Chapter 11. Testing an OpenShift Enterprise Deployment
This chapter provides information on how to test an OpenShift Enterprise deployment, and information on how to diagnose some problems.
11.1. Testing the MCollective Configuration
Important
Do not run the
ruby193-mcollective
daemon on the broker. The ruby193-mcollective
daemon runs on node hosts and the broker runs the ruby193-mcollective
client to contact node hosts. If the ruby193-mcollective
daemon is run on the broker, the broker will respond to the oo-mco ping
command and behave as both a broker and a node. This results in problems when creating applications, unless you have also run the node configuration on the broker host.
Run the following command on each node host to verify that the
ruby193-mcollective
service is running:
# service ruby193-mcollective status
If the service is not running, use the following command to start it:
# service ruby193-mcollective start
The command-line interface to MCollective is provided by the
oo-mco
command. This command can be used to perform diagnostics concerning communication between the broker and node hosts. Get a list of available commands with the following command:
# oo-mco help
Use the
oo-mco ping
command to display all node hosts the current broker is aware of. An output similar to the following example is displayed:
node.example.com time=100.02 ms ---- ping statistics ---- 1 replies max: 100.02 min: 100.02 avg: 100.02
Use the
oo-mco help
command to see the full list of MCollective command line options.