Application Interface Specification Quckstart Guide --------------------------------------------------- This AIS package is broken into four parts. The exec directory contains all of the code responsible for serving the APIs. The api directory contains APIs the user can link to. The test directory contains some simple test programs which exercise the APIs. The directory conf contains example configuration files which can be copied directly onto the target system. The API implements the Cluster Membership (CLM), Availabilty Management Framework (AMF) and the Checkpointing (CKPT) APIs. Configuring the AIS Executive: ----------------------------- The AIS Executive will automatically determine cluster membership by communicating on a specified multicast address and port. The directory conf contains the file network.conf bindnetaddr:192.168.1.0 mcastaddr:226.94.1.1 mcastport:6000 bindnetaddr specifies the address which the AIS Executive should bind to. This address should always end in zero. If the local interface taffic traffic should routed over is 192.168.5.92, set bindnetaddr to 192.168.1.0. mcastaddr is a multicast address. The default should work but you may have a different network configuration. Avoid 224.x.x.x because this is a "config" multicast address. mcastport specifies the UDP port number. It is possible to use the same multicast address on a network with the AIS services configured for multiple UDP ports. The directory conf contains the file groups.conf which specifies the failover groups, service units, components, and policies to be used by the AMF. The configuration file matches the testamf1-6 programs in the test directory and can be copied directly. These two files should be placed in the /etc/ais directory. Building AIS ------------ AIS requires GCC, LD, and a Linux 2.4 kernel. AIS has been tested on Debian Sarge, MontaVista Carrier Grade Edition 3.1, and Redhat 9. Compile AIS by running make in the root directory. Make can also be run in the individual directories. Nothing is installed by make. If install is desired, the files must be copied manually. Setup network ------------- Some networks do not automatically configure the default route. Ensure the default route is configured or AIS wont be able to communicate with other nodes. [sdake@slickdeal sdake]$ /sbin/route Kernel IP routing table Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Use Iface 10.0.0.6 * 255.255.255.255 UH 0 0 0 tun0 127.0.0.0 * 255.0.0.0 U 0 0 0 lo default 192.168.1.1 0.0.0.0 UG 0 0 0 eth0 the word default above specifies the default route. If the default route is missing, specify one by unix# /sbin/route add default gw 192.168.1.1 where 192.168.1.1 is the gateway. It is possible to specify an invalid route which will also make AIS work properly. Run AIS Executive ----------------- Get 2 or more nodes and run the AIS executive on each node. A list of node IPs should be displayed on stdout when the nodes join a configuration. Run the aisexec program (after the default route is setup and the config files are in place). Try out the CLM functionality ----------------------------- Run test/testclm on one node. Then kill and add nodes. This will cause callbacks to be called in the testclm application which will print out the node state changes. Try out the AIS AMF functionality --------------------------------- After aisexec is running Run testamf1 on one node, testamf3 testamf4 on another node. One will become active one standby. testamf2 is special in that it shows reporting and canceling an error. Run testamf2 on the node testamf1 was run from. The ha states and readiness states will be shown. Try out the AIS CKPT functionality ---------------------------------- run ckptstress. This will write checkpoint data as quickly as possible to the cluster. Write your own applications --------------------------- Without real applications, finding the hard bugs will be difficult. Please port or write apps and let us know of the progress! Contribute! ----------- Code, examples, documentation, bug reports, testing are all appreciated. Read the TODO or the ask on the mailing lists for ways to contribute.