Support Policies for RHEL High Availability clusters - corosync
Contents
Overview
Applicable Environments
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) with the High Availability Add-On
Useful References and Guides
Introduction
This guide lays out the policies applicable to Red Hat's support for the RHEL High Availability cluster software in the area of the corosync
component and its related settings. Users of the RHEL High Availability product should adhere to these policies in order to be eligible for assistance from Red Hat with the appropriate product support subscriptions.
Policies
Usage outside of a RHEL High Availability cluster: Red Hat only supports usage of corosync
in the context of a RHEL High Availability cluster utilizing the full cluster stack that is a part of the High Availability Add-On. Specifically:
- RHEL 7 and 8: Red Hat only provides support for the
corosync
component when used in conjunction withpacemaker
. - RHEL 6: Red Hat only provides support for the
corosync
component when used in conjunction withcman
- regardless of whetherpacemaker
is used.- NOTE: Red Hat does NOT provide support for running RHEL 6 clusters with
pacemaker
directly usingcorosync
withoutcman
.cman
is required in RHEL 6 for support from Red Hat.
- NOTE: Red Hat does NOT provide support for running RHEL 6 clusters with
Cluster deployments that use corosync
in a stand-alone manner will not receive support from Red Hat.
totem token
limits: Red Hat places the following supported limits on the totem token
setting that controls the timing and timeouts of ORF tokens (aka heartbeats) within a cluster:
- RHEL 7, 8 and 9: Maximum 300000 ms (300 s), no minimum
- RHEL 6: Maximum 300000 ms (300 s), minimum 5000 ms (5 s)
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