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swarm docs: add administration guide for Managers and Raft

This adds a guide with recommendations on how to setup
Managers and keep the Swarm cluster healthy.

Signed-off-by: Alexandre Beslic <alexandre.beslic@gmail.com>
Alexandre Beslic 9 år sedan
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      docs/swarm/admin_guide.md
  2. 47 0
      docs/swarm/raft.md

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docs/swarm/admin_guide.md

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+<!--[metadata]>
++++
+aliases = [
+"/engine/swarm/manager-administration-guide/"
+]
+title = "Swarm Manager Administration Guide"
+description = "Manager administration guide"
+keywords = ["docker, container, cluster, swarm, manager, raft"]
+advisory = "rc"
+[menu.main]
+identifier="manager_admin_guide"
+parent="engine_swarm"
+weight="12"
++++
+<![end-metadata]-->
+
+# Administer and maintain a swarm of Docker Engines
+
+When you run a swarm of Docker Engines, **manager nodes** are the key components
+for managing the cluster and storing the cluster state. It is important to understand
+some key features of manager nodes in order to properly deploy and maintain the
+swarm.
+
+This article covers the following swarm administration tasks:
+
+* [Add Manager nodes for fault tolerance](#add-manager-nodes-for-fault-tolerance)
+* [Distributing manager nodes](#distributing-manager-nodes)
+* [Running manager-only nodes](#run-manager-only-nodes)
+* [Backing up the cluster state](#back-up-the-cluster-state)
+* [Monitoring the swarm health](#monitor-swarm-health)
+* [Recovering from disaster](#recover-from-disaster)
+
+Refer to [How swarm mode nodes work](how-swarm-mode-works/nodes.md)
+for a brief overview of Docker Swarm mode and the difference between manager and
+worker nodes.
+
+## Operating manager nodes in a swarm
+
+Swarm manager nodes use the [Raft Consensus Algorithm](raft.md) to manage the
+cluster state. You only need to understand some general concepts of Raft in
+order to manage a swarm.
+
+There is no limit on the number of manager nodes. The decision about how many
+manager nodes to implement is a trade-off between performance and
+fault-tolerance. Adding manager nodes to a swarm makes the swarm more
+fault-tolerant. However, additional manager nodes reduce write performance
+because more nodes must acknowledge proposals to update the cluster state.
+This means more network round-trip traffic.
+
+Raft requires a majority of managers, also called a quorum, to agree on proposed
+updates to the cluster. A quorum of managers must also agree on node additions
+and removals. Membership operations are subject to the same constraints as state
+replication.
+
+## Add manager nodes for fault tolerance
+
+You should maintain an odd number of managers in the swarm to support manager
+node failures. Having an odd number of managers ensures that during a network
+partition, there is a higher chance that a quorum remains available to process
+requests if the network is partitioned into two sets. Keeping a quorum is not
+guaranteed if you encounter more than two network partitions.
+
+| Cluster Size |  Majority  |  Fault Tolerance  |
+|:------------:|:----------:|:-----------------:|
+|      1       |     1      |         0         |
+|      2       |     2      |         0         |
+|    **3**     |     2      |       **1**       |
+|      4       |     3      |         2         |
+|    **5**     |     3      |       **2**       |
+|      6       |     4      |         2         |
+|    **7**     |     4      |       **3**       |
+|      8       |     5      |         3         |
+|    **9**     |     5      |       **4**       |
+
+For example, in a swarm with *5 nodes*, if you lose *3 nodes*, you don't have a
+quorum. Therefore you can't add or remove nodes until you recover one of the
+unavailable manager nodes or recover the cluster with disaster recovery
+commands. See [Recover from disaster](#recover-from-disaster).
+
+While it is possible to scale a swarm down to a single manager node, it is
+impossible to demote the last manager node. This ensures you maintain access to
+the swarm and that the swarm can still process requests. Scaling down to a
+single manager is an unsafe operation and is not recommended. If
+the last node leaves the cluster unexpetedly during the demote operation, the
+cluster swarm will become unavailable until you reboot the node or restart with
+`--force-new-cluster`.
+
+You manage cluster membership with the `docker swarm` and `docker node`
+subsystems. Refer to [Add nodes to a swarm](join-nodes.md) for more information
+on how to add worker nodes and promote a worker node to be a manager.
+
+## Distributing manager nodes
+
+In addition to maintaining an odd number of manager nodes, pay attention to
+datacenter topology when placing managers. For optimal fault-tolerance, distribute
+manager nodes across a minimum of 3 availability-zones to support failures of an
+entire set of machines or common maintenance scenarios. If you suffer a failure
+in any of those zones, the swarm should maintain a quorum of manager nodes
+available to process requests and rebalance workloads.
+
+| Swarm manager nodes |  Repartition (on 3 Availability zones) |
+|:-------------------:|:--------------------------------------:|
+| 3                   |                  1-1-1                 |
+| 5                   |                  2-2-1                 |
+| 7                   |                  3-2-2                 |
+| 9                   |                  3-3-3                 |
+
+## Run manager-only nodes
+
+By default manager nodes also act as a worker nodes. This means the scheduler
+can assign tasks to a manager node. For small and non-critical clusters
+assigning tasks to managers is relatively low-risk as long as you schedule
+services using **resource constraints** for *cpu* and *memory*.
+
+However, because manager nodes use the Raft consensus algorithm to replicate data
+in a consistent way, they are sensitive to resource starvation. You should
+isolate managers in your swarm from processes that might block cluster
+operations like cluster heartbeat or leader elections.
+
+To avoid interference with manager node operation, you can drain manager nodes
+to make them unavailable as worker nodes:
+
+```bash
+docker node update --availability drain <NODE-ID>
+```
+
+When you drain a node, the scheduler reassigns any tasks running on the node to
+other available worker nodes in the cluster. It also prevents the scheduler from
+assigning tasks to the node.
+
+## Back up the cluster state
+
+Docker manager nodes store the cluster state and manager logs in the following
+directory:
+
+`/var/lib/docker/swarm/raft`
+
+Back up the raft data directory often so that you can use it in case of disaster
+recovery.
+
+You should never restart a manager node with the data directory from another
+node (for example, by copying the `raft` directory from one node to another).
+The data directory is unique to a node ID and a node can only use a given node
+ID once to join the swarm. (ie. Node ID space should be globally unique)
+
+To cleanly re-join a manager node to a cluster:
+
+1. Run `docker node demote <id-node>` to demote the node to a worker.
+2. Run `docker node rm <id-node>` before adding a node back with a fresh state.
+3. Re-join the node to the cluster using `docker swarm join`.
+
+In case of [disaster recovery](#recover-from-disaster), you can take the raft data
+directory of one of the manager nodes to restore to a new swarm cluster.
+
+## Monitor swarm health
+
+You can monitor the health of Manager nodes by querying the docker `nodes` API
+in JSON format through the `/nodes` HTTP endpoint. Refer to the [nodes API documentation](../reference/api/docker_remote_api_v1.24.md#36-nodes)
+for more information.
+
+From the command line, run `docker node inspect <id-node>` to query the nodes.
+For instance, to query the reachability of the node as a Manager:
+
+```bash
+docker node inspect manager1 --format "{{ .ManagerStatus.Reachability }}"
+reachable
+```
+
+To query the status of the node as a Worker that accept tasks:
+
+```bash
+docker node inspect manager1 --format "{{ .Status.State }}"
+ready
+```
+
+From those commands, we can see that `manager1` is both at the status
+`reachable` as a manager and `ready` as a worker.
+
+An `unreachable` health status means that this particular manager node is unreachable
+from other manager nodes. In this case you need to take action to restore the unreachable
+manager:
+
+- Restart the daemon and see if the manager comes back as reachable.
+- Reboot the machine.
+- If neither restarting or rebooting work, you should add another manager node or promote a worker to be a manager node. You also need to cleanly remove the failed node entry from the Manager set with `docker node demote <id-node>` and `docker node rm <id-node>`.
+
+Alternatively you can also get an overview of the cluster health with `docker node ls`:
+
+```bash
+# From a Manager node
+docker node ls
+ID                           HOSTNAME  MEMBERSHIP  STATUS  AVAILABILITY  MANAGER STATUS
+1mhtdwhvsgr3c26xxbnzdc3yp    node05    Accepted    Ready   Active
+516pacagkqp2xc3fk9t1dhjor    node02    Accepted    Ready   Active        Reachable
+9ifojw8of78kkusuc4a6c23fx *  node01    Accepted    Ready   Active        Leader
+ax11wdpwrrb6db3mfjydscgk7    node04    Accepted    Ready   Active
+bb1nrq2cswhtbg4mrsqnlx1ck    node03    Accepted    Ready   Active        Reachable
+di9wxgz8dtuh9d2hn089ecqkf    node06    Accepted    Ready   Active
+```
+
+## Manager advertise address
+
+When initiating or joining a Swarm cluster, you have to specify the `--listen-addr`
+flag to advertise your address to other Manager nodes in the cluster.
+
+We recommend that you use a *fixed IP address* for the advertised address, otherwise
+the cluster could become unstable on machine reboot.
+
+Indeed if the whole cluster restarts and every Manager gets a new IP address on
+restart, there is no way for any of those nodes to contact an existing Manager
+and the cluster will stay stuck trying to contact other nodes through their old address.
+While having dynamic IP addresses for Worker nodes is acceptable, Managers are
+meant to be a stable piece in the infrastructure thus it is highly recommended to
+deploy those critical nodes with static IPs.
+
+## Recover from disaster
+
+Swarm is resilient to failures and the cluster can recover from any number
+of temporary node failures (machine reboots or crash with restart).
+
+In a swarm of `N` managers, there must be a quorum of manager nodes greater than
+50% of the total number of managers (or `(N/2)+1`) in order for the swarm to
+process requests and remain available. This means the swarm can tolerate up to
+`(N-1)/2` permanent failures beyond which requests involving cluster management
+cannot be processed. These types of failures include data corruption or hardware
+failures.
+
+Even if you follow the guidelines here, it is possible that you can lose a
+quorum of manager nodes. If you can't recover the quorum by conventional
+means such as restarting faulty nodes, you can recover the cluster by running
+`docker swarm init --force-new-cluster` on a manager node.
+
+```bash
+# From the node to recover
+docker swarm init --force-new-cluster --listen-addr node01:2377
+```
+
+The `--force-new-cluster` flag puts the Docker Engine into swarm mode as a
+manager node of a single-node cluster. It discards cluster membership information
+that existed before the loss of the quorum but it retains data necessary to the
+Swarm cluster such as services, tasks and the list of worker nodes.

+ 47 - 0
docs/swarm/raft.md

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+<!--[metadata]>
++++
+title = "Raft consensus in swarm mode"
+description = "Raft consensus algorithm in swarm mode"
+keywords = ["docker, container, cluster, swarm, raft"]
+advisory = "rc"
+[menu.main]
+identifier="raft"
+parent="engine_swarm"
+weight="13"
++++
+<![end-metadata]-->
+
+## Raft consensus algorithm
+
+When the Docker Engine runs in swarm mode, manager nodes implement the
+[Raft Consensus Algorithm](http://thesecretlivesofdata.com/raft/) to manage the global cluster state.
+
+The reason why *Docker swarm mode* is using a consensus algorithm is to make sure that
+all the manager nodes that are in charge of managing and scheduling tasks in the cluster,
+are storing the same consistent state.
+
+Having the same consistent state across the cluster means that in case of a failure,
+any Manager node can pick up the tasks and restore the services to a stable state.
+For example, if the *Leader Manager* which is responsible for scheduling tasks in the
+cluster dies unexpectedly, any other Manager can pick up the task of scheduling and
+re-balance tasks to match the desired state.
+
+Systems using consensus algorithms to replicate logs in a distributed systems
+do require special care. They ensure that the cluster state stays consistent
+in the presence of failures by requiring a majority of nodes to agree on values.
+
+Raft tolerates up to `(N-1)/2` failures and requires a majority or quorum of
+`(N/2)+1` members to agree on values proposed to the cluster. This means that in
+a cluster of 5 Managers running Raft, if 3 nodes are unavailable, the system
+will not process any more requests to schedule additional tasks. The existing
+tasks will keep running but the scheduler will not be able to rebalance tasks to
+cope with failures if when the manager set is not healthy.
+
+The implementation of the consensus algorithm in swarm mode means it features
+the properties inherent to distributed systems:
+
+- *agreement on values* in a fault tolerant system. (Refer to [FLP impossibility theorem](http://the-paper-trail.org/blog/a-brief-tour-of-flp-impossibility/)
+ and the [Raft Consensus Algorithm paper](https://www.usenix.org/system/files/conference/atc14/atc14-paper-ongaro.pdf))
+- *mutual exclusion* through the leader election process
+- *cluster membership* management
+- *globally consistent object sequencing* and CAS (compare-and-swap) primitives