Restart the search head cluster
You can restart the entire cluster with the splunk rolling-restart
command. The command performs a phased restart of all cluster members, so that the cluster as a whole can continue to perform its functions during the restart process.
The deployer also automatically initiates a rolling restart, when necessary, after distributing a configuration bundle to the members. For details on this process, see "Push the configuration bundle".
Caution: In most cases, when changing configuration settings in the [shclustering]
stanza of server.conf
, you must restart all members at approximately the same time, in order to maintain identical settings across all members. For this reason, do not use the splunk rolling-restart
command to restart the members after such configuration changes, except when configuring the captain_is_adhoc_searchhead
attribute. Instead, run the splunk restart
command on each member. See "Configure the search head cluster".
Initiate a rolling restart
Invoke the splunk rolling-restart
command from any member:
splunk rolling-restart shcluster-members
You can also initiate a rolling restart through the search head clustering dashboard in Settings. See Use the search head clustering dashboard.
Monitor the restart process
To check the progress of the rolling restart, run this variant of the splunk rolling-restart
command from the captain:
splunk rolling-restart shcluster-members -status 1
The command returns the status of any members that have started or completed the restart process. For example:
Peer | Status | Start Time | End Time | GUID 1. server-centos65x64-4 | RESTARTING | Mon Apr 20 11:52:21 2015 | N/A | 7F10190D-F00A-47AF-8688-8DD26F1A8A4D 2. server-centos65x64-3 | RESTART-COMPLETE | Mon Apr 20 11:51:54 2015 | Mon Apr 20 11:52:16 2015 | E78F5ECF-1EC0-4E51-9EF7-5939B793763C
Caution: Although you can run this variant of the command from any member, if you run it from a member that is currently restarting, the command can fail. For that reason, it is recommended that you run it from the captain. The captain is always the last member to restart, so the command will not fail until the end of the process., if you run it from the captain
You can run this variant of the command multiple times during the restart process to view the current status of the restart. When the captain restarts at the end of the process, the command will fail. After the captain restarts, you can view the final restart status in the captain's audit.log
file:
index=_audit rolling-restart
How rolling restart works
The rolling restart works like this: The captain issues a restart message to approximately 10%, by default, of the members at a time. Once those members restart and contact the captain, the captain then issues a restart message to another 10% of the members, and so on, until all the members, including the captain, have restarted.
Note: If there are fewer than 10 members in the cluster, the captain issues the restart to one member at a time.
The captain is the final member to restart. After the captain member restarts, it continues to function as the captain.
After all members have restarted, it requires approximately 60 seconds for the cluster to stabilize. During this interval, error messages might appear. You can ignore these messages. They should desist within 60 seconds.
Note: During a rolling restart, there is no guarantee that all knowledge objects will be available to all members.
Configure the number of members that restart simultaneously
By default, the captain issues the restart command to 10% of the members at a time. However, the percentage is configurable through the percent_peers_to_restart
attribute in the [shclustering]
stanza of server.conf
. For convenience, you can configure this attribute with the CLI splunk edit shcluster-config
command. For example, to change the restart behavior so that the captain restarts 20% of the peers at a time, use this command:
splunk edit shcluster-config -percent_peers_to_restart 20
Caution: Do not set the value to greater than 20%. Otherwise, issues can arise during the captain election process.
After changing the percent_peers_to_restart
attribute, you still need to run the splunk rolling-restart
command to initiate the actual restart.
Restart fails if cluster cannot maintain a majority
A cluster with a dynamic captain requires that a majority of members be running at all times. See "Captain election." This requirement extends to the rolling restart process.
If restarting the next set of members (governed by the percent_peers_to_restart
attribute) would cause the number of active members to fall below 51% (for example, because some other members have failed), the restart process halts, in order to maintain an active majority of members. The captain then makes repeated attempts to restart the process, in case another member has rejoined the cluster in the interim. These attempts continue until the restart_timeout
period elapses (by default, 10 minutes). At that point, the captain makes no more attempts, and the remaining members do not go through the rolling-restart process.
The restart_timeout
attribute is settable in server.conf
.
Use static captain to recover from loss of majority | Use the search head clustering dashboard |
This documentation applies to the following versions of Splunk® Enterprise: 7.0.0, 7.0.1, 7.0.2, 7.0.3, 7.0.4, 7.0.5, 7.0.6, 7.0.7, 7.0.8, 7.0.9, 7.0.10, 7.0.11, 7.0.13
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