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[11/17] zookeeper git commit: ZOOKEEPER-3155: Remove Forrest XMLs and their build process from the …
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-<h1>ZooKeeper Administrator's Guide</h1>
-<h3>A Guide to Deployment and Administration</h3>
-<div id="front-matter">
-<div id="minitoc-area">
-<ul class="minitoc">
-<li>
-<a href="#ch_deployment">Deployment</a>
-<ul class="minitoc">
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_systemReq">System Requirements</a>
-<ul class="minitoc">
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_supportedPlatforms">Supported Platforms</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_requiredSoftware">Required Software </a>
-</li>
-</ul>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_zkMulitServerSetup">Clustered (Multi-Server) Setup</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_singleAndDevSetup">Single Server and Developer Setup</a>
-</li>
-</ul>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#ch_administration">Administration</a>
-<ul class="minitoc">
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_designing">Designing a ZooKeeper Deployment</a>
-<ul class="minitoc">
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_CrossMachineRequirements">Cross Machine Requirements</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#Single+Machine+Requirements">Single Machine Requirements</a>
-</li>
-</ul>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_provisioning">Provisioning</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_strengthsAndLimitations">Things to Consider: ZooKeeper Strengths and Limitations</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_administering">Administering</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_maintenance">Maintenance</a>
-<ul class="minitoc">
-<li>
-<a href="#Ongoing+Data+Directory+Cleanup">Ongoing Data Directory Cleanup</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#Debug+Log+Cleanup+%28log4j%29">Debug Log Cleanup (log4j)</a>
-</li>
-</ul>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_supervision">Supervision</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_monitoring">Monitoring</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_logging">Logging</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_troubleshooting">Troubleshooting</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_configuration">Configuration Parameters</a>
-<ul class="minitoc">
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_minimumConfiguration">Minimum Configuration</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_advancedConfiguration">Advanced Configuration</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_clusterOptions">Cluster Options</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_authOptions">Authentication & Authorization Options</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#Experimental+Options%2FFeatures">Experimental Options/Features</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#Unsafe+Options">Unsafe Options</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#Communication+using+the+Netty+framework">Communication using the Netty framework</a>
-</li>
-</ul>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_zkCommands">ZooKeeper Commands: The Four Letter Words</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_dataFileManagement">Data File Management</a>
-<ul class="minitoc">
-<li>
-<a href="#The+Data+Directory">The Data Directory</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#The+Log+Directory">The Log Directory</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_filemanagement">File Management</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#Recovery+-+TxnLogToolkit">Recovery - TxnLogToolkit</a>
-</li>
-</ul>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_commonProblems">Things to Avoid</a>
-</li>
-<li>
-<a href="#sc_bestPractices">Best Practices</a>
-</li>
-</ul>
-</li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<a name="ch_deployment"></a>
-<h2 class="h3">Deployment</h2>
-<div class="section">
-<p>This section contains information about deploying Zookeeper and
- covers these topics:</p>
-<ul>
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#sc_systemReq">System Requirements</a>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#sc_zkMulitServerSetup">Clustered (Multi-Server) Setup</a>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#sc_singleAndDevSetup">Single Server and Developer Setup</a>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-</ul>
-<p>The first two sections assume you are interested in installing
- ZooKeeper in a production environment such as a datacenter. The final
- section covers situations in which you are setting up ZooKeeper on a
- limited basis - for evaluation, testing, or development - but not in a
- production environment.</p>
-<a name="sc_systemReq"></a>
-<h3 class="h4">System Requirements</h3>
-<a name="sc_supportedPlatforms"></a>
-<h4>Supported Platforms</h4>
-<p>ZooKeeper consists of multiple components. Some components are
- supported broadly, and other components are supported only on a smaller
- set of platforms.</p>
-<ul>
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<strong>Client</strong> is the Java client
- library, used by applications to connect to a ZooKeeper ensemble.
- </p>
-
-</li>
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<strong>Server</strong> is the Java server
- that runs on the ZooKeeper ensemble nodes.</p>
-
-</li>
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<strong>Native Client</strong> is a client
- implemented in C, similar to the Java client, used by applications
- to connect to a ZooKeeper ensemble.</p>
-
-</li>
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<strong>Contrib</strong> refers to multiple
- optional add-on components.</p>
-
-</li>
-
-</ul>
-<p>The following matrix describes the level of support committed for
- running each component on different operating system platforms.</p>
-<table class="ForrestTable" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="4">
-<caption>Support Matrix</caption>
-
-<title>Support Matrix</title>
-
-
-<tr>
-
-<th>Operating System</th>
- <th>Client</th>
- <th>Server</th>
- <th>Native Client</th>
- <th>Contrib</th>
-
-</tr>
-
-
-<tr>
-
-<td>GNU/Linux</td>
- <td>Development and Production</td>
- <td>Development and Production</td>
- <td>Development and Production</td>
- <td>Development and Production</td>
-
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-
-<td>Solaris</td>
- <td>Development and Production</td>
- <td>Development and Production</td>
- <td>Not Supported</td>
- <td>Not Supported</td>
-
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-
-<td>FreeBSD</td>
- <td>Development and Production</td>
- <td>Development and Production</td>
- <td>Not Supported</td>
- <td>Not Supported</td>
-
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-
-<td>Windows</td>
- <td>Development and Production</td>
- <td>Development and Production</td>
- <td>Not Supported</td>
- <td>Not Supported</td>
-
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-
-<td>Mac OS X</td>
- <td>Development Only</td>
- <td>Development Only</td>
- <td>Not Supported</td>
- <td>Not Supported</td>
-
-</tr>
-
-
-</table>
-<p>For any operating system not explicitly mentioned as supported in
- the matrix, components may or may not work. The ZooKeeper community
- will fix obvious bugs that are reported for other platforms, but there
- is no full support.</p>
-<a name="sc_requiredSoftware"></a>
-<h4>Required Software </h4>
-<p>ZooKeeper runs in Java, release 1.6 or greater (JDK 6 or
- greater). It runs as an <em>ensemble</em> of
- ZooKeeper servers. Three ZooKeeper servers is the minimum
- recommended size for an ensemble, and we also recommend that
- they run on separate machines. At Yahoo!, ZooKeeper is
- usually deployed on dedicated RHEL boxes, with dual-core
- processors, 2GB of RAM, and 80GB IDE hard drives.</p>
-<a name="sc_zkMulitServerSetup"></a>
-<h3 class="h4">Clustered (Multi-Server) Setup</h3>
-<p>For reliable ZooKeeper service, you should deploy ZooKeeper in a
- cluster known as an <em>ensemble</em>. As long as a majority
- of the ensemble are up, the service will be available. Because Zookeeper
- requires a majority, it is best to use an
- odd number of machines. For example, with four machines ZooKeeper can
- only handle the failure of a single machine; if two machines fail, the
- remaining two machines do not constitute a majority. However, with five
- machines ZooKeeper can handle the failure of two machines. </p>
-<div class="note">
-<div class="label">Note</div>
-<div class="content">
-
-<p>
- As mentioned in the
- <a href="zookeeperStarted.html">ZooKeeper Getting Started Guide</a>
- , a minimum of three servers are required for a fault tolerant
- clustered setup, and it is strongly recommended that you have an
- odd number of servers.
- </p>
-
-<p>Usually three servers is more than enough for a production
- install, but for maximum reliability during maintenance, you may
- wish to install five servers. With three servers, if you perform
- maintenance on one of them, you are vulnerable to a failure on one
- of the other two servers during that maintenance. If you have five
- of them running, you can take one down for maintenance, and know
- that you're still OK if one of the other four suddenly fails.
- </p>
-
-<p>Your redundancy considerations should include all aspects of
- your environment. If you have three ZooKeeper servers, but their
- network cables are all plugged into the same network switch, then
- the failure of that switch will take down your entire ensemble.
- </p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-<p>Here are the steps to setting a server that will be part of an
- ensemble. These steps should be performed on every host in the
- ensemble:</p>
-<ol>
-
-<li>
-
-<p>Install the Java JDK. You can use the native packaging system
- for your system, or download the JDK from:</p>
-
-
-<p>
-<a href="http://java.sun.com/javase/downloads/index.jsp">http://java.sun.com/javase/downloads/index.jsp</a>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>Set the Java heap size. This is very important to avoid
- swapping, which will seriously degrade ZooKeeper performance. To
- determine the correct value, use load tests, and make sure you are
- well below the usage limit that would cause you to swap. Be
- conservative - use a maximum heap size of 3GB for a 4GB
- machine.</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>Install the ZooKeeper Server Package. It can be downloaded
- from:
- </p>
-
-<p>
-
-<a href="http://zookeeper.apache.org/releases.html">
- http://zookeeper.apache.org/releases.html
- </a>
-
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>Create a configuration file. This file can be called anything.
- Use the following settings as a starting point:</p>
-
-
-<pre class="code">
-tickTime=2000
-dataDir=/var/lib/zookeeper/
-clientPort=2181
-initLimit=5
-syncLimit=2
-server.1=zoo1:2888:3888
-server.2=zoo2:2888:3888
-server.3=zoo3:2888:3888</pre>
-
-
-<p>You can find the meanings of these and other configuration
- settings in the section <a href="#sc_configuration">Configuration Parameters</a>. A word
- though about a few here:</p>
-
-
-<p>Every machine that is part of the ZooKeeper ensemble should know
- about every other machine in the ensemble. You accomplish this with
- the series of lines of the form <strong>server.id=host:port:port</strong>. The parameters <strong>host</strong> and <strong>port</strong> are straightforward. You attribute the
- server id to each machine by creating a file named
- <span class="codefrag filename">myid</span>, one for each server, which resides in
- that server's data directory, as specified by the configuration file
- parameter <strong>dataDir</strong>.</p>
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-<p>The myid file
- consists of a single line containing only the text of that machine's
- id. So <span class="codefrag filename">myid</span> of server 1 would contain the text
- "1" and nothing else. The id must be unique within the
- ensemble and should have a value between 1 and 255.</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>If your configuration file is set up, you can start a
- ZooKeeper server:</p>
-
-
-<p>
-<span class="codefrag computeroutput">$ java -cp zookeeper.jar:lib/slf4j-api-1.6.1.jar:lib/slf4j-log4j12-1.6.1.jar:lib/log4j-1.2.15.jar:conf \
- org.apache.zookeeper.server.quorum.QuorumPeerMain zoo.cfg
- </span>
-</p>
-
-
-<p>QuorumPeerMain starts a ZooKeeper server,
- <a href="http://java.sun.com/javase/technologies/core/mntr-mgmt/javamanagement/">JMX</a>
- management beans are also registered which allows
- management through a JMX management console.
- The <a href="zookeeperJMX.html">ZooKeeper JMX
- document</a> contains details on managing ZooKeeper with JMX.
- </p>
-
-
-<p>See the script <em>bin/zkServer.sh</em>,
- which is included in the release, for an example
- of starting server instances.</p>
-
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>Test your deployment by connecting to the hosts:</p>
-
-
-<p>In Java, you can run the following command to execute
- simple operations:</p>
-
-
-<p>
-<span class="codefrag computeroutput">$ bin/zkCli.sh -server 127.0.0.1:2181</span>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-</ol>
-<a name="sc_singleAndDevSetup"></a>
-<h3 class="h4">Single Server and Developer Setup</h3>
-<p>If you want to setup ZooKeeper for development purposes, you will
- probably want to setup a single server instance of ZooKeeper, and then
- install either the Java or C client-side libraries and bindings on your
- development machine.</p>
-<p>The steps to setting up a single server instance are the similar
- to the above, except the configuration file is simpler. You can find the
- complete instructions in the <a href="zookeeperStarted.html#sc_InstallingSingleMode">Installing and
- Running ZooKeeper in Single Server Mode</a> section of the <a href="zookeeperStarted.html">ZooKeeper Getting Started
- Guide</a>.</p>
-<p>For information on installing the client side libraries, refer to
- the <a href="zookeeperProgrammers.html#Bindings">Bindings</a>
- section of the <a href="zookeeperProgrammers.html">ZooKeeper
- Programmer's Guide</a>.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<a name="ch_administration"></a>
-<h2 class="h3">Administration</h2>
-<div class="section">
-<p>This section contains information about running and maintaining
- ZooKeeper and covers these topics: </p>
-<ul>
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#sc_designing">Designing a ZooKeeper Deployment</a>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#sc_provisioning">Provisioning</a>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#sc_strengthsAndLimitations">Things to Consider: ZooKeeper Strengths and Limitations</a>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#sc_administering">Administering</a>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#sc_maintenance">Maintenance</a>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#sc_supervision">Supervision</a>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#sc_monitoring">Monitoring</a>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#sc_logging">Logging</a>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#sc_troubleshooting">Troubleshooting</a>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#sc_configuration">Configuration Parameters</a>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#sc_zkCommands">ZooKeeper Commands: The Four Letter Words</a>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#sc_dataFileManagement">Data File Management</a>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#sc_commonProblems">Things to Avoid</a>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#sc_bestPractices">Best Practices</a>
-</p>
-
-</li>
-
-</ul>
-<a name="sc_designing"></a>
-<h3 class="h4">Designing a ZooKeeper Deployment</h3>
-<p>The reliablity of ZooKeeper rests on two basic assumptions.</p>
-<ol>
-
-<li>
-<p> Only a minority of servers in a deployment
- will fail. <em>Failure</em> in this context
- means a machine crash, or some error in the network that
- partitions a server off from the majority.</p>
-
-</li>
-
-<li>
-<p> Deployed machines operate correctly. To
- operate correctly means to execute code correctly, to have
- clocks that work properly, and to have storage and network
- components that perform consistently.</p>
-
-</li>
-
-</ol>
-<p>The sections below contain considerations for ZooKeeper
- administrators to maximize the probability for these assumptions
- to hold true. Some of these are cross-machines considerations,
- and others are things you should consider for each and every
- machine in your deployment.</p>
-<a name="sc_CrossMachineRequirements"></a>
-<h4>Cross Machine Requirements</h4>
-<p>For the ZooKeeper service to be active, there must be a
- majority of non-failing machines that can communicate with
- each other. To create a deployment that can tolerate the
- failure of F machines, you should count on deploying 2xF+1
- machines. Thus, a deployment that consists of three machines
- can handle one failure, and a deployment of five machines can
- handle two failures. Note that a deployment of six machines
- can only handle two failures since three machines is not a
- majority. For this reason, ZooKeeper deployments are usually
- made up of an odd number of machines.</p>
-<p>To achieve the highest probability of tolerating a failure
- you should try to make machine failures independent. For
- example, if most of the machines share the same switch,
- failure of that switch could cause a correlated failure and
- bring down the service. The same holds true of shared power
- circuits, cooling systems, etc.</p>
-<a name="Single+Machine+Requirements"></a>
-<h4>Single Machine Requirements</h4>
-<p>If ZooKeeper has to contend with other applications for
- access to resourses like storage media, CPU, network, or
- memory, its performance will suffer markedly. ZooKeeper has
- strong durability guarantees, which means it uses storage
- media to log changes before the operation responsible for the
- change is allowed to complete. You should be aware of this
- dependency then, and take great care if you want to ensure
- that ZooKeeper operations aren’t held up by your media. Here
- are some things you can do to minimize that sort of
- degradation:
- </p>
-<ul>
-
-<li>
-
-<p>ZooKeeper's transaction log must be on a dedicated
- device. (A dedicated partition is not enough.) ZooKeeper
- writes the log sequentially, without seeking Sharing your
- log device with other processes can cause seeks and
- contention, which in turn can cause multi-second
- delays.</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>Do not put ZooKeeper in a situation that can cause a
- swap. In order for ZooKeeper to function with any sort of
- timeliness, it simply cannot be allowed to swap.
- Therefore, make certain that the maximum heap size given
- to ZooKeeper is not bigger than the amount of real memory
- available to ZooKeeper. For more on this, see
- <a href="#sc_commonProblems">Things to Avoid</a>
- below. </p>
-
-</li>
-
-</ul>
-<a name="sc_provisioning"></a>
-<h3 class="h4">Provisioning</h3>
-<p></p>
-<a name="sc_strengthsAndLimitations"></a>
-<h3 class="h4">Things to Consider: ZooKeeper Strengths and Limitations</h3>
-<p></p>
-<a name="sc_administering"></a>
-<h3 class="h4">Administering</h3>
-<p></p>
-<a name="sc_maintenance"></a>
-<h3 class="h4">Maintenance</h3>
-<p>Little long term maintenance is required for a ZooKeeper
- cluster however you must be aware of the following:</p>
-<a name="Ongoing+Data+Directory+Cleanup"></a>
-<h4>Ongoing Data Directory Cleanup</h4>
-<p>The ZooKeeper <a href="#var_datadir">Data
- Directory</a> contains files which are a persistent copy
- of the znodes stored by a particular serving ensemble. These
- are the snapshot and transactional log files. As changes are
- made to the znodes these changes are appended to a
- transaction log. Occasionally, when a log grows large, a
- snapshot of the current state of all znodes will be written
- to the filesystem and a new transaction log file is created
- for future transactions. During snapshotting, ZooKeeper may
- continue appending incoming transactions to the old log file.
- Therefore, some transactions which are newer than a snapshot
- may be found in the last transaction log preceding the
- snapshot.
- </p>
-<p>A ZooKeeper server <strong>will not remove
- old snapshots and log files</strong> when using the default
- configuration (see autopurge below), this is the
- responsibility of the operator. Every serving environment is
- different and therefore the requirements of managing these
- files may differ from install to install (backup for example).
- </p>
-<p>The PurgeTxnLog utility implements a simple retention
- policy that administrators can use. The <a href="api/index.html">API docs</a> contains details on
- calling conventions (arguments, etc...).
- </p>
-<p>In the following example the last count snapshots and
- their corresponding logs are retained and the others are
- deleted. The value of <count> should typically be
- greater than 3 (although not required, this provides 3 backups
- in the unlikely event a recent log has become corrupted). This
- can be run as a cron job on the ZooKeeper server machines to
- clean up the logs daily.</p>
-<pre class="code"> java -cp zookeeper.jar:lib/slf4j-api-1.6.1.jar:lib/slf4j-log4j12-1.6.1.jar:lib/log4j-1.2.15.jar:conf org.apache.zookeeper.server.PurgeTxnLog <dataDir> <snapDir> -n <count></pre>
-<p>Automatic purging of the snapshots and corresponding
- transaction logs was introduced in version 3.4.0 and can be
- enabled via the following configuration parameters <strong>autopurge.snapRetainCount</strong> and <strong>autopurge.purgeInterval</strong>. For more on
- this, see <a href="#sc_advancedConfiguration">Advanced Configuration</a>
- below.</p>
-<a name="Debug+Log+Cleanup+%28log4j%29"></a>
-<h4>Debug Log Cleanup (log4j)</h4>
-<p>See the section on <a href="#sc_logging">logging</a> in this document. It is
- expected that you will setup a rolling file appender using the
- in-built log4j feature. The sample configuration file in the
- release tar's conf/log4j.properties provides an example of
- this.
- </p>
-<a name="sc_supervision"></a>
-<h3 class="h4">Supervision</h3>
-<p>You will want to have a supervisory process that manages
- each of your ZooKeeper server processes (JVM). The ZK server is
- designed to be "fail fast" meaning that it will shutdown
- (process exit) if an error occurs that it cannot recover
- from. As a ZooKeeper serving cluster is highly reliable, this
- means that while the server may go down the cluster as a whole
- is still active and serving requests. Additionally, as the
- cluster is "self healing" the failed server once restarted will
- automatically rejoin the ensemble w/o any manual
- interaction.</p>
-<p>Having a supervisory process such as <a href="http://cr.yp.to/daemontools.html">daemontools</a> or
- <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Service_Management_Facility">SMF</a>
- (other options for supervisory process are also available, it's
- up to you which one you would like to use, these are just two
- examples) managing your ZooKeeper server ensures that if the
- process does exit abnormally it will automatically be restarted
- and will quickly rejoin the cluster.</p>
-<a name="sc_monitoring"></a>
-<h3 class="h4">Monitoring</h3>
-<p>The ZooKeeper service can be monitored in one of two
- primary ways; 1) the command port through the use of <a href="#sc_zkCommands">4 letter words</a> and 2) <a href="zookeeperJMX.html">JMX</a>. See the appropriate section for
- your environment/requirements.</p>
-<a name="sc_logging"></a>
-<h3 class="h4">Logging</h3>
-<p>ZooKeeper uses <strong>log4j</strong> version 1.2 as
- its logging infrastructure. The ZooKeeper default <span class="codefrag filename">log4j.properties</span>
- file resides in the <span class="codefrag filename">conf</span> directory. Log4j requires that
- <span class="codefrag filename">log4j.properties</span> either be in the working directory
- (the directory from which ZooKeeper is run) or be accessible from the classpath.</p>
-<p>For more information, see
- <a href="http://logging.apache.org/log4j/1.2/manual.html#defaultInit">Log4j Default Initialization Procedure</a>
- of the log4j manual.</p>
-<a name="sc_troubleshooting"></a>
-<h3 class="h4">Troubleshooting</h3>
-<dl>
-
-<dt>
-<term> Server not coming up because of file corruption</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>A server might not be able to read its database and fail to come up because of
- some file corruption in the transaction logs of the ZooKeeper server. You will
- see some IOException on loading ZooKeeper database. In such a case,
- make sure all the other servers in your ensemble are up and working. Use "stat"
- command on the command port to see if they are in good health. After you have verified that
- all the other servers of the ensemble are up, you can go ahead and clean the database
- of the corrupt server. Delete all the files in datadir/version-2 and datalogdir/version-2/.
- Restart the server.
- </p>
-</dd>
-
-</dl>
-<a name="sc_configuration"></a>
-<h3 class="h4">Configuration Parameters</h3>
-<p>ZooKeeper's behavior is governed by the ZooKeeper configuration
- file. This file is designed so that the exact same file can be used by
- all the servers that make up a ZooKeeper server assuming the disk
- layouts are the same. If servers use different configuration files, care
- must be taken to ensure that the list of servers in all of the different
- configuration files match.</p>
-<a name="sc_minimumConfiguration"></a>
-<h4>Minimum Configuration</h4>
-<p>Here are the minimum configuration keywords that must be defined
- in the configuration file:</p>
-<dl>
-
-<dt>
-<term>clientPort</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>the port to listen for client connections; that is, the
- port that clients attempt to connect to.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>dataDir</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>the location where ZooKeeper will store the in-memory
- database snapshots and, unless specified otherwise, the
- transaction log of updates to the database.</p>
-<div class="note">
-<div class="label">Note</div>
-<div class="content">
-
-<p>Be careful where you put the transaction log. A
- dedicated transaction log device is key to consistent good
- performance. Putting the log on a busy device will adversely
- effect performance.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>tickTime</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>the length of a single tick, which is the basic time unit
- used by ZooKeeper, as measured in milliseconds. It is used to
- regulate heartbeats, and timeouts. For example, the minimum
- session timeout will be two ticks.</p>
-</dd>
-
-</dl>
-<a name="sc_advancedConfiguration"></a>
-<h4>Advanced Configuration</h4>
-<p>The configuration settings in the section are optional. You can
- use them to further fine tune the behaviour of your ZooKeeper servers.
- Some can also be set using Java system properties, generally of the
- form <em>zookeeper.keyword</em>. The exact system
- property, when available, is noted below.</p>
-<dl>
-
-<dt>
-<term>dataLogDir</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(No Java system property)</p>
-<p>This option will direct the machine to write the
- transaction log to the <strong>dataLogDir</strong> rather than the <strong>dataDir</strong>. This allows a dedicated log
- device to be used, and helps avoid competition between logging
- and snaphots.</p>
-<div class="note">
-<div class="label">Note</div>
-<div class="content">
-
-<p>Having a dedicated log device has a large impact on
- throughput and stable latencies. It is highly recommened to
- dedicate a log device and set <strong>dataLogDir</strong> to point to a directory on
- that device, and then make sure to point <strong>dataDir</strong> to a directory
- <em>not</em> residing on that device.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>globalOutstandingLimit</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(Java system property: <strong>zookeeper.globalOutstandingLimit.</strong>)</p>
-<p>Clients can submit requests faster than ZooKeeper can
- process them, especially if there are a lot of clients. To
- prevent ZooKeeper from running out of memory due to queued
- requests, ZooKeeper will throttle clients so that there is no
- more than globalOutstandingLimit outstanding requests in the
- system. The default limit is 1,000.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>preAllocSize</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(Java system property: <strong>zookeeper.preAllocSize</strong>)</p>
-<p>To avoid seeks ZooKeeper allocates space in the
- transaction log file in blocks of preAllocSize kilobytes. The
- default block size is 64M. One reason for changing the size of
- the blocks is to reduce the block size if snapshots are taken
- more often. (Also, see <strong>snapCount</strong>).</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>snapCount</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(Java system property: <strong>zookeeper.snapCount</strong>)</p>
-<p>ZooKeeper records its transactions using snapshots and
- a transaction log (think write-ahead log).The number of
- transactions recorded in the transaction log before a snapshot
- can be taken (and the transaction log rolled) is determined
- by snapCount. In order to prevent all of the machines in the quorum
- from taking a snapshot at the same time, each ZooKeeper server
- will take a snapshot when the number of transactions in the transaction log
- reaches a runtime generated random value in the [snapCount/2+1, snapCount]
- range.The default snapCount is 100,000.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>maxClientCnxns</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(No Java system property)</p>
-<p>Limits the number of concurrent connections (at the socket
- level) that a single client, identified by IP address, may make
- to a single member of the ZooKeeper ensemble. This is used to
- prevent certain classes of DoS attacks, including file
- descriptor exhaustion. The default is 60. Setting this to 0
- entirely removes the limit on concurrent connections.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>clientPortAddress</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.3.0:</strong> the
- address (ipv4, ipv6 or hostname) to listen for client
- connections; that is, the address that clients attempt
- to connect to. This is optional, by default we bind in
- such a way that any connection to the <strong>clientPort</strong> for any
- address/interface/nic on the server will be
- accepted.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>minSessionTimeout</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(No Java system property)</p>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.3.0:</strong> the
- minimum session timeout in milliseconds that the server
- will allow the client to negotiate. Defaults to 2 times
- the <strong>tickTime</strong>.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>maxSessionTimeout</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(No Java system property)</p>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.3.0:</strong> the
- maximum session timeout in milliseconds that the server
- will allow the client to negotiate. Defaults to 20 times
- the <strong>tickTime</strong>.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>fsync.warningthresholdms</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(Java system property: <strong>zookeeper.fsync.warningthresholdms</strong>)</p>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.3.4:</strong> A
- warning message will be output to the log whenever an
- fsync in the Transactional Log (WAL) takes longer than
- this value. The values is specified in milliseconds and
- defaults to 1000. This value can only be set as a
- system property.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>autopurge.snapRetainCount</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(No Java system property)</p>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.4.0:</strong>
- When enabled, ZooKeeper auto purge feature retains
- the <strong>autopurge.snapRetainCount</strong> most
- recent snapshots and the corresponding transaction logs in the
- <strong>dataDir</strong> and <strong>dataLogDir</strong> respectively and deletes the rest.
- Defaults to 3. Minimum value is 3.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>autopurge.purgeInterval</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(No Java system property)</p>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.4.0:</strong> The
- time interval in hours for which the purge task has to
- be triggered. Set to a positive integer (1 and above)
- to enable the auto purging. Defaults to 0.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>syncEnabled</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(Java system property: <strong>zookeeper.observer.syncEnabled</strong>)</p>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.4.6, 3.5.0:</strong>
- The observers now log transaction and write snapshot to disk
- by default like the participants. This reduces the recovery time
- of the observers on restart. Set to "false" to disable this
- feature. Default is "true"</p>
-</dd>
-
-</dl>
-<a name="sc_clusterOptions"></a>
-<h4>Cluster Options</h4>
-<p>The options in this section are designed for use with an ensemble
- of servers -- that is, when deploying clusters of servers.</p>
-<dl>
-
-<dt>
-<term>electionAlg</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(No Java system property)</p>
-<p>Election implementation to use. A value of "0" corresponds
- to the original UDP-based version, "1" corresponds to the
- non-authenticated UDP-based version of fast leader election, "2"
- corresponds to the authenticated UDP-based version of fast
- leader election, and "3" corresponds to TCP-based version of
- fast leader election. Currently, algorithm 3 is the default</p>
-<div class="note">
-<div class="label">Note</div>
-<div class="content">
-
-<p> The implementations of leader election 0, 1, and 2 are now
- <strong> deprecated </strong>. We have the intention
- of removing them in the next release, at which point only the
- FastLeaderElection will be available.
- </p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>initLimit</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(No Java system property)</p>
-<p>Amount of time, in ticks (see <a href="#id_tickTime">tickTime</a>), to allow followers to
- connect and sync to a leader. Increased this value as needed, if
- the amount of data managed by ZooKeeper is large.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>leaderServes</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(Java system property: zookeeper.<strong>leaderServes</strong>)</p>
-<p>Leader accepts client connections. Default value is "yes".
- The leader machine coordinates updates. For higher update
- throughput at thes slight expense of read throughput the leader
- can be configured to not accept clients and focus on
- coordination. The default to this option is yes, which means
- that a leader will accept client connections.</p>
-<div class="note">
-<div class="label">Note</div>
-<div class="content">
-
-<p>Turning on leader selection is highly recommended when
- you have more than three ZooKeeper servers in an ensemble.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>server.x=[hostname]:nnnnn[:nnnnn], etc</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(No Java system property)</p>
-<p>servers making up the ZooKeeper ensemble. When the server
- starts up, it determines which server it is by looking for the
- file <span class="codefrag filename">myid</span> in the data directory. That file
- contains the server number, in ASCII, and it should match
- <strong>x</strong> in <strong>server.x</strong> in the left hand side of this
- setting.</p>
-<p>The list of servers that make up ZooKeeper servers that is
- used by the clients must match the list of ZooKeeper servers
- that each ZooKeeper server has.</p>
-<p>There are two port numbers <strong>nnnnn</strong>.
- The first followers use to connect to the leader, and the second is for
- leader election. The leader election port is only necessary if electionAlg
- is 1, 2, or 3 (default). If electionAlg is 0, then the second port is not
- necessary. If you want to test multiple servers on a single machine, then
- different ports can be used for each server.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>syncLimit</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(No Java system property)</p>
-<p>Amount of time, in ticks (see <a href="#id_tickTime">tickTime</a>), to allow followers to sync
- with ZooKeeper. If followers fall too far behind a leader, they
- will be dropped.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>group.x=nnnnn[:nnnnn]</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(No Java system property)</p>
-<p>Enables a hierarchical quorum construction."x" is a group identifier
- and the numbers following the "=" sign correspond to server identifiers.
- The left-hand side of the assignment is a colon-separated list of server
- identifiers. Note that groups must be disjoint and the union of all groups
- must be the ZooKeeper ensemble. </p>
-<p> You will find an example <a href="zookeeperHierarchicalQuorums.html">here</a>
-
-</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>weight.x=nnnnn</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(No Java system property)</p>
-<p>Used along with "group", it assigns a weight to a server when
- forming quorums. Such a value corresponds to the weight of a server
- when voting. There are a few parts of ZooKeeper that require voting
- such as leader election and the atomic broadcast protocol. By default
- the weight of server is 1. If the configuration defines groups, but not
- weights, then a value of 1 will be assigned to all servers.
- </p>
-<p> You will find an example <a href="zookeeperHierarchicalQuorums.html">here</a>
-
-</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>cnxTimeout</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(Java system property: zookeeper.<strong>cnxTimeout</strong>)</p>
-<p>Sets the timeout value for opening connections for leader election notifications.
- Only applicable if you are using electionAlg 3.
- </p>
-<div class="note">
-<div class="label">Note</div>
-<div class="content">
-
-<p>Default value is 5 seconds.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>4lw.commands.whitelist</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(Java system property: <strong>zookeeper.4lw.commands.whitelist</strong>)</p>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.4.10:</strong>
- This property contains a list of comma separated
- <a href="#sc_zkCommands">Four Letter Words</a> commands. It is introduced
- to provide fine grained control over the set of commands ZooKeeper can execute,
- so users can turn off certain commands if necessary.
- By default it contains all supported four letter word commands except "wchp" and "wchc",
- if the property is not specified. If the property is specified, then only commands listed
- in the whitelist are enabled.
- </p>
-<p>Here's an example of the configuration that enables stat, ruok, conf, and isro
- command while disabling the rest of Four Letter Words command:</p>
-<pre class="code">
- 4lw.commands.whitelist=stat, ruok, conf, isro
- </pre>
-<p>Users can also use asterisk option so they don't have to include every command one by one in the list.
- As an example, this will enable all four letter word commands:
- </p>
-<pre class="code">
- 4lw.commands.whitelist=*
- </pre>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>ipReachableTimeout</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(Java system property: <strong>zookeeper.ipReachableTimeout</strong>)</p>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.4.11:</strong>
- Set this timeout value for IP addresses reachable checking when hostname is resolved, as mesured in
- milliseconds.
- By default, ZooKeeper will use the first IP address of the hostname(without any reachable checking).
- When zookeeper.ipReachableTimeout is set(larger than 0), ZooKeeper will will try to pick up the first
- IP address which is reachable. This is done by calling Java API InetAddress.isReachable(long timeout)
- function, in which this timeout value is used. If none of such reachable IP address can be found, the
- first IP address of the hostname will be used anyway.
- </p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>tcpKeepAlive</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(Java system property: <strong>zookeeper.tcpKeepAlive</strong>)</p>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.4.11:</strong>
- Setting this to true sets the TCP keepAlive flag on the
- sockets used by quorum members to perform elections.
- This will allow for connections between quorum members to
- remain up when there is network infrastructure that may
- otherwise break them. Some NATs and firewalls may terminate
- or lose state for long running or idle connections.</p>
-<p> Enabling this option relies on OS level settings to work
- properly, check your operating system's options regarding TCP
- keepalive for more information. Defaults to
- <strong>false</strong>.
- </p>
-</dd>
-
-
-</dl>
-<p></p>
-<a name="sc_authOptions"></a>
-<h4>Authentication & Authorization Options</h4>
-<p>The options in this section allow control over
- authentication/authorization performed by the service.</p>
-<dl>
-
-<dt>
-<term>zookeeper.DigestAuthenticationProvider.superDigest</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(Java system property only: <strong>zookeeper.DigestAuthenticationProvider.superDigest</strong>)</p>
-<p>By default this feature is <strong>disabled</strong>
-</p>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.2:</strong>
- Enables a ZooKeeper ensemble administrator to access the
- znode hierarchy as a "super" user. In particular no ACL
- checking occurs for a user authenticated as
- super.</p>
-<p>org.apache.zookeeper.server.auth.DigestAuthenticationProvider
- can be used to generate the superDigest, call it with
- one parameter of "super:<password>". Provide the
- generated "super:<data>" as the system property value
- when starting each server of the ensemble.</p>
-<p>When authenticating to a ZooKeeper server (from a
- ZooKeeper client) pass a scheme of "digest" and authdata
- of "super:<password>". Note that digest auth passes
- the authdata in plaintext to the server, it would be
- prudent to use this authentication method only on
- localhost (not over the network) or over an encrypted
- connection.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>isro</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.4.0:</strong> Tests if
- server is running in read-only mode. The server will respond with
- "ro" if in read-only mode or "rw" if not in read-only mode.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>gtmk</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>Gets the current trace mask as a 64-bit signed long value in
- decimal format. See <span class="codefrag command">stmk</span> for an explanation of
- the possible values.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>stmk</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>Sets the current trace mask. The trace mask is 64 bits,
- where each bit enables or disables a specific category of trace
- logging on the server. Log4J must be configured to enable
- <span class="codefrag command">TRACE</span> level first in order to see trace logging
- messages. The bits of the trace mask correspond to the following
- trace logging categories.</p>
-<table class="ForrestTable" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="4">
-<caption>Trace Mask Bit Values</caption>
-
-<title>Trace Mask Bit Values</title>
-
-
-<tr>
-
-<td>0b0000000000</td>
- <td>Unused, reserved for future use.</td>
-
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-
-<td>0b0000000010</td>
- <td>Logs client requests, excluding ping
- requests.</td>
-
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-
-<td>0b0000000100</td>
- <td>Unused, reserved for future use.</td>
-
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-
-<td>0b0000001000</td>
- <td>Logs client ping requests.</td>
-
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-
-<td>0b0000010000</td>
- <td>Logs packets received from the quorum peer that is
- the current leader, excluding ping requests.</td>
-
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-
-<td>0b0000100000</td>
- <td>Logs addition, removal and validation of client
- sessions.</td>
-
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-
-<td>0b0001000000</td>
- <td>Logs delivery of watch events to client
- sessions.</td>
-
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-
-<td>0b0010000000</td>
- <td>Logs ping packets received from the quorum peer
- that is the current leader.</td>
-
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-
-<td>0b0100000000</td>
- <td>Unused, reserved for future use.</td>
-
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-
-<td>0b1000000000</td>
- <td>Unused, reserved for future use.</td>
-
-</tr>
-
-
-</table>
-<p>All remaining bits in the 64-bit value are unused and
- reserved for future use. Multiple trace logging categories are
- specified by calculating the bitwise OR of the documented values.
- The default trace mask is 0b0100110010. Thus, by default, trace
- logging includes client requests, packets received from the
- leader and sessions.</p>
-<p>To set a different trace mask, send a request containing the
- <span class="codefrag command">stmk</span> four-letter word followed by the trace
- mask represented as a 64-bit signed long value. This example uses
- the Perl <span class="codefrag command">pack</span> function to construct a trace
- mask that enables all trace logging categories described above and
- convert it to a 64-bit signed long value with big-endian byte
- order. The result is appended to <span class="codefrag command">stmk</span> and sent
- to the server using netcat. The server responds with the new
- trace mask in decimal format.</p>
-<pre class="code">$ perl -e "print 'stmk', pack('q>', 0b0011111010)" | nc localhost 2181
-250
- </pre>
-</dd>
-
-</dl>
-<a name="Experimental+Options%2FFeatures"></a>
-<h4>Experimental Options/Features</h4>
-<p>New features that are currently considered experimental.</p>
-<dl>
-
-<dt>
-<term>Read Only Mode Server</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(Java system property: <strong>readonlymode.enabled</strong>)</p>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.4.0:</strong>
- Setting this value to true enables Read Only Mode server
- support (disabled by default). ROM allows clients
- sessions which requested ROM support to connect to the
- server even when the server might be partitioned from
- the quorum. In this mode ROM clients can still read
- values from the ZK service, but will be unable to write
- values and see changes from other clients. See
- ZOOKEEPER-784 for more details.
- </p>
-</dd>
-
-
-</dl>
-<a name="Unsafe+Options"></a>
-<h4>Unsafe Options</h4>
-<p>The following options can be useful, but be careful when you use
- them. The risk of each is explained along with the explanation of what
- the variable does.</p>
-<dl>
-
-<dt>
-<term>forceSync</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(Java system property: <strong>zookeeper.forceSync</strong>)</p>
-<p>Requires updates to be synced to media of the transaction
- log before finishing processing the update. If this option is
- set to no, ZooKeeper will not require updates to be synced to
- the media.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>jute.maxbuffer:</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(Java system property:<strong>
- jute.maxbuffer</strong>)</p>
-<p>This option can only be set as a Java system property.
- There is no zookeeper prefix on it. It specifies the maximum
- size of the data that can be stored in a znode. The default is
- 0xfffff, or just under 1M. If this option is changed, the system
- property must be set on all servers and clients otherwise
- problems will arise. This is really a sanity check. ZooKeeper is
- designed to store data on the order of kilobytes in size.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>skipACL</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>(Java system property: <strong>zookeeper.skipACL</strong>)</p>
-<p>Skips ACL checks. This results in a boost in throughput,
- but opens up full access to the data tree to everyone.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>quorumListenOnAllIPs</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>When set to true the ZooKeeper server will listen
- for connections from its peers on all available IP addresses,
- and not only the address configured in the server list of the
- configuration file. It affects the connections handling the
- ZAB protocol and the Fast Leader Election protocol. Default
- value is <strong>false</strong>.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-</dl>
-<a name="Communication+using+the+Netty+framework"></a>
-<h4>Communication using the Netty framework</h4>
-<p>
-<strong>New in
- 3.4:</strong> <a href="http://jboss.org/netty">Netty</a>
- is an NIO based client/server communication framework, it
- simplifies (over NIO being used directly) many of the
- complexities of network level communication for java
- applications. Additionally the Netty framework has built
- in support for encryption (SSL) and authentication
- (certificates). These are optional features and can be
- turned on or off individually.
- </p>
-<p>Prior to version 3.4 ZooKeeper has always used NIO
- directly, however in versions 3.4 and later Netty is
- supported as an option to NIO (replaces). NIO continues to
- be the default, however Netty based communication can be
- used in place of NIO by setting the environment variable
- "zookeeper.serverCnxnFactory" to
- "org.apache.zookeeper.server.NettyServerCnxnFactory". You
- have the option of setting this on either the client(s) or
- server(s), typically you would want to set this on both,
- however that is at your discretion.
- </p>
-<p>
- TBD - tuning options for netty - currently there are none that are netty specific but we should add some. Esp around max bound on the number of reader worker threads netty creates.
- </p>
-<p>
- TBD - how to manage encryption
- </p>
-<p>
- TBD - how to manage certificates
- </p>
-<a name="sc_zkCommands"></a>
-<h3 class="h4">ZooKeeper Commands: The Four Letter Words</h3>
-<p>ZooKeeper responds to a small set of commands. Each command is
- composed of four letters. You issue the commands to ZooKeeper via telnet
- or nc, at the client port.</p>
-<p>Three of the more interesting commands: "stat" gives some
- general information about the server and connected clients,
- while "srvr" and "cons" give extended details on server and
- connections respectively.</p>
-<dl>
-
-<dt>
-<term>conf</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.3.0:</strong> Print
- details about serving configuration.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>cons</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.3.0:</strong> List
- full connection/session details for all clients connected
- to this server. Includes information on numbers of packets
- received/sent, session id, operation latencies, last
- operation performed, etc...</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>crst</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.3.0:</strong> Reset
- connection/session statistics for all connections.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>dump</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>Lists the outstanding sessions and ephemeral nodes. This
- only works on the leader.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>envi</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>Print details about serving environment</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>ruok</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>Tests if server is running in a non-error state. The server
- will respond with imok if it is running. Otherwise it will not
- respond at all.</p>
-<p>A response of "imok" does not necessarily indicate that the
- server has joined the quorum, just that the server process is active
- and bound to the specified client port. Use "stat" for details on
- state wrt quorum and client connection information.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>srst</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>Reset server statistics.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>srvr</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.3.0:</strong> Lists
- full details for the server.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>stat</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>Lists brief details for the server and connected
- clients.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>wchs</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.3.0:</strong> Lists
- brief information on watches for the server.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>wchc</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.3.0:</strong> Lists
- detailed information on watches for the server, by
- session. This outputs a list of sessions(connections)
- with associated watches (paths). Note, depending on the
- number of watches this operation may be expensive (ie
- impact server performance), use it carefully.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>wchp</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.3.0:</strong> Lists
- detailed information on watches for the server, by path.
- This outputs a list of paths (znodes) with associated
- sessions. Note, depending on the number of watches this
- operation may be expensive (ie impact server performance),
- use it carefully.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>mntr</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>
-<strong>New in 3.4.0:</strong> Outputs a list
- of variables that could be used for monitoring the health of the cluster.</p>
-<pre class="code">$ echo mntr | nc localhost 2185
-
-zk_version 3.4.0
-zk_avg_latency 0
-zk_max_latency 0
-zk_min_latency 0
-zk_packets_received 70
-zk_packets_sent 69
-zk_outstanding_requests 0
-zk_server_state leader
-zk_znode_count 4
-zk_watch_count 0
-zk_ephemerals_count 0
-zk_approximate_data_size 27
-zk_followers 4 - only exposed by the Leader
-zk_synced_followers 4 - only exposed by the Leader
-zk_pending_syncs 0 - only exposed by the Leader
-zk_open_file_descriptor_count 23 - only available on Unix platforms
-zk_max_file_descriptor_count 1024 - only available on Unix platforms
-zk_fsync_threshold_exceed_count 0
-</pre>
-<p>The output is compatible with java properties format and the content
- may change over time (new keys added). Your scripts should expect changes.</p>
-<p>ATTENTION: Some of the keys are platform specific and some of the keys are only exported by the Leader. </p>
-<p>The output contains multiple lines with the following format:</p>
-<pre class="code">key \t value</pre>
-</dd>
-
-</dl>
-<p>Here's an example of the <strong>ruok</strong>
- command:</p>
-<pre class="code">$ echo ruok | nc 127.0.0.1 5111
-imok
-</pre>
-<a name="sc_dataFileManagement"></a>
-<h3 class="h4">Data File Management</h3>
-<p>ZooKeeper stores its data in a data directory and its transaction
- log in a transaction log directory. By default these two directories are
- the same. The server can (and should) be configured to store the
- transaction log files in a separate directory than the data files.
- Throughput increases and latency decreases when transaction logs reside
- on a dedicated log devices.</p>
-<a name="The+Data+Directory"></a>
-<h4>The Data Directory</h4>
-<p>This directory has two files in it:</p>
-<ul>
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<span class="codefrag filename">myid</span> - contains a single integer in
- human readable ASCII text that represents the server id.</p>
-
-</li>
-
-
-<li>
-
-<p>
-<span class="codefrag filename">snapshot.<zxid></span> - holds the fuzzy
- snapshot of a data tree.</p>
-
-</li>
-
-</ul>
-<p>Each ZooKeeper server has a unique id. This id is used in two
- places: the <span class="codefrag filename">myid</span> file and the configuration file.
- The <span class="codefrag filename">myid</span> file identifies the server that
- corresponds to the given data directory. The configuration file lists
- the contact information for each server identified by its server id.
- When a ZooKeeper server instance starts, it reads its id from the
- <span class="codefrag filename">myid</span> file and then, using that id, reads from the
- configuration file, looking up the port on which it should
- listen.</p>
-<p>The <span class="codefrag filename">snapshot</span> files stored in the data
- directory are fuzzy snapshots in the sense that during the time the
- ZooKeeper server is taking the snapshot, updates are occurring to the
- data tree. The suffix of the <span class="codefrag filename">snapshot</span> file names
- is the <em>zxid</em>, the ZooKeeper transaction id, of the
- last committed transaction at the start of the snapshot. Thus, the
- snapshot includes a subset of the updates to the data tree that
- occurred while the snapshot was in process. The snapshot, then, may
- not correspond to any data tree that actually existed, and for this
- reason we refer to it as a fuzzy snapshot. Still, ZooKeeper can
- recover using this snapshot because it takes advantage of the
- idempotent nature of its updates. By replaying the transaction log
- against fuzzy snapshots ZooKeeper gets the state of the system at the
- end of the log.</p>
-<a name="The+Log+Directory"></a>
-<h4>The Log Directory</h4>
-<p>The Log Directory contains the ZooKeeper transaction logs.
- Before any update takes place, ZooKeeper ensures that the transaction
- that represents the update is written to non-volatile storage. A new
- log file is started when the number of transactions written to the
- current log file reaches a (variable) threshold. The threshold is
- computed using the same parameter which influences the frequency of
- snapshotting (see snapCount above). The log file's suffix is the first
- zxid written to that log.</p>
-<a name="sc_filemanagement"></a>
-<h4>File Management</h4>
-<p>The format of snapshot and log files does not change between
- standalone ZooKeeper servers and different configurations of
- replicated ZooKeeper servers. Therefore, you can pull these files from
- a running replicated ZooKeeper server to a development machine with a
- stand-alone ZooKeeper server for trouble shooting.</p>
-<p>Using older log and snapshot files, you can look at the previous
- state of ZooKeeper servers and even restore that state. The
- LogFormatter class allows an administrator to look at the transactions
- in a log.</p>
-<p>The ZooKeeper server creates snapshot and log files, but
- never deletes them. The retention policy of the data and log
- files is implemented outside of the ZooKeeper server. The
- server itself only needs the latest complete fuzzy snapshot, all log
- files following it, and the last log file preceding it. The latter
- requirement is necessary to include updates which happened after this
- snapshot was started but went into the existing log file at that time.
- This is possible because snapshotting and rolling over of logs
- proceed somewhat independently in ZooKeeper. See the
- <a href="#sc_maintenance">maintenance</a> section in
- this document for more details on setting a retention policy
- and maintenance of ZooKeeper storage.
- </p>
-<div class="note">
-<div class="label">Note</div>
-<div class="content">
-
-<p>The data stored in these files is not encrypted. In the case of
- storing sensitive data in ZooKeeper, necessary measures need to be
- taken to prevent unauthorized access. Such measures are external to
- ZooKeeper (e.g., control access to the files) and depend on the
- individual settings in which it is being deployed. </p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-<a name="Recovery+-+TxnLogToolkit"></a>
-<h4>Recovery - TxnLogToolkit</h4>
-<p>TxnLogToolkit is a command line tool shipped with ZooKeeper which
- is capable of recovering transaction log entries with broken CRC.</p>
-<p>Running it without any command line parameters or with the "-h,--help"
- argument, it outputs the following help page:</p>
-<pre class="code">
- $ bin/zkTxnLogToolkit.sh
-
- usage: TxnLogToolkit [-dhrv] txn_log_file_name
- -d,--dump Dump mode. Dump all entries of the log file. (this is the default)
- -h,--help Print help message
- -r,--recover Recovery mode. Re-calculate CRC for broken entries.
- -v,--verbose Be verbose in recovery mode: print all entries, not just fixed ones.
- -y,--yes Non-interactive mode: repair all CRC errors without asking
- </pre>
-<p>The default behaviour is safe: it dumps the entries of the given
- transaction log file to the screen: (same as using '-d,--dump' parameter)</p>
-<pre class="code">
- $ bin/zkTxnLogToolkit.sh log.100000001
- ZooKeeper Transactional Log File with dbid 0 txnlog format version 2
- 4/5/18 2:15:58 PM CEST session 0x16295bafcc40000 cxid 0x0 zxid 0x100000001 createSession 30000
- <strong>CRC ERROR - 4/5/18 2:16:05 PM CEST session 0x16295bafcc40000 cxid 0x1 zxid 0x100000002 closeSession null</strong>
- 4/5/18 2:16:05 PM CEST session 0x16295bafcc40000 cxid 0x1 zxid 0x100000002 closeSession null
- 4/5/18 2:16:12 PM CEST session 0x26295bafcc90000 cxid 0x0 zxid 0x100000003 createSession 30000
- 4/5/18 2:17:34 PM CEST session 0x26295bafcc90000 cxid 0x0 zxid 0x200000001 closeSession null
- 4/5/18 2:17:34 PM CEST session 0x16295bd23720000 cxid 0x0 zxid 0x200000002 createSession 30000
- 4/5/18 2:18:02 PM CEST session 0x16295bd23720000 cxid 0x2 zxid 0x200000003 create '/andor,#626262,v{s{31,s{'world,'anyone}}},F,1
- EOF reached after 6 txns.
- </pre>
-<p>There's a CRC error in the 2nd entry of the above transaction log file. In <strong>dump</strong>
- mode, the toolkit only prints this information to the screen without touching the original file. In
- <strong>recovery</strong> mode (-r,--recover flag) the original file still remains
- untouched and all transactions will be copied over to a new txn log file with ".fixed" suffix. It recalculates
- CRC values and copies the calculated value, if it doesn't match the original txn entry.
- By default, the tool works interactively: it asks for confirmation whenever CRC error encountered.</p>
-<pre class="code">
- $ bin/zkTxnLogToolkit.sh -r log.100000001
- ZooKeeper Transactional Log File with dbid 0 txnlog format version 2
- CRC ERROR - 4/5/18 2:16:05 PM CEST session 0x16295bafcc40000 cxid 0x1 zxid 0x100000002 closeSession null
- Would you like to fix it (Yes/No/Abort) ?
- </pre>
-<p>Answering <strong>Yes</strong> means the newly calculated CRC value will be outputted
- to the new file. <strong>No</strong> means that the original CRC value will be copied over.
- <strong>Abort</strong> will abort the entire operation and exits.
- (In this case the ".fixed" will not be deleted and left in a half-complete state: contains only entries which
- have already been processed or only the header if the operation was aborted at the first entry.)</p>
-<pre class="code">
- $ bin/zkTxnLogToolkit.sh -r log.100000001
- ZooKeeper Transactional Log File with dbid 0 txnlog format version 2
- CRC ERROR - 4/5/18 2:16:05 PM CEST session 0x16295bafcc40000 cxid 0x1 zxid 0x100000002 closeSession null
- Would you like to fix it (Yes/No/Abort) ? y
- EOF reached after 6 txns.
- Recovery file log.100000001.fixed has been written with 1 fixed CRC error(s)
- </pre>
-<p>The default behaviour of recovery is to be silent: only entries with CRC error get printed to the screen.
- One can turn on verbose mode with the -v,--verbose parameter to see all records.
- Interactive mode can be turned off with the -y,--yes parameter. In this case all CRC errors will be fixed
- in the new transaction file.</p>
-<a name="sc_commonProblems"></a>
-<h3 class="h4">Things to Avoid</h3>
-<p>Here are some common problems you can avoid by configuring
- ZooKeeper correctly:</p>
-<dl>
-
-<dt>
-<term>inconsistent lists of servers</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>The list of ZooKeeper servers used by the clients must match
- the list of ZooKeeper servers that each ZooKeeper server has.
- Things work okay if the client list is a subset of the real list,
- but things will really act strange if clients have a list of
- ZooKeeper servers that are in different ZooKeeper clusters. Also,
- the server lists in each Zookeeper server configuration file
- should be consistent with one another.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>incorrect placement of transaction log</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>The most performance critical part of ZooKeeper is the
- transaction log. ZooKeeper syncs transactions to media before it
- returns a response. A dedicated transaction log device is key to
- consistent good performance. Putting the log on a busy device will
- adversely effect performance. If you only have one storage device,
- put trace files on NFS and increase the snapshotCount; it doesn't
- eliminate the problem, but it should mitigate it.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>incorrect Java heap size</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>You should take special care to set your Java max heap size
- correctly. In particular, you should not create a situation in
- which ZooKeeper swaps to disk. The disk is death to ZooKeeper.
- Everything is ordered, so if processing one request swaps the
- disk, all other queued requests will probably do the same. the
- disk. DON'T SWAP.</p>
-<p>Be conservative in your estimates: if you have 4G of RAM, do
- not set the Java max heap size to 6G or even 4G. For example, it
- is more likely you would use a 3G heap for a 4G machine, as the
- operating system and the cache also need memory. The best and only
- recommend practice for estimating the heap size your system needs
- is to run load tests, and then make sure you are well below the
- usage limit that would cause the system to swap.</p>
-</dd>
-
-
-<dt>
-<term>Publicly accessible deployment</term>
-</dt>
-<dd>
-<p>
- A ZooKeeper ensemble is expected to operate in a trusted computing environment.
- It is thus recommended to deploy ZooKeeper behind a firewall.
- </p>
-</dd>
-
-</dl>
-<a name="sc_bestPractices"></a>
-<h3 class="h4">Best Practices</h3>
-<p>For best results, take note of the following list of good
- Zookeeper practices:</p>
-<p>For multi-tennant installations see the <a href="zookeeperProgrammers.html#ch_zkSessions">section</a>
- detailing ZooKeeper "chroot" support, this can be very useful
- when deploying many applications/services interfacing to a
- single ZooKeeper cluster.</p>
-</div>
-
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-<h1>Introduction to hierarchical quorums</h1>
-<div id="front-matter"></div>
-
-
-
-
-
-<p>
- This document gives an example of how to use hierarchical quorums. The basic idea is
- very simple. First, we split servers into groups, and add a line for each group listing
- the servers that form this group. Next we have to assign a weight to each server.
- </p>
-
-
-<p>
- The following example shows how to configure a system with three groups of three servers
- each, and we assign a weight of 1 to each server:
- </p>
-
-
-<pre class="code">
- group.1=1:2:3
- group.2=4:5:6
- group.3=7:8:9
-
- weight.1=1
- weight.2=1
- weight.3=1
- weight.4=1
- weight.5=1
- weight.6=1
- weight.7=1
- weight.8=1
- weight.9=1
- </pre>
-
-
-<p>
- When running the system, we are able to form a quorum once we have a majority of votes from
- a majority of non-zero-weight groups. Groups that have zero weight are discarded and not
- considered when forming quorums. Looking at the example, we are able to form a quorum once
- we have votes from at least two servers from each of two different groups.
- </p>
-
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