About high availability replication for clusters
You can configure a cluster deployment of GitHub Enterprise Server for high availability, where an identical set of passive nodes sync with the nodes in your active cluster. If hardware or software failures affect the datacenter with your active cluster, you can manually fail over to the replica nodes and continue processing user requests, minimizing the impact of the outage.
In high availability mode, each active node syncs regularly with a corresponding passive node. The passive node runs in standby and does not serve applications or process user requests.
We recommend configuring high availability as a part of a comprehensive disaster recovery plan for GitHub Enterprise Server. We also recommend performing regular backups. For more information, see "Configuring backups on your appliance."
Prerequisites
Hardware and software
For each existing node in your active cluster, you'll need to provision a second virtual machine with identical hardware resources. For example, if your cluster has 11 nodes and each node has 12 vCPUs, 96 GB of RAM, and 750 GB of attached storage, you must provision 11 new virtual machines that each have 12 vCPUs, 96 GB of RAM, and 750 GB of attached storage.
On each new virtual machine, install the same version of GitHub Enterprise Server that runs on the nodes in your active cluster. You don't need to upload a license or perform any additional configuration. For more information, see "Setting up a GitHub Enterprise Server instance."
Note: The nodes that you intend to use for high availability replication should be standalone GitHub Enterprise Server instances. Don't initialize the passive nodes as a second cluster.
Network
You must assign a static IP address to each new node that you provision, and you must configure a load balancer to accept connections and direct them to the nodes in your cluster's front-end tier.
We don't recommend configuring a firewall between the network with your active cluster and the network with your passive cluster. The latency between the network with the active nodes and the network with the passive nodes must be less than 70 milliseconds. For more information about network connectivity between nodes in the passive cluster, see "Cluster network configuration."
Creating a high availability replica for a cluster
- Assigning active nodes to the primary datacenter
- Adding passive nodes to the cluster configuration file
- Example configuration
Assigning active nodes to the primary datacenter
Before you define a secondary datacenter for your passive nodes, ensure that you assign your active nodes to the primary datacenter.
-
SSH into any node in your cluster. For more information, see "Accessing the administrative shell (SSH)."
-
Open the cluster configuration file at /data/user/common/cluster.conf in a text editor. For example, you can use Vim.
sudo vim /data/user/common/cluster.conf
-
Note the name of your cluster's primary datacenter. The
[cluster]
section at the top of the cluster configuration file defines the primary datacenter's name, using theprimary-datacenter
key-value pair. By default, the primary datacenter for your cluster is nameddefault
.[cluster] mysql-master = HOSTNAME redis-master = HOSTNAME primary-datacenter = default
- Optionally, change the name of the primary datacenter to something more descriptive or accurate by editing the value of
primary-datacenter
.
- Optionally, change the name of the primary datacenter to something more descriptive or accurate by editing the value of
-
The cluster configuration file lists each node under a
[cluster "HOSTNAME"]
heading. Under each node's heading, add a new key-value pair to assign the node to a datacenter. Use the same value asprimary-datacenter
from step 3 above. For example, if you want to use the default name (default
), add the following key-value pair to the section for each node.datacenter = default
When you're done, the section for each node in the cluster configuration file should look like the following example. The order of the key-value pairs doesn't matter.
[cluster "HOSTNAME"] datacenter = default hostname = HOSTNAME ipv4 = IP ADDRESS ... ...
Note: If you changed the name of the primary datacenter in step 3, find the
consul-datacenter
key-value pair in the section for each node and change the value to the renamed primary datacenter. For example, if you named the primary datacenterprimary
, use the following key-value pair for each node.consul-datacenter = primary
-
Apply the new configuration. This command can take some time to finish, so we recommend running the command in a terminal multiplexer like
screen
ortmux
.ghe-cluster-config-apply
-
After the configuration run finishes, GitHub Enterprise Server displays the following message.
Finished cluster configuration
After GitHub Enterprise Server returns you to the prompt, you've finished assigning your nodes to the cluster's primary datacenter.
Adding passive nodes to the cluster configuration file
To configure high availability, you must define a corresponding passive node for every active node in your cluster. The following instructions create a new cluster configuration that defines both active and passive nodes. You will:
- Create a copy of the active cluster configuration file.
- Edit the copy to define passive nodes that correspond to the active nodes, adding the IP addresses of the new virtual machines that you provisioned.
- Merge the modified copy of the cluster configuration back into your active configuration.
- Apply the new configuration to start replication.
For an example configuration, see "Example configuration."
-
For each node in your cluster, provision a matching virtual machine with identical specifications, running the same version of GitHub Enterprise Server. Note the IPv4 address and hostname for each new cluster node. For more information, see "Prerequisites."
Note: If you're reconfiguring high availability after a failover, you can use the old nodes from the primary datacenter instead.
-
SSH into any node in your cluster. For more information, see "Accessing the administrative shell (SSH)."
-
Back up your existing cluster configuration.
cp /data/user/common/cluster.conf ~/$(date +%Y-%m-%d)-cluster.conf.backup
-
Create a copy of your existing cluster configuration file in a temporary location, like /home/admin/cluster-passive.conf. Delete unique key-value pairs for IP addresses (
ipv*
), UUIDs (uuid
), and public keys for WireGuard (wireguard-pubkey
).grep -Ev "(?:|ipv|uuid|vpn|wireguard\-pubkey)" /data/user/common/cluster.conf > ~/cluster-passive.conf
-
Remove the
[cluster]
section from the temporary cluster configuration file that you copied in the previous step.git config -f ~/cluster-passive.conf --remove-section cluster
-
Decide on a name for the secondary datacenter where you provisioned your passive nodes, then update the temporary cluster configuration file with the new datacenter name. Replace
SECONDARY
with the name you choose.sed -i 's/datacenter = default/datacenter = SECONDARY/g' ~/cluster-passive.conf
-
Decide on a pattern for the passive nodes' hostnames.
Warning: Hostnames for passive nodes must be unique and differ from the hostname for the corresponding active node.
-
Open the temporary cluster configuration file from step 3 in a text editor. For example, you can use Vim.
sudo vim ~/cluster-passive.conf
-
In each section within the temporary cluster configuration file, update the node's configuration. The cluster configuration file lists each node under a
[cluster "HOSTNAME"]
heading.- Change the quoted hostname in the section heading and the value for
hostname
within the section to the passive node's hostname, per the pattern you chose in step 7 above. - Add a new key named
ipv4
, and set the value to the passive node's static IPv4 address. - Add a new key-value pair,
replica = enabled
.
[cluster "NEW PASSIVE NODE HOSTNAME"] ... hostname = NEW PASSIVE NODE HOSTNAME ipv4 = NEW PASSIVE NODE IPV4 ADDRESS replica = enabled ... ...
- Change the quoted hostname in the section heading and the value for
-
Append the contents of the temporary cluster configuration file that you created in step 4 to the active configuration file.
cat ~/cluster-passive.conf >> /data/user/common/cluster.conf
-
Designate the primary MySQL and Redis nodes in the secondary datacenter. Replace
REPLICA MYSQL PRIMARY HOSTNAME
andREPLICA REDIS PRIMARY HOSTNAME
with the hostnames of the passives node that you provisioned to match your existing MySQL and Redis primaries.git config -f /data/user/common/cluster.conf cluster.mysql-master-replica REPLICA MYSQL PRIMARY HOSTNAME git config -f /data/user/common/cluster.conf cluster.redis-master-replica REPLICA REDIS PRIMARY HOSTNAME
Warning: Review your cluster configuration file before proceeding.
- In the top-level
[cluster]
section, ensure that the values formysql-master-replica
andredis-master-replica
are the correct hostnames for the passive nodes in the secondary datacenter that will serve as the MySQL and Redis primaries after a failover. - In each section for an active node named
[cluster "ACTIVE NODE HOSTNAME"]
, double-check the following key-value pairs.datacenter
should match the value ofprimary-datacenter
in the top-level[cluster]
section.consul-datacenter
should match the value ofdatacenter
, which should be the same as the value forprimary-datacenter
in the top-level[cluster]
section.
- Ensure that for each active node, the configuration has one corresponding section for one passive node with the same roles. In each section for a passive node, double-check each key-value pair.
datacenter
should match all other passive nodes.consul-datacenter
should match all other passive nodes.hostname
should match the hostname in the section heading.ipv4
should match the node's unique, static IPv4 address.replica
should be configured asenabled
.
- Take the opportunity to remove sections for offline nodes that are no longer in use.
To review an example configuration, see "Example configuration."
- In the top-level
-
Initialize the new cluster configuration. This command can take some time to finish, so we recommend running the command in a terminal multiplexer like
screen
ortmux
.ghe-cluster-config-init
-
After the initialization finishes, GitHub Enterprise Server displays the following message.
Finished cluster initialization
-
Apply the new configuration. This command can take some time to finish, so we recommend running the command in a terminal multiplexer like
screen
ortmux
.ghe-cluster-config-apply
-
After the configuration run finishes, GitHub Enterprise Server displays the following message.
Finished cluster configuration
-
Configure a load balancer that will accept connections from users if you fail over to the passive nodes. For more information, see "Cluster network configuration."
You've finished configuring high availability replication for the nodes in your cluster. Each active node begins replicating configuration and data to its corresponding passive node, and you can direct traffic to the load balancer for the secondary datacenter in the event of a failure. For more information about failing over, see "Initiating a failover to your replica cluster."
Example configuration
The top-level [cluster]
configuration should look like the following example.
[cluster]
mysql-master = HOSTNAME OF ACTIVE MYSQL MASTER
redis-master = HOSTNAME OF ACTIVE REDIS MASTER
primary-datacenter = PRIMARY DATACENTER NAME
mysql-master-replica = HOSTNAME OF PASSIVE MYSQL MASTER
redis-master-replica = HOSTNAME OF PASSIVE REDIS MASTER
mysql-auto-failover = false
...
The configuration for an active node in your cluster's storage tier should look like the following example.
...
[cluster "UNIQUE ACTIVE NODE HOSTNAME"]
datacenter = default
hostname = UNIQUE ACTIVE NODE HOSTNAME
ipv4 = IPV4 ADDRESS
consul-datacenter = default
consul-server = true
git-server = true
pages-server = true
mysql-server = true
elasticsearch-server = true
redis-server = true
memcache-server = true
metrics-server = true
storage-server = true
vpn = IPV4 ADDRESS SET AUTOMATICALLY
uuid = UUID SET AUTOMATICALLY
wireguard-pubkey = PUBLIC KEY SET AUTOMATICALLY
...
The configuration for the corresponding passive node in the storage tier should look like the following example.
- Important differences from the corresponding active node are bold.
- GitHub Enterprise Server assigns values for
vpn
,uuid
, andwireguard-pubkey
automatically, so you shouldn't define the values for passive nodes that you will initialize. - The server roles, defined by
*-server
keys, match the corresponding active node.
...
[cluster "UNIQUE PASSIVE NODE HOSTNAME"]
replica = enabled
ipv4 = IPV4 ADDRESS OF NEW VM WITH IDENTICAL RESOURCES
datacenter = SECONDARY DATACENTER NAME
hostname = UNIQUE PASSIVE NODE HOSTNAME
consul-datacenter = SECONDARY DATACENTER NAME
consul-server = true
git-server = true
pages-server = true
mysql-server = true
elasticsearch-server = true
redis-server = true
memcache-server = true
metrics-server = true
storage-server = true
vpn = DO NOT DEFINE
uuid = DO NOT DEFINE
wireguard-pubkey = DO NOT DEFINE
...
Monitoring replication between active and passive cluster nodes
Initial replication between the active and passive nodes in your cluster takes time. The amount of time depends on the amount of data to replicate and the activity levels for GitHub Enterprise Server.
You can monitor the progress on any node in the cluster, using command-line tools available via the GitHub Enterprise Server administrative shell. For more information about the administrative shell, see "Accessing the administrative shell (SSH)."
-
Monitor replication of databases:
/usr/local/share/enterprise/ghe-cluster-status-mysql
-
Monitor replication of repository and Gist data:
ghe-spokes status
-
Monitor replication of attachment and LFS data:
ghe-storage replication-status
-
Monitor replication of Pages data:
ghe-dpages replication-status
You can use ghe-cluster-status
to review the overall health of your cluster. For more information, see "Command-line utilities."
Reconfiguring high availability replication after a failover
After you fail over from the cluster's active nodes to the cluster's passive nodes, you can reconfigure high availability replication in two ways.
Provisioning and configuring new passive nodes
After a failover, you can reconfigure high availability in two ways. The method you choose will depend on the reason that you failed over, and the state of the original active nodes.
-
Provision and configure a new set of passive nodes for each of the new active nodes in your secondary datacenter.
-
Use the old active nodes as the new passive nodes.
The process for reconfiguring high availability is identical to the initial configuration of high availability. For more information, see "Creating a high availability replica for a cluster."
Disabling high availability replication for a cluster
You can stop replication to the passive nodes for your cluster deployment of GitHub Enterprise Server.
-
SSH into any node in your cluster. For more information, see "Accessing the administrative shell (SSH)."
-
Open the cluster configuration file at /data/user/common/cluster.conf in a text editor. For example, you can use Vim.
sudo vim /data/user/common/cluster.conf
-
In the top-level
[cluster]
section, delete theredis-master-replica
, andmysql-master-replica
key-value pairs. -
Delete each section for a passive node. For passive nodes,
replica
is configured asenabled
. -
Apply the new configuration. This command can take some time to finish, so we recommend running the command in a terminal multiplexer like
screen
ortmux
.ghe-cluster-config-apply
-
After the configuration run finishes, GitHub Enterprise Server displays the following message.
Finished cluster configuration
After GitHub Enterprise Server returns you to the prompt, you've finished disabling high availability replication.