Chapter 13. Maintaining Satellite Server
This chapter provides information on how to maintain a Satellite Server, including information on how to work with audit records, how to clean unused tasks, and how to recover Pulp from a full disk.
13.1. Deleting Audit Records Manually
You can use the foreman-rake audits:expire
command to remove audit records at any time.
Procedure
Delete the audit records using the
foreman-rake audits:expire
command:# foreman-rake audits:expire days=Number_Of_Days
This command deletes all audit records older than
Number_Of_Days
.
13.2. Deleting Audit Records Automatically
You can automatically delete audit records using the Saved audits interval
setting. This setting is empty by default, meaning Satellite does not automatically delete the audit records.
Procedure
- In the Satellite web UI, navigate to Administer > Settings.
- On the General tab, find the Saved audits interval setting.
- Set the value of the setting to the number of days after which you want Satellite to delete the audit records.
13.3. Anonymizing Audit Records
You can use the foreman-rake audits:anonymize
command to remove any user account or IP information while maintaining the audit records in the database. You can also use a cron job to schedule anonymizing the audit records at the set interval that you want.
By default, using the foreman-rake audits:anonymize
command anonymizes audit records that are older than 90 days. You can specify the number of days to keep the audit records by adding the days option and add the number of days.
For example, if you want to anonymize audit records that are older than seven days, enter the following command:
# foreman-rake audits:anonymize days=7
13.4. Deleting Report Records
Report records are created automatically in Satellite. You can use the foreman-rake reports:expire
command to remove reports at any time. You can also use a cron job to schedule report record deletions at the set interval that you want.
By default, using the foreman-rake reports:expire
command removes report records that are older than 90 days. You can specify the number of days to keep the report records by adding the days option and add the number of days.
For example, if you want to delete report records that are older than seven days, enter the following command:
# foreman-rake reports:expire days=7
13.5. Configuring the Cleaning Unused Tasks Feature
Satellite performs regular cleaning to reduce disc space in the database and limit the rate of disk growth. As a result, Satellite backup completes faster and overall performance is higher.
By default, Satellite executes a cron job that cleans tasks every day at 19:45. Satellite removes the following tasks during the cleaning:
- Tasks that have run successfully and are older than thirty days
- All tasks that are older than a year
You can configure the cleaning unused tasks feature using these options:
To configure the time at which Satellite runs the cron job, set the
--foreman-plugin-tasks-cron-line
parameter to the time you want in cron format. For example, to schedule the cron job to run every day at 15:00, enter the following command:# satellite-installer --foreman-plugin-tasks-cron-line "00 15 * * *"
-
To configure the period after which Satellite deletes the tasks, edit the
:rules:
section in the/etc/foreman/plugins/foreman-tasks.yaml
file. To disable regular task cleanup on Satellite, enter the following command:
# satellite-installer --foreman-plugin-tasks-automatic-cleanup false
To reenable regular task cleanup on Satellite, enter the following command:
# satellite-installer --foreman-plugin-tasks-automatic-cleanup true
13.6. Deleting Task Records
Task records are created automatically in Satellite. You can use the foreman-rake foreman_tasks:cleanup
command to remove tasks at any time. You can also use a cron job to schedule Task record deletions at the set interval that you want.
For example, if you want to delete task records from successful repository synchronizations, enter the following command:
# foreman-rake foreman_tasks:cleanup TASK_SEARCH='label = Actions::Katello::Repository::Sync' STATES='stopped'
13.7. Deleting a Task by ID
You can delete tasks by ID, for example if you have submitted confidential data by mistake.
Procedure
Connect to your Satellite Server using SSH:
# ssh root@satellite.example.com
Optional: View the task:
# hammer task info --id My_Task_ID
Delete the task:
# foreman-rake foreman_tasks:cleanup TASK_SEARCH="id=My_Task_ID"
Optional: Ensure the task has been removed from Satellite Server:
# hammer task info --id My_Task_ID
Note that because the task is deleted, this command returns a non-zero exit code.
13.8. Recovering from a Full Disk
The following procedure describes how to resolve the situation when a logical volume (LV) with the Pulp database on it has no free space.
Procedure
- Let running Pulp tasks finish but do not trigger any new ones as they can fail due to the full disk.
Ensure that the LV with the
/var/lib/pulp
directory on it has sufficient free space. Here are some ways to achieve that:Remove orphaned content:
# foreman-rake katello:delete_orphaned_content RAILS_ENV=production
This is run weekly so it will not free much space.
- Change the download policy from Immediate to On Demand for as many repositories as possible and remove already downloaded packages. See the Red Hat Knowledgebase solution How to change syncing policy for Repositories on Satellite from "Immediate" to "On-Demand" on the Red Hat Customer Portal for instructions.
Grow the file system on the LV with the
/var/lib/pulp
directory on it. For more information, see Growing a logical volume and file system in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 Configuring and managing logical volumes.NoteIf you use an untypical file system (other than for example ext3, ext4, or xfs), you might need to unmount the file system so that it is not in use. In that case, complete the following steps:
Stop Satellite services:
# satellite-maintain service stop
- Grow the file system on the LV.
Start Satellite services:
# satellite-maintain service start
- If some Pulp tasks failed due to the full disk, run them again.
13.9. Managing Packages on the Base Operating System of Satellite Server or Capsule Server
To install and update packages on the Satellite Server or Capsule Server base operating system, you must enter the satellite-maintain packages
command. Satellite prevents users from installing and updating packages with yum
because yum
might also update the packages related to Satellite Server or Capsule Server and result in system inconsistency.
The satellite-maintain packages
command restarts some services on the operating system where you run it because it runs the satellite-installer
command after installing packages.
You can manage packages using the satellite-maintain packages
command as follows:
To install packages on Satellite Server or Capsule Server:
# satellite-maintain packages install package_1 package_2
To check for available package updates on Satellite Server or Capsule Server:
# satellite-maintain packages check-update
To update all packages on Satellite Server or Capsule Server:
# satellite-maintain packages update
To update specific packages on Satellite Server or Capsule Server:
# satellite-maintain packages update package_1 package_2
Updating packages individually can lead to package inconsistencies on Satellite Server or Capsule Server. For more information about updating packages on Satellite Server, see Updating Satellite Server to the Next Minor Version in Upgrading and Updating Red Hat Satellite.
13.10. Reclaiming PostgreSQL Space
The PostgreSQL database can use a large amount of disk space especially in heavily loaded deployments. Use this procedure to reclaim some of this disk space on Satellite.
Procedure
Stop all services, except for the
postgresql
service:# satellite-maintain service stop --exclude postgresql
Switch to the
postgres
user and reclaim space on the database:# su - postgres -c 'vacuumdb --full --all'
Start the other services when the vacuum completes:
# satellite-maintain service start