2
0

sentinel.conf 6.9 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181
  1. # Example sentinel.conf
  2. # port <sentinel-port>
  3. # The port that this sentinel instance will run on
  4. port 26379
  5. # sentinel announce-ip <ip>
  6. # sentinel announce-port <port>
  7. #
  8. # The above two configuration directives are useful in environments where,
  9. # because of NAT, Sentinel is reachable from outside via a non-local address.
  10. #
  11. # When announce-ip is provided, the Sentinel will claim the specified IP address
  12. # in HELLO messages used to gossip its presence, instead of auto-detecting the
  13. # local address as it usually does.
  14. #
  15. # Similarly when announce-port is provided and is valid and non-zero, Sentinel
  16. # will announce the specified TCP port.
  17. #
  18. # The two options don't need to be used together, if only announce-ip is
  19. # provided, the Sentinel will announce the specified IP and the server port
  20. # as specified by the "port" option. If only announce-port is provided, the
  21. # Sentinel will announce the auto-detected local IP and the specified port.
  22. #
  23. # Example:
  24. #
  25. # sentinel announce-ip 1.2.3.4
  26. # dir <working-directory>
  27. # Every long running process should have a well-defined working directory.
  28. # For Redis Sentinel to chdir to /tmp at startup is the simplest thing
  29. # for the process to don't interfere with administrative tasks such as
  30. # unmounting filesystems.
  31. dir /tmp
  32. # sentinel monitor <master-name> <ip> <redis-port> <quorum>
  33. #
  34. # Tells Sentinel to monitor this master, and to consider it in O_DOWN
  35. # (Objectively Down) state only if at least <quorum> sentinels agree.
  36. #
  37. # Note that whatever is the ODOWN quorum, a Sentinel will require to
  38. # be elected by the majority of the known Sentinels in order to
  39. # start a failover, so no failover can be performed in minority.
  40. #
  41. # Slaves are auto-discovered, so you don't need to specify slaves in
  42. # any way. Sentinel itself will rewrite this configuration file adding
  43. # the slaves using additional configuration options.
  44. # Also note that the configuration file is rewritten when a
  45. # slave is promoted to master.
  46. #
  47. # Note: master name should not include special characters or spaces.
  48. # The valid charset is A-z 0-9 and the three characters ".-_".
  49. sentinel monitor mymaster 127.0.0.1 6379 2
  50. # sentinel auth-pass <master-name> <password>
  51. #
  52. # Set the password to use to authenticate with the master and slaves.
  53. # Useful if there is a password set in the Redis instances to monitor.
  54. #
  55. # Note that the master password is also used for slaves, so it is not
  56. # possible to set a different password in masters and slaves instances
  57. # if you want to be able to monitor these instances with Sentinel.
  58. #
  59. # However you can have Redis instances without the authentication enabled
  60. # mixed with Redis instances requiring the authentication (as long as the
  61. # password set is the same for all the instances requiring the password) as
  62. # the AUTH command will have no effect in Redis instances with authentication
  63. # switched off.
  64. #
  65. # Example:
  66. #
  67. # sentinel auth-pass mymaster MySUPER--secret-0123passw0rd
  68. # sentinel down-after-milliseconds <master-name> <milliseconds>
  69. #
  70. # Number of milliseconds the master (or any attached slave or sentinel) should
  71. # be unreachable (as in, not acceptable reply to PING, continuously, for the
  72. # specified period) in order to consider it in S_DOWN state (Subjectively
  73. # Down).
  74. #
  75. # Default is 30 seconds.
  76. sentinel down-after-milliseconds mymaster 30000
  77. # sentinel parallel-syncs <master-name> <numslaves>
  78. #
  79. # How many slaves we can reconfigure to point to the new slave simultaneously
  80. # during the failover. Use a low number if you use the slaves to serve query
  81. # to avoid that all the slaves will be unreachable at about the same
  82. # time while performing the synchronization with the master.
  83. sentinel parallel-syncs mymaster 1
  84. # sentinel failover-timeout <master-name> <milliseconds>
  85. #
  86. # Specifies the failover timeout in milliseconds. It is used in many ways:
  87. #
  88. # - The time needed to re-start a failover after a previous failover was
  89. # already tried against the same master by a given Sentinel, is two
  90. # times the failover timeout.
  91. #
  92. # - The time needed for a slave replicating to a wrong master according
  93. # to a Sentinel current configuration, to be forced to replicate
  94. # with the right master, is exactly the failover timeout (counting since
  95. # the moment a Sentinel detected the misconfiguration).
  96. #
  97. # - The time needed to cancel a failover that is already in progress but
  98. # did not produced any configuration change (SLAVEOF NO ONE yet not
  99. # acknowledged by the promoted slave).
  100. #
  101. # - The maximum time a failover in progress waits for all the slaves to be
  102. # reconfigured as slaves of the new master. However even after this time
  103. # the slaves will be reconfigured by the Sentinels anyway, but not with
  104. # the exact parallel-syncs progression as specified.
  105. #
  106. # Default is 3 minutes.
  107. sentinel failover-timeout mymaster 180000
  108. # SCRIPTS EXECUTION
  109. #
  110. # sentinel notification-script and sentinel reconfig-script are used in order
  111. # to configure scripts that are called to notify the system administrator
  112. # or to reconfigure clients after a failover. The scripts are executed
  113. # with the following rules for error handling:
  114. #
  115. # If script exits with "1" the execution is retried later (up to a maximum
  116. # number of times currently set to 10).
  117. #
  118. # If script exits with "2" (or an higher value) the script execution is
  119. # not retried.
  120. #
  121. # If script terminates because it receives a signal the behavior is the same
  122. # as exit code 1.
  123. #
  124. # A script has a maximum running time of 60 seconds. After this limit is
  125. # reached the script is terminated with a SIGKILL and the execution retried.
  126. # NOTIFICATION SCRIPT
  127. #
  128. # sentinel notification-script <master-name> <script-path>
  129. #
  130. # Call the specified notification script for any sentinel event that is
  131. # generated in the WARNING level (for instance -sdown, -odown, and so forth).
  132. # This script should notify the system administrator via email, SMS, or any
  133. # other messaging system, that there is something wrong with the monitored
  134. # Redis systems.
  135. #
  136. # The script is called with just two arguments: the first is the event type
  137. # and the second the event description.
  138. #
  139. # The script must exist and be executable in order for sentinel to start if
  140. # this option is provided.
  141. #
  142. # Example:
  143. #
  144. # sentinel notification-script mymaster /var/redis/notify.sh
  145. # CLIENTS RECONFIGURATION SCRIPT
  146. #
  147. # sentinel client-reconfig-script <master-name> <script-path>
  148. #
  149. # When the master changed because of a failover a script can be called in
  150. # order to perform application-specific tasks to notify the clients that the
  151. # configuration has changed and the master is at a different address.
  152. #
  153. # The following arguments are passed to the script:
  154. #
  155. # <master-name> <role> <state> <from-ip> <from-port> <to-ip> <to-port>
  156. #
  157. # <state> is currently always "failover"
  158. # <role> is either "leader" or "observer"
  159. #
  160. # The arguments from-ip, from-port, to-ip, to-port are used to communicate
  161. # the old address of the master and the new address of the elected slave
  162. # (now a master).
  163. #
  164. # This script should be resistant to multiple invocations.
  165. #
  166. # Example:
  167. #
  168. # sentinel client-reconfig-script mymaster /var/redis/reconfig.sh