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Configure a cluster on Red Hat-based distributions

This tutorial describes how to install and configure three Percona XtraDB Cluster nodes on Red Hat or CentOS 7 servers, using the packages from Percona repositories.

  • Node 1

    • Host name: percona1

    • IP address: 192.168.70.71

  • Node 2

    • Host name: percona2

    • IP address: 192.168.70.72

  • Node 3

    • Host name: percona3

    • IP address: 192.168.70.73

Prerequisites

The procedure described in this tutorial requires the following:

  • All three nodes have Red Hat or Red Hat or CentOS 7 installed.

  • The firewall on all nodes is configured to allow connecting to ports 3306, 4444, 4567 and 4568.

  • SELinux on all nodes is disabled.

Different from previous versions

The variable wsrep_sst_auth has been removed. Percona XtraDB Cluster 8.4 automatically creates the system user mysql.pxc.internal.session. During SST, the user mysql.pxc.sst.user and the role mysql.pxc.sst.role are created on the donor node.

Step 1. Installing PXC

Install Percona XtraDB Cluster on all three nodes as described in Installing Percona XtraDB Cluster on Red Hat Enterprise Linux or CentOS.

Step 2. Configuring the first node

Individual nodes should be configured to be able to bootstrap the cluster. For more information about bootstrapping the cluster, see Bootstrapping the First Node.

  1. Make sure that the configuration file /etc/my.cnf on the first node (percona1) contains the following:

    [mysqld]
    
    datadir=/var/lib/mysql
    user=mysql
    
    # Path to Galera library
    wsrep_provider=/usr/lib64/galera4/libgalera_smm.so
    
    # Cluster connection URL contains the IPs of node#1, node#2 and node#3
    wsrep_cluster_address=gcomm://192.168.70.71,192.168.70.72,192.168.70.73
    
    # In order for Galera to work correctly binlog format should be ROW
    binlog_format=ROW
    
    # Using the MyISAM storage engine is not recommended.
    default_storage_engine=InnoDB
    
    # This InnoDB autoincrement locking mode is a requirement for Galera
    innodb_autoinc_lock_mode=2
    
    # Node 1 address
    wsrep_node_address=192.168.70.71
    
    # SST method
    wsrep_sst_method=xtrabackup-v2
    
    # Cluster name
    wsrep_cluster_name=my_centos_cluster
    
  2. Start the first node with the following command:

    [root@percona1 ~] # systemctl start mysql@bootstrap.service
    

    The previous command will start the cluster with initial wsrep_cluster_address variable set to gcomm://. If the node or MySQL are restarted later, there will be no need to change the configuration file.

  3. After the first node has been started, cluster status can be checked with the following command:

    mysql> show status like 'wsrep%';
    

    This output shows that the cluster has been successfully bootstrapped.

    Expected output
    +----------------------------+--------------------------------------+
    | Variable_name              | Value                                |
    +----------------------------+--------------------------------------+
    | wsrep_local_state_uuid     | c2883338-834d-11e2-0800-03c9c68e41ec |
    ...
    | wsrep_local_state          | 4                                    |
    | wsrep_local_state_comment  | Synced                               |
    ...
    | wsrep_cluster_size         | 1                                    |
    | wsrep_cluster_status       | Primary                              |
    | wsrep_connected            | ON                                   |
    ...
    | wsrep_ready                | ON                                   |
    +----------------------------+--------------------------------------+
    75 rows in set (0.00 sec)
    

    Copy the automatically generated temporary password for the superuser account:

    $ sudo grep 'temporary password' /var/log/mysqld.log
    

    Use this password to log in as root:

    $ mysql -u root -p
    

    Change the password for the superuser account and log out. For example:

    mysql> ALTER USER 'root'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'r00tP@$$';
    
    Expected output
    Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
    

Step 3. Configuring the second node

  1. Make sure that the configuration file /etc/my.cnf on the second node (percona2) contains the following:

    [mysqld]
    
    datadir=/var/lib/mysql
    user=mysql
    
    # Path to Galera library
    wsrep_provider=/usr/lib64/galera4/libgalera_smm.so
    
    # Cluster connection URL contains IPs of node#1, node#2 and node#3
    wsrep_cluster_address=gcomm://192.168.70.71,192.168.70.72,192.168.70.73
    
    # In order for Galera to work correctly binlog format should be ROW
    binlog_format=ROW
    
    # Using the MyISAM storage engine is not recommended
    default_storage_engine=InnoDB
    
    # This InnoDB auto_increment locking mode is a requirement for Galera
    innodb_autoinc_lock_mode=2
    
    # Node 2 address
    wsrep_node_address=192.168.70.72
    
    # Cluster name
    wsrep_cluster_name=my_centos_cluster
    
    # SST method
    wsrep_sst_method=xtrabackup-v2
    
  2. Start the second node with the following command:

    [root@percona2 ~]# systemctl start mysql
    
  3. After the server has been started, it should receive SST automatically. Cluster status can be checked on both nodes. The following is an example of status from the second node (percona2):

    mysql> show status like 'wsrep%';
    

    The output shows that the new node has been successfully added to the cluster.

    Expected output
    +----------------------------+--------------------------------------+
    | Variable_name              | Value                                |
    +----------------------------+--------------------------------------+
    | wsrep_local_state_uuid     | c2883338-834d-11e2-0800-03c9c68e41ec |
    ...
    | wsrep_local_state          | 4                                    |
    | wsrep_local_state_comment  | Synced                               |
    ...
    | wsrep_cluster_size         | 2                                    |
    | wsrep_cluster_status       | Primary                              |
    | wsrep_connected            | ON                                   |
    ...
    | wsrep_ready                | ON                                   |
    +----------------------------+--------------------------------------+
    40 rows in set (0.01 sec)
    

Step 4. Configuring the third node

  1. Make sure that the MySQL configuration file /etc/my.cnf on the third node (percona3) contains the following:

    [mysqld]
    
    datadir=/var/lib/mysql
    user=mysql
    
    # Path to Galera library
    wsrep_provider=/usr/lib64/galera4/libgalera_smm.so
    
    # Cluster connection URL contains IPs of node#1, node#2 and node#3
    wsrep_cluster_address=gcomm://192.168.70.71,192.168.70.72,192.168.70.73
    
    # In order for Galera to work correctly binlog format should be ROW
    binlog_format=ROW
    
    # Using the MyISAM storage engine is not recommended
    default_storage_engine=InnoDB
    
    # This InnoDB auto_increment locking mode is a requirement for Galera
    innodb_autoinc_lock_mode=2
    
    # Node #3 address
    wsrep_node_address=192.168.70.73
    
    # Cluster name
    wsrep_cluster_name=my_centos_cluster
    
    # SST method
    wsrep_sst_method=xtrabackup-v2
    
  2. Start the third node with the following command:

    [root@percona3 ~]# systemctl start mysql
    
  3. After the server has been started, it should receive SST automatically. Cluster status can be checked on all three nodes. The following is an example of status from the third node (percona3):

    mysql> show status like 'wsrep%';
    

    The output confirms that the third node has joined the cluster.

    Expected output
    +----------------------------+--------------------------------------+
    | Variable_name              | Value                                |
    +----------------------------+--------------------------------------+
    | wsrep_local_state_uuid     | c2883338-834d-11e2-0800-03c9c68e41ec |
    ...
    | wsrep_local_state          | 4                                    |
    | wsrep_local_state_comment  | Synced                               |
    ...
    | wsrep_cluster_size         | 3                                    |
    | wsrep_cluster_status       | Primary                              |
    | wsrep_connected            | ON                                   |
    ...
    | wsrep_ready                | ON                                   |
    +----------------------------+--------------------------------------+
    40 rows in set (0.01 sec)
    

Testing replication

To test replication, lets create a new database on second node, create a table for that database on the third node, and add some records to the table on the first node.

  1. Create a new database on the second node:

    mysql@percona2> CREATE DATABASE percona;
    

    The following output confirms that a new database has been created:

    Expected output
    Query OK, 1 row affected (0.01 sec)
    
  2. Switch to a newly created database:

    mysql@percona3> USE percona;
    

    The following output confirms that a database has been changed:

    Expected output
    Database changed
    
  3. Create a table on the third node:

    mysql@percona3> CREATE TABLE example (node_id INT PRIMARY KEY, node_name VARCHAR(30));
    

    The following output confirms that a table has been created:

    Expected output
    Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.05 sec)
    
  4. Insert records on the first node:

    mysql@percona1> INSERT INTO percona.example VALUES (1, 'percona1');
    

    The following output confirms that the records have been inserted:

    Expected output
    Query OK, 1 row affected (0.02 sec)
    
  5. Retrieve all the rows from that table on the second node:

    mysql@percona2> SELECT * FROM percona.example;
    

    The following output confirms that all the rows have been retrieved:

    Expected output
    +---------+-----------+
    | node_id | node_name |
    +---------+-----------+
    |       1 | percona1  |
    +---------+-----------+
    1 row in set (0.00 sec)
    

    This simple procedure should ensure that all nodes in the cluster are synchronized and working as intended.

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Last update: 2024-01-18