open-nomad/website/source/intro/getting-started/running.html.md
2015-10-10 12:29:56 -06:00

6.1 KiB

layout page_title sidebar_current description
intro Running Nomad getting-started-running Learn about the Nomad agent, and the lifecycle of running and stopping.

Running Nomad

Nomad relies on a long running agent on every machine in the cluster. The agent can run either in server or client mode. Each region must have at least one server, though a cluster of 3 or 5 servers is recommended. A single server deployment is highly discouraged as data loss is inevitable in a failure scenario.

All other agents run in client mode. A client is a very lightweight process that registers the host machine, performs heartbeating, and runs any tasks that are assigned to it by the servers. The agent must be run on every node that is part of the cluster so that the servers can assign work to those machines.

Starting the Agent

For simplicity, we will run a single Nomad agent in development mode. This mode is used to quickly start an agent that is acting as a client and server to test job configurations or prototype interactions. It should not be used in production as it does not persist state.

vagrant@nomad:~$ sudo nomad agent -dev

==> Starting Nomad agent...
==> Nomad agent configuration:

                 Atlas: <disabled>
                Client: true
             Log Level: DEBUG
                Region: global (DC: dc1)
                Server: true

==> Nomad agent started! Log data will stream in below:

    [INFO] serf: EventMemberJoin: nomad.global 127.0.0.1
    [INFO] nomad: starting 4 scheduling worker(s) for [service batch _core]
    [INFO] client: using alloc directory /tmp/NomadClient599911093
    [INFO] raft: Node at 127.0.0.1:4647 [Follower] entering Follower state
    [INFO] nomad: adding server nomad.global (Addr: 127.0.0.1:4647) (DC: dc1)
    [WARN] fingerprint.network: Ethtool not found, checking /sys/net speed file
    [WARN] raft: Heartbeat timeout reached, starting election
    [INFO] raft: Node at 127.0.0.1:4647 [Candidate] entering Candidate state
    [DEBUG] raft: Votes needed: 1
    [DEBUG] raft: Vote granted. Tally: 1
    [INFO] raft: Election won. Tally: 1
    [INFO] raft: Node at 127.0.0.1:4647 [Leader] entering Leader state
    [INFO] raft: Disabling EnableSingleNode (bootstrap)
    [DEBUG] raft: Node 127.0.0.1:4647 updated peer set (2): [127.0.0.1:4647]
    [INFO] nomad: cluster leadership acquired
    [DEBUG] client: applied fingerprints [arch cpu host memory storage network]
    [DEBUG] client: available drivers [docker exec java]
    [DEBUG] client: node registration complete
    [DEBUG] client: updated allocations at index 1 (0 allocs)
    [DEBUG] client: allocs: (added 0) (removed 0) (updated 0) (ignore 0)
    [DEBUG] client: state updated to ready

As you can see, the Nomad agent has started and has output some log data. From the log data, you can see that our agent is running in both client and server mode, and has claimed leadership of the cluster. Additionally, the local client has been registered and marked as ready.

-> Note: Typically any agent running in client mode must be run with root level privilege. Nomad makes use of operating system primitives for resource isolation which require elevated permissions. The agent will function as non-root, but certain task drivers will not be available.

Cluster Nodes

If you run nomad node-status in another terminal, you can see the registered nodes of the Nomad cluster:

$ vagrant ssh
...

$ nomad node-status
ID                                    DC   Name   Class   Drain  Status
72d3af97-144f-1e5f-94e5-df1516fe4add  dc1  nomad  <none>  false  ready

The output shows our Node ID, which is a randomly generated UUID, its datacenter, node name, node class, drain mode and current status. We can see that our node is in the ready state, and task draining is currently off.

The agent is also running in server mode, which means it is part of the gossip protocol used to connect all the server instances together. We can view the members of the gossip ring using the server-members command:

$ nomad server-members
Name          Addr       Port  Status  Proto  Build     DC   Region
nomad.global  127.0.0.1  4648  alive   2      0.1.0dev  dc1  global

The output shows our own agent, the address it is running on, its health state, some version information, and the datacenter and region. Additional metadata can be viewed by providing the -detailed flag.

Stopping the Agent

You can use Ctrl-C (the interrupt signal) to halt the agent. By default, all signals will cause the agent to forcefully shutdown. The agent can be configured to gracefully leave on either the interrupt or terminate signals.

After interrupting the agent, you should see it leave the cluster and shut down:

^C==> Caught signal: interrupt
    [DEBUG] http: Shutting down http server
    [INFO] agent: requesting shutdown
    [INFO] client: shutting down
    [INFO] nomad: shutting down server
    [WARN] serf: Shutdown without a Leave
    [INFO] agent: shutdown complete

By gracefully leaving, Nomad clients update their status to prevent futher tasks from being scheduled and to start migrating any tasks that are already assigned. Nomad servers notify their peers they intend to leave. When a server leaves, replication to that server stops. If a server fails, replication continues to be attempted until the node recovers. Nomad will automatically try to reconnect to failed nodes, allowing it to recover from certain network conditions, while left nodes are no longer contacted.

If an agent is operating as a server, a graceful leave is important to avoid causing a potential availability outage affecting the consensus protocol. If a server does forcefully exit and will not be returning into service, the server-force-leave command should be used to force the server from a failed to a left state.

Next Steps

The development Nomad agent is up and running. Let's try to run a job!