5.283. ricci


Updated ricci packages that fix multiple bugs and add two enhancements are now available for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.
The ricci packages contain a daemon and a client for remote configuring and managing of clusters.

Bug Fixes

BZ#724014
Previously, the ccs utility was not able to configure IPV6 hosts. The ccs utility has been updated to support the IPV6 protocol, so that it can be used to configure IPV6 hosts.
BZ#726772
The cman and ccs utilities contain different cluster schemas for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.2. A different cluster schema on a node from the schema contained in ccs could cause a valid cluster.conf file to be interpreted as invalid by ccs. A new ccs option, "--getschema", has been added. Using this option, if cluster schemas are different between what is included in ccs and the information on a node, the cluster schema on the node is used.
BZ#731113
Previously, the ccs utility did not check to see if the cluster.conf file was invalid. Therefore, when parsing an invalid cluster.conf file, ccs could terminate unexpectedly followed by a traceback, however with no detailed information about the problem provided. With this update, ccs checks to see whether cluster.conf is valid; if the file is invalid, ccs prints a helpful error message and exits gracefully.
BZ#738008
Previously, the "ccs_sync" command did not return a non-zero exit code if an error occurred or the ricci daemon was not running, even when running the command with the "-w" option (to exit with a failure status if any warnings were issued). The underlying source code has been modified so that "ccs_sync" with the "-w" option now returns "1" on failure.
BZ#738567
When running the "ccs" command with the "--checkconf" and "-f" options, ccs verifies that all the nodes in the file specified contain the same cluster.conf file. The XML code in the configuration file is indented whereas the XML code in the live configuration file from ricci is not, and therefore bare comparison of such strings always failed. As a consequence, ccs did not verify each node in the local cluster.conf file. The comparison method has been improved so that "ccs --checkconf -f" now correctly verifies whether all the nodes in the file contain the same cluster.conf file.
BZ#742345
Previously, if the user installed the ricci packages but did not install the modcluster package, any attempt to run cluster commands using ricci failed. With this update, users are no longer allowed to install only the ricci packages; the modcluster package is now required as a dependency. As a result, cluster commands can be executed as expected.
BZ#770637
Previously, when the user configured a virtual machine service, the virtual machine was not displayed in the output of the "ccs --lsservices" command. The ccs utility has been modified to specifically check for virtual machine services in the configuration file. Now, running "ccs" with the "--lsservices" option prints the proper output.
BZ#773383
Previously, if the user installed ricci and did not set a user password, the user was unable to connect to ricci. This could lead to confusion, because the user was not prompted to provide the password and therefore not aware of the requirement. Also, no explanation was logged in the system log. With this update, ricci logs a warning message to syslog on startup if the ricci user password is not set.

Enhancements

BZ#738797
Prior to this update, the ricci daemon processed tasks, but did not log any information about when the tasks were run. With this update, when ricci is asked to spawn a worker process, the date and time information is now logged using syslog.
BZ#758823
Prior to this update, the ccs utility did not provide a way to configure Redundant Ring Protocol (RRP). This update adds additional configuration options for RRP into the ccs utility so that users can configure RRP using ccs.
All users of ricci are advised to upgrade to these updated packages, which fix these bugs and add these enhancements.
Red Hat logoGithubRedditYoutubeTwitter

Learn

Try, buy, & sell

Communities

About Red Hat Documentation

We help Red Hat users innovate and achieve their goals with our products and services with content they can trust.

Making open source more inclusive

Red Hat is committed to replacing problematic language in our code, documentation, and web properties. For more details, see the Red Hat Blog.

About Red Hat

We deliver hardened solutions that make it easier for enterprises to work across platforms and environments, from the core datacenter to the network edge.

© 2024 Red Hat, Inc.