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Unix socket clients properly displayed in MONITOR and CLIENT LIST.
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1# Example sentinel.conf
2
3# port <sentinel-port>
4# The port that this sentinel instance will run on
5port 26379
6
7# sentinel monitor <master-name> <ip> <redis-port> <quorum>
8#
9# Tells Sentinel to monitor this slave, and to consider it in O_DOWN
10# (Objectively Down) state only if at least <quorum> sentinels agree.
11#
12# Note: master name should not include special characters or spaces.
13# The valid charset is A-z 0-9 and the three characters ".-_".
14sentinel monitor mymaster 127.0.0.1 6379 2
15
16# sentinel auth-pass <master-name> <password>
17#
18# Set the password to use to authenticate with the master and slaves.
19# Useful if there is a password set in the Redis instances to monitor.
20#
21# Note that the master password is also used for slaves, so it is not
22# possible to set a different password in masters and slaves instances
23# if you want to be able to monitor these instances with Sentinel.
24#
25# However you can have Redis instances without the authentication enabled
26# mixed with Redis instances requiring the authentication (as long as the
27# password set is the same for all the instances requiring the password) as
28# the AUTH command will have no effect in Redis instances with authentication
29# switched off.
30#
31# Example:
32#
33# sentinel auth-pass mymaster MySUPER--secret-0123passw0rd
34
35# sentinel down-after-milliseconds <master-name> <milliseconds>
36#
37# Number of milliseconds the master (or any attached slave or sentinel) should
38# be unreachable (as in, not acceptable reply to PING, continuously, for the
39# specified period) in order to consider it in S_DOWN state (Subjectively
40# Down).
41#
42# Default is 30 seconds.
43sentinel down-after-milliseconds mymaster 30000
44
45# sentinel can-failover <master-name> <yes|no>
46#
47# Specify if this Sentinel can start the failover for this master.
48sentinel can-failover mymaster yes
49
50# sentinel parallel-syncs <master-name> <numslaves>
51#
52# How many slaves we can reconfigure to point to the new slave simultaneously
53# during the failover. Use a low number if you use the slaves to serve query
54# to avoid that all the slaves will be unreachable at about the same
55# time while performing the synchronization with the master.
56sentinel parallel-syncs mymaster 1
57
58# sentinel failover-timeout <master-name> <milliseconds>
59#
60# Specifies the failover timeout in milliseconds. When this time has elapsed
61# without any progress in the failover process, it is considered concluded by
62# the sentinel even if not all the attached slaves were correctly configured
63# to replicate with the new master (however a "best effort" SLAVEOF command
64# is sent to all the slaves before).
65#
66# Also when 25% of this time has elapsed without any advancement, and there
67# is a leader switch (the sentinel did not started the failover but is now
68# elected as leader), the sentinel will continue the failover doing a
69# "takeover".
70#
71# Default is 15 minutes.
72sentinel failover-timeout mymaster 900000
73
74# SCRIPTS EXECTION
75#
76# sentinel notification-script and sentinel reconfig-script are used in order
77# to configure scripts that are called to notify the system administrator
78# or to reconfigure clients after a failover. The scripts are executed
79# with the following rules for error handling:
80#
81# If script exists with "1" the execution is retried later (up to a maximum
82# number of times currently set to 10).
83#
84# If script exists with "2" (or an higher value) the script execution is
85# not retried.
86#
87# If script terminates because it receives a signal the behavior is the same
88# as exit code 1.
89#
90# A script has a maximum running time of 60 seconds. After this limit is
91# reached the script is terminated with a SIGKILL and the execution retried.
92
93# NOTIFICATION SCRIPT
94#
95# sentinel notification-script <master-name> <script-path>
96#
97# Call the specified notification script for any sentienl event that is
98# generated in the WARNING level (for instance -sdown, -odown, and so forth).
99# This script should notify the system administrator via email, SMS, or any
100# other messaging system, that there is something wrong with the monitored
101# Redis systems.
102#
103# The script is called with just two arguments: the first is the event type
104# and the second the event description.
105#
106# The script must exist and be executable in order for sentinel to start if
107# this option is provided.
108#
109# Example:
110#
111# sentinel notification-script mymaster /var/redis/notify.sh
112
113# CLIENTS RECONFIGURATION SCRIPT
114#
115# sentinel client-reconfig-script <master-name> <script-path>
116#
117# When the failover starts, ends, or is aborted, a script can be called in
118# order to perform application-specific tasks to notify the clients that the
119# configuration has changed and the master is at a different address.
120#
121# The script is called in the following cases:
122#
123# Failover started (a slave is already promoted)
124# Failover finished (all the additional slaves already reconfigured)
125# Failover aborted (in that case the script was previously called when the
126# failover started, and now gets called again with swapped
127# addresses).
128#
129# The following arguments are passed to the script:
130#
131# <master-name> <role> <state> <from-ip> <from-port> <to-ip> <to-port>
132#
133# <state> is "start", "end" or "abort"
134# <role> is either "leader" or "observer"
135#
136# The arguments from-ip, from-port, to-ip, to-port are used to communicate
137# the old address of the master and the new address of the elected slave
138# (now a master) in the case state is "start" or "end".
139#
140# For abort instead the "from" is the address of the promoted slave and
141# "to" is the address of the original master address, since the failover
142# was aborted.
143#
144# This script should be resistant to multiple invocations.
145#
146# Example:
147#
148# sentinel client-reconfig-script mymaster /var/redis/reconfig.sh
149
150