Skip to main content
Version: 3.1

Failover an application in Rancher within an asynchronous DR setup

In the event of a disaster, when one of your Kubernetes clusters becomes inaccessible, you have the option to failover the applications running on it to an operational Kubernetes cluster.

The following considerations are used in the examples on this page. Update them to the appropriate values for your environment:

  • Source Cluster is the Kubernetes cluster which is down and where your applications were originally running.
  • Destination Cluster is the Kubernetes cluster where the applications will be failed over.
  • The Zookeeper application is being failed over to the destination cluster.

Follow the instructions on this page to perform a failover of your applications to the destination cluster. These instructions apply to both scenarios, whether it is a controlled failover or a disaster recovery.

Prerequisite

You must ensure that Stork version 24.2.0 or newer is installed on both the source and destination clusters.

note

If you are using a Stork version prior to 24.2.0, then you can follow this procedure to perform a failover.

Perform failover

In the event of a disaster, you can migrate an application or workload from the source cluster to destination cluster by running the storkctl perform failover command.

You can include or exclude a subset of namespaces for migration by using one of the following flags:

  • --include-namespaces - Use this flag to include a subset of namespaces for the migration.
  • --exclude-namespaces - Use this flag to exclude a subset of namespaces for the migration.

The --include-namespaces and --exclude-namespaces flags are mutually exclusive.

Are your clusters paired in a unidirectional manner? (Click to expand for more details)
If yes, you must use the --skip-source-operations flag to skip the source cluster operations.

To start the failover operation, run the following command in the destination cluster:

storkctl perform failover -m <migration-schedule> -n <migration-schedule-namespace>

Example:

$ storkctl perform failover -m migration-schedule -n zookeeper
Started failover for MigrationSchedule zookeeper/migration-schedule
To check failover status use the command : `storkctl get failover failover-migration-schedule-2024-05-20-140139 -n zookeeper`

Check failover status

Run the following command to check the status of the failover operation. You can refer to the above section to get the value of failover-action-name.

storkctl get failover <failover-action-name> -n <migration-schedule-namespace>

Example:

$ storkctl get failover failover-migration-schedule-2024-05-20-140139 -n zookeeper
NAME                                    CREATED               STAGE       STATUS       MORE INFO
failover-migration-schedule-2024-05-20-140139 20 May 24 14:02 UTC Completed Successful Scaled up Apps in : 1/1 namespaces

If the status is failed, you can use the kubectl describe actions <failover-action-name> -n <migration-schedule-namespace> command to get more information about the failure.

Verify volumes and Kubernetes resources

To verify the volumes and Kubernetes resources that are migrated to the destination cluster, run the following command:

kubectl get all -n <migration-schedule-namespace>

Example:

$ kubectl get all -n zookeeper
```output
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
pod/zk-544ffcc474-6gx64 1/1 Running 0 18h

NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
service/zk-service ClusterIP 10.233.22.60 <none> 3306/TCP 18h

NAME READY UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE
deployment.apps/zk 1/1 1 1 18h

NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY AGE
replicaset.apps/zk-544ffcc474 1 1 1 18h
Was this page helpful?