booth formation; for an ad-hoc (and, in the worst case, abrupt, for a lack of a direct atomicity) change of this preference baring direct interventions at the sites, the ticket needs to be revoked first, only then it can be granted at another site again.

ticket revoke <ticket> [<site address>]

Revoke the ticket in the booth formation as identified with one of its member sites specified by the address. When this specification is omitted, site address that has been specified with a prior ’pcs booth create’ command is used. Specifying site address is therefore mandatory when running this command at a host in an arbitrator role.

status

Print current status of booth on the local node.

pull <node>

Pull booth configuration from the specified node.

sync [--skip-offline]

Send booth configuration from the local node to all nodes in the cluster.

enable

Enable booth arbitrator service.

disable

Disable booth arbitrator service.

start

Start booth arbitrator service.

stop

Stop booth arbitrator service.

status
[status] [--full] [--hide-inactive]

View all information about the cluster and resources (--full provides more details, --hide-inactive hides inactive resources).

resources [<resource id | tag id>] [node=<node>] [--hide-inactive]

Show status of all currently configured resources. If --hide-inactive is specified, only show active resources. If a resource or tag id is specified, only show status of the specified resource or resources in the specified tag. If node is specified, only show status of resources configured for the specified node.

cluster

View current cluster status.

corosync

View current membership information as seen by corosync.

quorum

View current quorum status.

qdevice <device model> [--full] [<cluster name>]

Show runtime status of specified model of quorum device provider. Using --full will give more detailed output. If <cluster name> is specified, only information about the specified cluster will be displayed.

booth

Print current status of booth on the local node.

nodes [corosync | both | config]

View current status of nodes from pacemaker. If ’corosync’ is specified, view current status of nodes from corosync instead. If ’both’ is specified, view current status of nodes from both corosync & pacemaker. If ’config’ is specified, print nodes from corosync & pacemaker configuration.

pcsd [<node>]...

Show current status of pcsd on nodes specified, or on all nodes configured in the local cluster if no nodes are specified.

xml

View xml version of status (output from crm_mon -r -1 -X).

config

[show]

View full cluster configuration.

backup [filename]

Creates the tarball containing the cluster configuration files. If filename is not specified the standard output will be used.

restore [--local] [filename]

Restores the cluster configuration files on all nodes from the backup. If filename is not specified the standard input will be used. If --local is specified only the files on the current node will be restored.

checkpoint

List all available configuration checkpoints.

checkpoint view <checkpoint_number>

Show specified configuration checkpoint.

checkpoint diff <checkpoint_number> <checkpoint_number>

Show differences between the two specified checkpoints. Use checkpoint number ’live’ to compare a checkpoint to the current live configuration.

checkpoint restore <checkpoint_number>

Restore cluster configuration to specified checkpoint.

pcsd
certkey <certificate file> <key file>

Load custom certificate and key files for use in pcsd.

status [<node>]...

Show current status of pcsd on nodes specified, or on all nodes configured in the local cluster if no nodes are specified.

sync-certificates

Sync pcsd certificates to all nodes in the local cluster.

deauth [<token>]...

Delete locally stored authentication tokens used by remote systems to connect to the local pcsd instance. If no tokens are specified all tokens will be deleted. After this command is run other nodes will need to re-authenticate against this node to be able to connect to it.

host
auth (<host name> [addr=<address>[:<port>]])... [-u <username>] [-p
<password>]

Authenticate local pcs/pcsd against pcsd on specified hosts. It is possible to specify an address and a port via which pcs/pcsd will communicate with each host. If an address is not specified a host name will be used. If a port is not specified 2224 will be used.

deauth [<host name>]...

Delete authentication tokens which allow pcs/pcsd on the current system to connect to remote pcsd instances on specified host names. If the current system is a member of a cluster, the tokens will be deleted from all nodes in the cluster. If no host names are specified all tokens will be deleted. After this command is run this node will need to re-authenticate against other nodes to be able to connect to them.

node
attribute [[<node>] [--name <name>] | <node> <name>=<value> ...]

Manage node attributes. If no parameters are specified, show attributes of all nodes. If one parameter is specified, show attributes of specified node. If --name is specified, show specified attribute’s value from all nodes. If more parameters are specified, set attributes of specified node. Attributes can be removed by setting an attribute without a value.

maintenance [--all | <node>...] [--wait[=n]]

Put specified node(s) into maintenance mode, if no nodes or options are specified the current node will be put into maintenance mode, if --all is specified all nodes will be put into maintenance mode. If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the node(s) to be put into maintenance mode and then return 0 on success or 1 if the operation not succeeded yet. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

unmaintenance [--all | <node>...] [--wait[=n]]

Remove node(s) from maintenance mode, if no nodes or options are specified the current node will be removed from maintenance mode, if --all is specified all nodes will be removed from maintenance mode. If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the node(s) to be removed from maintenance mode and then return 0 on success or 1 if the operation not succeeded yet. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

standby [--all | <node>...] [--wait[=n]]

Put specified node(s) into standby mode (the node specified will no longer be able to host resources), if no nodes or options are specified the current node will be put into standby mode, if --all is specified all nodes will be put into standby mode. If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the node(s) to be put into standby mode and then return 0 on success or 1 if the operation not succeeded yet. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

unstandby [--all | <node>...] [--wait[=n]]

Remove node(s) from standby mode (the node specified will now be able to host resources), if no nodes or options are specified the current node will be removed from standby mode, if --all is specified all nodes will be removed from standby mode. If --wait is specified, pcs will wait up to ’n’ seconds for the node(s) to be removed from standby mode and then return 0 on success or 1 if the operation not succeeded yet. If ’n’ is not specified it defaults to 60 minutes.

utilization [[<node>] [--name <name>] | <node> <name>=<value> ...]

Add specified utilization options to specified node. If node is not specified, shows utilization of all nodes. If --name is specified, shows specified utilization value from all nodes. If utilization options are not specified, shows utilization of specified node. Utilization option should be in format name=value, value has to be integer. Options may be removed by setting an option without a value. Example: pcs node utilization node1 cpu=4 ram=

alert
[config]

Show all configured alerts.

create path=<path> [id=<alert-id>] [description=<description>] [options
[<option>=<value>]...] [meta [<meta-option>=<value>]...]

Define an alert handler with specified path. Id will be automatically generated if it is not specified.

update <alert-id> [path=<path>] [description=<description>] [options
[<option>=<value>]...] [meta [<meta-option>=<value>]...]

Update an existing alert handler with specified id. Unspecified options will be kept unchanged. If you wish to remove an option, set it to empty value, i.e. ’option_name=’.

delete <alert-id> ...

Remove alert handlers with specified ids.

remove <alert-id> ...

Remove alert handlers with specified ids.

recipient add <alert-id> value=<recipient-value> [id=<recipient-id>]
[description=<description>] [options [<option>=<value>]...] [meta
[<meta-option>=<value>]...]

Add new recipient to specified alert handler.

recipient update <recipient-id> [value=<recipient-value>]
[description=<description>] [options [<option>=<value>]...] [meta
[<meta-option>=<value>]...]

Update an existing recipient identified by its id. Unspecified options will be kept unchanged. If you wish to remove an option, set it to empty value, i.e. ’option_name=’.

recipient delete <recipient-id> ...

Remove specified recipients.

recipient remove <recipient-id> ...

Remove specified recipients.

client
local-auth [<pcsd-port>] [-u <username>] [-p <password>]

Authenticate current user to local pcsd. This is required to run some pcs commands which may require permissions of root user such as ’pcs cluster start’.

dr

config

Display disaster-recovery configuration from the local node.

status [--full] [--hide-inactive]

Display status of the local and the remote site cluster (--full provides more details, --hide-inactive hides inactive resources).

set-recovery-site <recovery site node>

Set up disaster-recovery with the local cluster being the primary site. The recovery site is defined by a name of one of its nodes.

destroy

Permanently destroy disaster-recovery configuration on all sites.

tag
[config|list [<tag id>...]]

Display configured tags.

create <tag id> <id> [<id>]...

Create a tag containing the specified ids.

delete <tag id>...

Delete specified tags.

remove <tag id>...

Delete specified tags.

update <tag id> [add <id> [<id>]... [--before <id> | --after <id>]]
[remove <id> [<id>]...]

Update a tag using the specified ids. Ids can be added, removed or moved in a tag. You can use --before or --after to specify the position of the added ids relatively to some id already existing in the tag. By adding ids to a tag they are already in and specifying --after or --before you can move the ids in the tag.

EXAMPLES

Show all resources

# pcs resource config

Show options specific to the ’VirtualIP’ resource

# pcs resource config VirtualIP

Create a new resource called ’VirtualIP’ with options

# pcs resource create VirtualIP ocf:heartbeat:IPaddr2 ip=192.168.0.99 cidr_netmask=32 nic=eth2 op monitor interval=30s

Create a new resource called ’VirtualIP’ with options

# pcs resource create VirtualIP IPaddr2 ip=192.168.0.99 cidr_netmask=32 nic=eth2 op monitor interval=30s

Change the ip address of VirtualIP and remove the nic option

# pcs resource update VirtualIP ip=192.168.0.98 nic=

Delete the VirtualIP resource

# pcs resource delete VirtualIP

Create the MyStonith stonith fence_virt device which can fence host
’f1’

# pcs stonith create MyStonith fence_virt pcmk_host_list=f1

Set the stonith-enabled property to false on the cluster (which
disables stonith)

# pcs property set stonith-enabled=false

USING --FORCE IN PCS COMMANDS

Various pcs commands accept the --force option. Its purpose is to override some of checks that pcs is doing or some of errors that may occur when a pcs command is run. When such error occurs, pcs will print the error with a note it may be overridden. The exact behavior of the option is different for each pcs command. Using the --force option can lead into situations that would normally be prevented by logic of pcs commands and therefore its use is strongly discouraged unless you know what you are doing.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

EDITOR

Path to a plain-text editor. This is used when pcs is requested to present a text for the user to edit.

no_proxy, https_proxy, all_proxy, NO_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY, ALL_PROXY

These environment variables (listed according to their priorities) control how pcs handles proxy servers when connecting to cluster nodes. See curl(1) man page for details.

CHANGES IN PCS-0.11

This section summarizes the most important changes in commands done in pcs-0.11.x compared to pcs-0.10.x. For detailed description of current commands see above.

Legacy role names
Roles ’Master’ and ’Slave’ are deprecated and should not be used
anymore. Instead use ’Promoted’ and ’Unpromoted’ respectively.
Similarly, --master has been deprecated and replaced with --promoted.

cluster
uidgid rm

This command has been replaced with ’pcs cluster uidgid delete’ and ’pcs cluster uidgid remove’.

resource

move

The ’pcs resource move’ now automatically removes location constraint used for moving a resource. It is equivalent of ’pcs resource move --autodelete’ from pcs-0.10.9. Legacy functionality of the ’resource move’ command is still available as ’resource move-with-constraint <resource id>’.

show --full

This command has been replaced with ’pcs resource config’.

show --groups

This command has been replaced with ’pcs resource group list’.

show

This command has been replaced with ’pcs resource status’.

stonith
show --full

This command has been replaced with ’pcs stonith config’.

show

This command has been replaced with ’pcs stonith status’.

CHANGES IN PCS-0.10

This section summarizes the most important changes in commands done in pcs-0.10.x compared to pcs-0.9.x. For detailed description of current commands see above.

acl

show

The ’pcs acl show’ command has been deprecated and will be removed. Please use ’pcs acl config’ instead. Applicable in pcs-0.10.9 and newer.

alert

show

The ’pcs alert show’ command has been deprecated and will be removed. Please use ’pcs alert config’ instead. Applicable in pcs-0.10.9 and newer.

cluster

auth

The ’pcs cluster auth’ command only authenticates nodes in a local cluster and does not accept a node list. The new command for authentication is ’pcs host auth’. It allows one to specify host names, addresses and pcsd ports.

node add

Custom node names and Corosync 3.x with knet are fully supported now, therefore the syntax has been completely changed.
The --device and --watchdog options have been replaced with ’device’ and ’watchdog’ options, respectively.

pcsd-status

The ’pcs cluster pcsd-status’ command has been deprecated and will be removed. Please use ’pcs pcsd status’ or ’pcs status pcsd’ instead. Applicable in pcs-0.10.9 and newer.

quorum

This command has been replaced with ’pcs quorum’.

remote-node add

This command has been replaced with ’pcs cluster node add-guest’.

remote-node remove

This command has been replaced with ’pcs cluster node delete-guest’ and its alias ’pcs cluster node remove-guest’.

setup

Custom node names and Corosync 3.x with knet are fully supported now, therefore the syntax has been completely changed.

The --name option has been removed. The first parameter of the command is the cluster name now.
The --local option has been replaced with --corosync_conf <path>.

standby

This command has been replaced with ’pcs node standby’.

uidgid rm

This command has been deprecated, use ’pcs cluster uidgid delete’ or ’pcs cluster uidgid remove’ instead.

unstandby

This command has been replaced with ’pcs node unstandby’.

verify

The -V option has been replaced with --full.

To specify a filename, use the -f option.

constraint

list

The ’pcs constraint list’ command, as well as its variants ’pcs constraint [location | colocation | order | ticket] list’, has been deprecated and will be removed. Please use ’pcs constraint [location | colocation | order | ticket] config’ instead. Applicable in pcs-0.10.9 and newer.

show

The ’pcs constraint show’ command, as well as its variants ’pcs constraint [location | colocation | order | ticket] show’, has been deprecated and will be removed. Please use ’pcs constraint [location | colocation | order | ticket] config’ instead. Applicable in pcs-0.10.9 and newer.

pcsd
clear-auth

This command has been replaced with ’pcs host deauth’ and ’pcs pcsd deauth’.

property

list

The ’pcs property list’ command has been deprecated and will be removed. Please use ’pcs property config’ instead. Applicable in pcs-0.10.9 and newer.

set

The --node option is no longer supported. Use the ’pcs node attribute’ command to set node attributes.

show

The --node option is no longer supported. Use the ’pcs node attribute’ command to view node attributes.

The ’pcs property show’ command has been deprecated and will be removed. Please use ’pcs property config’ instead. Applicable in pcs-0.10.9 and newer.

unset

The --node option is no longer supported. Use the ’pcs node attribute’ command to unset node attributes.

resource

create

The ’master’ keyword has been changed to ’promotable’.

failcount reset

The command has been removed as ’pcs resource cleanup’ is doing exactly the same job.

master

This command has been replaced with ’pcs resource promotable’.

show

Previously, this command displayed either status or configuration of resources depending on the parameters specified. This was confusing, therefore the command was replaced by several new commands. To display resources status, run ’pcs resource’ or ’pcs resource status’. To display resources configuration, run ’pcs resource config’ or ’pcs resource config <resource name>’. To display configured resource groups, run ’pcs resource group list’.

status

groups

This command has been replaced with ’pcs resource group list’.

stonith
level add | clear | delete | remove

Delimiting stonith devices with a comma is deprecated, use a space instead. Applicable in pcs-0.10.9 and newer.

level clear

Syntax of the command has been fixed so that it is not ambiguous any more. New syntax is ’pcs stonith level clear [target <target> | stonith <stonith id>...]’. Old syntax ’pcs stonith level clear [<target> | <stonith ids>]’ is deprecated but still functional in pcs-0.10.x. Applicable in pcs-0.10.9 and newer.

level delete | remove

Syntax of the command has been fixed so that it is not ambiguous any more. New syntax is ’pcs stonith level delete | remove [target <target>] [stonith <stonith id>]...’. Old syntax ’pcs stonith level delete | remove [<target>] [<stonith id>]...’ is deprecated but still functional in pcs-0.10.x. Applicable in pcs-0.10.9 and newer.

sbd device setup

The --device option has been replaced with the ’device’ option.

sbd enable

The --device and --watchdog options have been replaced with ’device’ and ’watchdog’ options, respectively.

show

Previously, this command displayed either status or configuration of stonith resources depending on the parameters specified. This was confusing, therefore the command was replaced by several new commands. To display stonith resources status, run ’pcs stonith’ or ’pcs stonith status’. To display stonith resources configuration, run ’pcs stonith config’ or ’pcs stonith config <stonith name>’.

tag

list

The ’pcs tag list’ command has been deprecated and will be removed. Please use ’pcs tag config’ instead. Applicable in pcs-0.10.9 and newer.

SEE ALSO

http://clusterlabs.org/doc/

pcsd(8), pcs_snmp_agent(8)

corosync_overview(8), votequorum(5), corosync.conf(5), corosync-qdevice(8), corosync-qdevice-tool(8), corosync-qnetd(8), corosync-qnetd-tool(8)

pacemaker-controld(7), pacemaker-fenced(7), pacemaker-schedulerd(7), crm_mon(8), crm_report(8), crm_simulate(8)

boothd(8), sbd(8)

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