Upgrade notes

This document details the steps needed to upgrade a cluster to newer versions of Ganeti.

As a general rule the node daemons need to be restarted after each software upgrade; if using the provided example init.d script, this means running the following command on all nodes:

$ /etc/init.d/ganeti restart

2.11 and above

Starting from 2.10 onwards, Ganeti has support for parallely installed versions and automated upgrades. The default configuration for 2.11 and higher already is to install as a parallel version without changing the running version. If both versions, the installed one and the one to upgrade to, are 2.10 or higher, the actual switch of the live version can be carried out by the following command on the master node.:

$ gnt-cluster upgrade --to 2.11

This will carry out the steps described below in the section on upgrades from 2.1 and above. Downgrades to the previous minor version can be done in the same way, specifiying the smaller version on the --to argument.

Note that gnt-cluster upgrade only manages the actual switch between versions as described below on upgrades from 2.1 and above. It does not install or remove any binaries. Having the new binaries installed is a prerequisite of calling gnt-cluster upgrade (and the command will abort if the prerequisite is not met). The old binaries can be used to downgrade back to the previous version; once the system administrator decides that going back to the old version is not needed any more, they can be removed. Addition and removal of the Ganeti binaries should happen in the same way as for all other binaries on your system.

2.13

When upgrading to 2.13, first apply the instructions of 2.11 and above. 2.13 comes with the new feature of enhanced SSH security through individual SSH keys. This features needs to be enabled after the upgrade by:

$ gnt-cluster renew-crypto --new-ssh-keys --no-ssh-key-check

Note that new SSH keys are generated automatically without warning when upgrading with gnt-cluster upgrade.

If you instructed Ganeti to not touch the SSH setup (by using the --no-ssh-init option of gnt-cluster init, the changes in the handling of SSH keys will not affect your cluster.

If you want to be prompted for each newly created SSH key, leave out the --no-ssh-key-check option in the command listed above.

Note that after a downgrade from 2.13 to 2.12, the individual SSH keys will not get removed automatically. This can lead to reachability errors under very specific circumstances (Issue 1008). In case you plan on keeping 2.12 for a while and not upgrade to 2.13 again soon, we recommend to replace all SSH key pairs of non-master nodes’ with the master node’s SSH key pair.

2.12

Due to issue #1094 in Ganeti 2.11 and 2.12 up to version 2.12.4, we advise to rerun ‘gnt-cluster renew-crypto –new-node-certificates’ after an upgrade to 2.12.5 or higher.

2.11

When upgrading to 2.11, first apply the instructions of 2.11 and above. 2.11 comes with the new feature of enhanced RPC security through client certificates. This features needs to be enabled after the upgrade by:

$ gnt-cluster renew-crypto --new-node-certificates

Note that new node certificates are generated automatically without warning when upgrading with gnt-cluster upgrade.

2.1 and above

Starting with Ganeti 2.0, upgrades between revisions (e.g. 2.1.0 to 2.1.1) should not need manual intervention. As a safety measure, minor releases (e.g. 2.1.3 to 2.2.0) require the cfgupgrade command for changing the configuration version. Below you find the steps necessary to upgrade between minor releases.

To run commands on all nodes, the distributed shell (dsh) can be used, e.g. dsh -M -F 8 -f /var/lib/ganeti/ssconf_online_nodes gnt-cluster --version.

  1. Ensure no jobs are running (master node only):

    $ gnt-job list
    
  2. Pause the watcher for an hour (master node only):

    $ gnt-cluster watcher pause 1h
    
  3. Stop all daemons on all nodes:

    $ /etc/init.d/ganeti stop
    
  4. Backup old configuration (master node only):

    $ tar czf /var/lib/ganeti-$(date +%FT%T).tar.gz -C /var/lib ganeti
    
    (``/var/lib/ganeti`` can also contain exported instances, so make sure to
    backup only files you are interested in. Use ``--exclude export`` for
    example)
    
  5. Install new Ganeti version on all nodes

  6. Run cfgupgrade on the master node:

    $ /usr/lib/ganeti/tools/cfgupgrade --verbose --dry-run
    $ /usr/lib/ganeti/tools/cfgupgrade --verbose
    

    (cfgupgrade supports a number of parameters, run it with --help for more information)

  7. Upgrade the directory permissions on all nodes:

    $ /usr/lib/ganeti/ensure-dirs --full-run
    

    Note that ensure-dirs does not create the directories for file and shared-file storage. This is due to security reasons. They need to be created manually. For details see man gnt-cluster.

  8. Create the (missing) required users and make users part of the required groups on all nodes:

    $ /usr/lib/ganeti/tools/users-setup
    

    This will ask for confirmation. To execute directly, add the --yes-do-it option.

  9. Restart daemons on all nodes:

    $ /etc/init.d/ganeti restart
    
  10. Re-distribute configuration (master node only):

    $ gnt-cluster redist-conf
    
  11. If you use file storage, check that the /etc/ganeti/file-storage-paths is correct on all nodes. For security reasons it’s not copied automatically, but it can be copied manually via:

    $ gnt-cluster copyfile /etc/ganeti/file-storage-paths
    
  12. Restart daemons again on all nodes:

    $ /etc/init.d/ganeti restart
    
  13. Enable the watcher again (master node only):

    $ gnt-cluster watcher continue
    
  14. Verify cluster (master node only):

    $ gnt-cluster verify
    

Reverting an upgrade

For going back between revisions (e.g. 2.1.1 to 2.1.0) no manual intervention is required, as for upgrades.

Starting from version 2.8, cfgupgrade supports --downgrade option to bring the configuration back to the previous stable version. This is useful if you upgrade Ganeti and after some time you run into problems with the new version. You can downgrade the configuration without losing the changes made since the upgrade. Any feature not supported by the old version will be removed from the configuration, of course, but you get a warning about it. If there is any new feature and you haven’t changed from its default value, you don’t have to worry about it, as it will get the same value whenever you’ll upgrade again.

Automatic downgrades

From version 2.11 onwards, downgrades can be done by using the gnt-cluster upgrade command.:

gnt-cluster upgrade --to 2.10

Manual downgrades

The procedure is similar to upgrading, but please notice that you have to revert the configuration before installing the old version.

  1. Ensure no jobs are running (master node only):

    $ gnt-job list
    
  2. Pause the watcher for an hour (master node only):

    $ gnt-cluster watcher pause 1h
    
  3. Stop all daemons on all nodes:

    $ /etc/init.d/ganeti stop
    
  4. Backup old configuration (master node only):

    $ tar czf /var/lib/ganeti-$(date +%FT%T).tar.gz -C /var/lib ganeti
    
  5. Run cfgupgrade on the master node:

    $ /usr/lib/ganeti/tools/cfgupgrade --verbose --downgrade --dry-run
    $ /usr/lib/ganeti/tools/cfgupgrade --verbose --downgrade
    

    You may want to copy all the messages about features that have been removed during the downgrade, in case you want to restore them when upgrading again.

  6. Install the old Ganeti version on all nodes

    NB: in Ganeti 2.8, the cmdlib.py file was split into a series of files contained in the cmdlib directory. If Ganeti is installed from sources and not from a package, while downgrading Ganeti to a pre-2.8 version it is important to remember to remove the cmdlib directory from the directory containing the Ganeti python files (which usually is ${PREFIX}/lib/python${VERSION}/dist-packages/ganeti). A simpler upgrade/downgrade procedure will be made available in future versions of Ganeti.

  7. Restart daemons on all nodes:

    $ /etc/init.d/ganeti restart
    
  8. Re-distribute configuration (master node only):

    $ gnt-cluster redist-conf
    
  9. Restart daemons again on all nodes:

    $ /etc/init.d/ganeti restart
    
  10. Enable the watcher again (master node only):

    $ gnt-cluster watcher continue
    
  11. Verify cluster (master node only):

    $ gnt-cluster verify
    
Specific tasks for 2.11 to 2.10 downgrade

After running cfgupgrade, the client.pem and ssconf_master_candidates_certs files need to be removed from Ganeti’s data directory on all nodes. While this step is not necessary for 2.10 to run cleanly, leaving them will cause problems when upgrading again after the downgrade.

2.0 releases

2.0.3 to 2.0.4

No changes needed except restarting the daemon; but rollback to 2.0.3 might require configuration editing.

If you’re using Xen-HVM instances, please double-check the network configuration (nic_type parameter) as the defaults might have changed: 2.0.4 adds any missing configuration items and depending on the version of the software the cluster has been installed with, some new keys might have been added.

2.0.1 to 2.0.2/2.0.3

Between 2.0.1 and 2.0.2 there have been some changes in the handling of block devices, which can cause some issues. 2.0.3 was then released which adds two new options/commands to fix this issue.

If you use DRBD-type instances and see problems in instance start or activate-disks with messages from DRBD about “lower device too small” or similar, it is recoomended to:

  1. Run gnt-instance activate-disks --ignore-size $instance for each of the affected instances
  2. Then run gnt-cluster repair-disk-sizes which will check that instances have the correct disk sizes

1.2 to 2.0

Prerequisites:

  • Ganeti 1.2.7 is currently installed
  • All instances have been migrated from DRBD 0.7 to DRBD 8.x (i.e. no remote_raid1 disk template)
  • Upgrade to Ganeti 2.0.0~rc2 or later (~rc1 and earlier don’t have the needed upgrade tool)

In the below steps, replace /var/lib with $libdir if Ganeti was not installed with this prefix (e.g. /usr/local/var). Same for /usr/lib.

Execution (all steps are required in the order given):

  1. Make a backup of the current configuration, for safety:

    $ cp -a /var/lib/ganeti /var/lib/ganeti-1.2.backup
    
  2. Stop all instances:

    $ gnt-instance stop --all
    
  3. Make sure no DRBD device are in use, the following command should show no active minors:

    $ gnt-cluster command grep cs: /proc/drbd | grep -v cs:Unconf
    
  4. Stop the node daemons and rapi daemon on all nodes (note: should be logged in not via the cluster name, but the master node name, as the command below will remove the cluster ip from the master node):

    $ gnt-cluster command /etc/init.d/ganeti stop
    
  5. Install the new software on all nodes, either from packaging (if available) or from sources; the master daemon will not start but give error messages about wrong configuration file, which is normal

  6. Upgrade the configuration file:

    $ /usr/lib/ganeti/tools/cfgupgrade12 -v --dry-run
    $ /usr/lib/ganeti/tools/cfgupgrade12 -v
    
  7. Make sure ganeti-noded is running on all nodes (and start it if not)

  8. Start the master daemon:

    $ ganeti-masterd
    
  9. Check that a simple node-list works:

    $ gnt-node list
    
  10. Redistribute updated configuration to all nodes:

    $ gnt-cluster redist-conf
    $ gnt-cluster copyfile /var/lib/ganeti/known_hosts
    
  11. Optional: if needed, install RAPI-specific certificates under /var/lib/ganeti/rapi.pem and run:

    $ gnt-cluster copyfile /var/lib/ganeti/rapi.pem
    
  12. Run a cluster verify, this should show no problems:

    $ gnt-cluster verify
    
  13. Remove some obsolete files:

    $ gnt-cluster command rm /var/lib/ganeti/ssconf_node_pass
    $ gnt-cluster command rm /var/lib/ganeti/ssconf_hypervisor
    
  14. Update the xen pvm (if this was a pvm cluster) setting for 1.2 compatibility:

    $ gnt-cluster modify -H xen-pvm:root_path=/dev/sda
    
  15. Depending on your setup, you might also want to reset the initrd parameter:

    $ gnt-cluster modify -H xen-pvm:initrd_path=/boot/initrd-2.6-xenU
    
  16. Reset the instance autobalance setting to default:

    $ for i in $(gnt-instance list -o name --no-headers); do \
       gnt-instance modify -B auto_balance=default $i; \
      done
    
  17. Optional: start the RAPI demon:

    $ ganeti-rapi
    
  18. Restart instances:

    $ gnt-instance start --force-multiple --all
    

At this point, gnt-cluster verify should show no errors and the migration is complete.

1.2 releases

1.2.4 to any other higher 1.2 version

No changes needed. Rollback will usually require manual edit of the configuration file.

1.2.3 to 1.2.4

No changes needed. Note that going back from 1.2.4 to 1.2.3 will require manual edit of the configuration file (since we added some HVM-related new attributes).

1.2.2 to 1.2.3

No changes needed. Note that the drbd7-to-8 upgrade tool does a disk format change for the DRBD metadata, so in theory this might be risky. It is advised to have (good) backups before doing the upgrade.

1.2.1 to 1.2.2

No changes needed.

1.2.0 to 1.2.1

No changes needed. Only some bugfixes and new additions that don’t affect existing clusters.

1.2.0 beta 3 to 1.2.0

No changes needed.

1.2.0 beta 2 to beta 3

No changes needed. A new version of the debian-etch-instance OS (0.3) has been released, but upgrading it is not required.

1.2.0 beta 1 to beta 2

Beta 2 switched the config file format to JSON. Steps to upgrade:

  1. Stop the daemons (/etc/init.d/ganeti stop) on all nodes

  2. Disable the cron job (default is /etc/cron.d/ganeti)

  3. Install the new version

  4. Make a backup copy of the config file

  5. Upgrade the config file using the following command:

    $ /usr/share/ganeti/cfgupgrade --verbose /var/lib/ganeti/config.data
    
  6. Start the daemons and run gnt-cluster info, gnt-node list and gnt-instance list to check if the upgrade process finished successfully

The OS definition also need to be upgraded. There is a new version of the debian-etch-instance OS (0.2) that goes along with beta 2.