clush - execute shell commands on a cluster
clush -a | -g group | -w
nodes [OPTIONS]
clush -a | -g group | -w
nodes [OPTIONS] command
clush -a | -g group | -w
nodes [OPTIONS] --copy file | dir [ file |
dir ...] [ --dest path ]
clush -a | -g group | -w
nodes [OPTIONS] --rcopy file | dir [ file |
dir ...] [ --dest path ]
clush is a program for executing commands in parallel on a
cluster and for gathering their results. clush executes commands
interactively or can be used within shell scripts and other applications. It
is a partial front-end to the ClusterShell library that ensures a light,
unified and robust parallel command execution framework. Thus, it allows
traditional shell scripts to benefit from some of the library features.
clush currently makes use of the Ssh worker of ClusterShell, by
default, that only requires ssh(1) (OpenSSH SSH client).
clush can be started non-interactively to run a shell
command, or can be invoked as an interactive shell. To start a
clush interactive session, invoke the clush command without
providing command.
- Non-interactive
mode
- When clush is started non-interactively, the command is
executed on the specified remote hosts in parallel. If option -b or
--dshbak is specified, clush waits for command completion
and then displays gathered output results.
The -w option allows you to specify remote hosts by
using ClusterShell NodeSet syntax, including the node groups
@group special syntax and the Extended Patterns syntax to
benefits from NodeSet basic arithmetic (like
@Agroup\&@Bgroup). See EXTENDED PATTERNS in nodeset(1)
and also groups.conf(5) for more information.
Unless the option --nostdin (or -n) is
specified, clush detects when its standard input is connected to
a terminal (as determined by isatty(3)). If actually connected to
a terminal, clush listens to standard input when commands are
running, waiting for an Enter key press. Doing so will display
the status of current nodes. If standard input is not connected to a
terminal, and unless the option --nostdin is specified,
clush binds the standard input of the remote commands to its own
standard input, allowing scripting methods like:
# echo foo | clush -w node[40-42] -b cat
---------------
node[40-42]
---------------
foo
Please see some other great examples in the EXAMPLES section
below.
- Interactive
session
- If a command is not specified, and its standard input is connected
to a terminal, clush runs interactively. In this mode, clush
uses the GNU readline library to read command lines. Readline
provides commands for searching through the command history for lines
containing a specified string. For instance, type Control-R to search in
the history for the next entry matching the search string typed so far.
clush also recognizes special single-character prefixes that allows
the user to see and modify the current nodeset (the nodes where the
commands are executed).
To leave an interactive session, type quit or
Control-D.
- Local execution (
--worker=exec or -R exec )
- Instead of running provided command on remote nodes, clush can use
the dedicated exec worker to launch the command locally, for
each node. Some parameters could be used in the command line to make a
different command for each node. %h or %host will be
replaced by node name and %n or %rank by the remote rank
[0-N] (to get a literal % use %%)
- File copying mode (
--copy )
- When clush is started with the -c or --copy option,
it will attempt to copy specified files and/or directories
to the provided cluster nodes. The --dest option can be used to
specify a single path where all the file(s) should be copied to on the
target nodes. In the absence of --dest, clush will attempt
to copy each file or directory found in the command line to their same
location on the target nodes.
- Reverse file copying
mode ( --rcopy )
- When clush is started with the --rcopy option, it will
attempt to retrieve specified file and/or dir from provided
cluster nodes. If the --dest option is specified, it must be a
directory path where the files will be stored with their hostname
appended. If the destination path is not specified, it will take each
file or directory's parent directory as the local
destination.
- Selecting target
nodes:
- Output
behaviour:
- -q,
--quiet
- be quiet, print essential output only
- -v,
--verbose
- be verbose, print informative messages
- -d,
--debug
- output more messages for debugging purpose
- -G,
--groupbase
- do not display group source prefix
- -L
- disable header block and order output by nodes; if -b/-B is not specified,
clush will wait for all commands to finish and then display
aggregated output of commands with same return codes, ordered by node
name; alternatively, when used in conjunction with -b/-B (eg. -bL),
clush will enable a "life gathering" of results by line,
such as the next line is displayed as soon as possible (eg. when all nodes
have sent the line)
- -N
- disable labeling of command line
- -P,
--progress
- show progress during command execution; if writing is performed to
standard input, the live progress indicator will display the global
bandwidth of data written to the target nodes
- -b,
--dshbak
- display gathered results in a dshbak-like way (note: it will only try to
aggregate the output of commands with same return codes)
- -B
- like -b but including standard error
- -r,
--regroup
- fold nodeset using node groups
- -S,
--maxrc
- return the largest of command return codes
- --color=WHENCOLOR
- clush can use NO_COLOR, CLICOLOR and CLICOLOR_FORCE environment
variables. NO_COLOR takes precedence over CLICOLOR_FORCE which takes
precedence over CLICOLOR. When --color option is used these
environment variables are not taken into account. --color tells
whether to use ANSI colors to surround node or nodeset prefix/header with
escape sequences to display them in color on the terminal.
WHENCOLOR is never, always or auto (which use
color if standard output/error refer to a terminal). Colors are set to
[34m (blue foreground text) for stdout and [31m (red foreground text) for
stderr, and cannot be modified.
- --diff
- show diff between common outputs (find the best reference output by
focusing on largest nodeset and also smaller command return code)
- --outdir=OUTDIR
- output directory for stdout files (OPTIONAL)
- --errdir=ERRDIR
- output directory for stderr files (OPTIONAL)
- File
copying:
- -c,
--copy
- copy local file or directory to remote nodes
- --rcopy
- copy file or directory from remote nodes
- --dest=DEST_PATH
- destination file or directory on the nodes (optional: use the first source
directory path when not specified)
- -p
- preserve modification times and modes
- Connection
options:
- -f FANOUT, --fanout=FANOUT
- do not execute more than FANOUT commands at the same time, useful to limit
resource usage. In tree mode, the same fanout value is used on the
head node and on each gateway (the fanout value is propagated).
That is, if the fanout is 16, each gateway will initiate up
to 16 connections to their target nodes at the same time. Default
fanout value is defined in clush.conf(5).
- -l USER, --user=USER
- execute remote command as user
- -o OPTIONS, --options=OPTIONS
- can be used to give ssh options, eg. -o "-p 2022 -i
~/.ssh/myidrsa"; these options are added first to ssh and
override default ones
- -t CONNECT_TIMEOUT, --connect_timeout=CONNECT_TIMEOUT
- limit time to connect to a node
- -u COMMAND_TIMEOUT, --command_timeout=COMMAND_TIMEOUT
- limit time for command to run on the node
- -m MODE, --mode=MODE
- run mode; define MODEs in <confdir>/*.conf
- -R WORKER, --worker=WORKER
- worker name to use for connection (exec, ssh, rsh,
pdsh, or the name of a Python worker module), default is
ssh
- --remote=REMOTE
- whether to enable remote execution: in tree mode, 'yes' forces connections
to the leaf nodes for execution, 'no' establishes connections up to the
leaf parent nodes for execution (default is 'yes')
For a short explanation of these options, see -h,
--help.
By default, an exit status of zero indicates success of the
clush command but gives no information about the remote commands exit
status. However, when the -S option is specified, the exit status of
clush is the largest value of the remote commands return codes.
For failed remote commands whose exit status is non-zero, and
unless the combination of options -qS is specified, clush
displays messages similar to:
- # clush -w node[3-5,62] uname -r
- Run command uname -r in parallel on nodes: node3, node4, node5 and
node62
- # clush -w node[1-3] --worker=exec ping -c1 %host
- Run locally, in parallel, a ping command for nodes: node1, node2 and
node3. You may also use -R exec as the shorter and pdsh compatible
option.
- # clush -w node[3-5,62] -b uname -r
- Run command uname -r on nodes[3-5,62] and display gathered output
results (integrated dshbak-like).
- # clush -w node[3-5,62] -bL uname -r
- Line mode: run command uname -r on nodes[3-5,62] and display
gathered output results without default header block.
- # ssh node32 find /etc/yum.repos.d -type f | clush -w node[40-42] -b
xargs ls -l
- Search some files on node32 in /etc/yum.repos.d and use clush to list the
matching ones on node[40-42], and use -b to display gathered
results.
- # clush -w node[3-5,62] --diff dmidecode -s bios-version
- Run this Linux command to get BIOS version on nodes[3-5,62] and show
version differences (if any).
- # clush -a uname -r
- Run command uname -r on all cluster nodes, see
groups.conf(5) to setup all cluster nodes (all: field).
- # clush -a -x node[5,7] uname -r
- Run command uname -r on all cluster nodes except on nodes node5 and
node7.
- # clush -a --diff cat /some/file
- Run command cat /some/file on all cluster nodes and show
differences (if any), line by line, between common outputs.
- # clush -w @oss modprobe lustre
- Run command modprobe lustre on nodes from node group named
oss, see groups.conf(5) to setup node groups (map:
field).
- # clush -g oss modprobe lustre
- Same as previous example but using -g to avoid @ group
prefix.
- # clush -w @mds,@oss modprobe lustre
- You may specify several node groups by separating them with commas (please
see EXTENDED PATTERNS in nodeset(1) and also groups.conf(5)
for more information).
- # clush -w node[3-5,62] --copy /etc/motd
- Copy local file /etc/motd to remote nodes node[3-5,62].
- # clush -w node[3-5,62] --copy /etc/motd --dest /tmp/motd2
- Copy local file /etc/motd to remote nodes node[3-5,62] at path
/tmp/motd2.
- # clush -w node[3-5,62] -c /usr/share/doc/clustershell
- Recursively copy local directory /usr/share/doc/clustershell to the
same path on remote nodes node[3-5,62].
- # clush -w node[3-5,62] --rcopy /etc/motd --dest /tmp
- Copy /etc/motd from remote nodes node[3-5,62] to local /tmp
directory, each file having their remote hostname appended, eg.
/tmp/motd.node3.
- $CLUSTERSHELL_CFGDIR/clush.conf
- Global clush configuration file. If $CLUSTERSHELL_CFGDIR is not defined,
/etc/clustershell/clush.conf is used instead.
- $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/clustershell/clush.conf
- User configuration file for clush. If $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is not defined,
$HOME/.config/clustershell/clush.conf is used instead.
- $HOME/.local/etc/clustershell/clush.conf
- Local user configuration file for clush (default installation for pip
--user)
- ~/.clush.conf
- Deprecated per-user clush configuration file.
- ~/.clush_history
- File in which interactive clush command history is saved.
clubak(1), cluset(1), nodeset(1),
readline(3), clush.conf(5), groups.conf(5).
http://clustershell.readthedocs.org/
Stephane Thiell <sthiell@stanford.edu>
GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 or later
(LGPLv2.1+)