Bidirectional Rsync/Unison based SysVol replication workaround: Difference between revisions

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On DC1 run the following:
On DC1 run the following:
crontab -e
crontab -e
*/5 * * * * root /usr/bin/rsync -XAavz --log-file /var/log/sysvol-sync.log --delete-after -f"+ */" -f"- *" /var/lib/samba/sysvol root@DC2:/var/lib/samba && /usr/bin/unison &> /dev/null
*/5 * * * * /usr/bin/rsync -XAavzq --log-file /var/log/sysvol-sync.log --delete-after -f"+ */" -f"- *" /var/lib/samba/sysvol root@DC2:/var/lib/samba && /usr/bin/unison -silent


:'''Warning: Make sure that the destination folder is really your SysVol folder, because the command will replicate to the given directory and sync everything in it that isn't also on the source! You could damage your system! So check the output carefully if the replication is doing, what you expect!'''
:'''Warning: Make sure that the destination folder is really your SysVol folder, because the command will replicate to the given directory and sync everything in it that isn't also on the source! You could damage your system! So check the output carefully if the replication is doing, what you expect!'''

Revision as of 16:55, 8 November 2019

Introduction

Samba AD currently doesn't provide support for SysVol replication. To achive this important feature in a Multi-DC environment, until it's implemented, workarounds are necessary to keep it in sync. This HowTo provides a basic workaround solution based on rsync and unison.

Information on unison + rsync replication

This HowTo describes a solution for SysVol replication, that is based on rsync and unison. As Compare to the rsync method, it is bidirectional. But this howto only cover two DC setup.

It have the following advantages:

  • setup is fast done
  • configuration is very easy
  • Can work with windows (Please add in)

We will use rsync through a SSH tunnel.

Setup the SysVol replication

Some assumptions:

You are running all commands as root.
rsync is located  /usr/bin/rsync
sysvol is located /var/lib/samba/sysvol on both DC1 and DC2
unison is located /usr/bin/unison
DC1 is at DC1
DC2 is at DC2
sysvolsync log is located /var/log/sysvol-sync.log

Change the path if that don't fit your setup.

Setup on the Domain Controller with the PDC Emulator FSMO role

  • Install rsync by using your package manager or compile from source. Make sure, that you use a version that supports extended ACLs!
  • We don't need to setup rsync server.
  • Install unison by using your package manager or compile from source. (Gentoo need to do eselect unison to create the link)

Creating SSH Public Key and ssh-copy to DC2

ssh-keygen -t rsa
ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub root@DC2

You can try to access DC2 via ssh

ssh DC2

Setup ssh Control

If the remote system enforces rate limits on incoming ssh connections, unison wil fail if you try to run it this way. So we create the first ssh connection as a controlpath file in the location specified, all subsequent connections will reuse on the first connection.

mkdir ~/.ssh/ctl
cat << EOF > ~/.ssh/ctl/config
Host *
ControlMaster auto
ControlPath ~/.ssh/ctl/%h_%p_%r
ControlPersist 1
EOF

Setup Sysvolsync Log files

Do the following on DC1 so that we can check what happen on the sync. Please include this files into to log rotate as we didn't control the log size here.

touch /var/log/sysvol-sync.log
chmod 640 /var/log/sysvol-sync.log

Setup Unison defaults running parameters

Please run the following on DC1

install -o root -g root -m 0750 -d /root/.unison
cat << EOF > /root/.unison/default.prf
# Unison preferences file
# Roots of the synchronization
#
# copymax & maxthreads params were set to 1 for easier troubleshooting.
# Have to experiment to see if they can be increased again.
root = /var/lib/samba
# Note that 2 x / behind DC2, it is required
root = ssh://root@DC2//var/lib/samba 
# 
# Paths to synchronize
path = sysvol
#
#ignore = Path stats    ## ignores /var/www/stats
auto=true
batch=true
perms=0
rsync=true
maxthreads=1
retry=3
confirmbigdeletes=false
servercmd=/usr/bin/unison
copythreshold=0
copyprog = /usr/bin/rsync -XAavz --rsh='ssh -p 22' --inplace --compress
copyprogrest = /usr/bin/rsync -XAavz --rsh='ssh -p 22' --partial --inplace --compress
copyquoterem = true
copymax = 1
logfile = /var/log/sysvol-sync.log
EOF

Setup SysVol on DC2

  • On DC2 Install rsync by using your package manager or compile from source. Make sure, that you use a version that supports extended ACLs!
  • On DC2 Install unison by using your package manager or compile from source. (Gentoo need to do eselect unison to create the link)
  • Run the following command on DC1
ssh DC2 "cp -R --preserve=all /var/lib/samba/sysvol /var/lib/samba/"

1st Trial

What happen is we use rsync to create the directory structure with extended attributes Than unison setup copies only the extened attributes on files.


Please make a backup on you sysvol just in case as we are really TRYING there are no dry-run

/usr/bin/rsync -XAavz --log-file /var/log/sysvol-sync.log --delete-after -f"+ */" -f"- *"  /var/lib/samba/sysvol root@DC2:/var/lib/samba  &&  /usr/bin/unison
Note: The path on DC2 are just /var/lib/samba which is different from DC1, it is by design, there is nothing wrong!

Add to Crontab on DC1

On DC1 run the following:

crontab -e 
*/5 * * * * /usr/bin/rsync -XAavzq --log-file /var/log/sysvol-sync.log --delete-after -f"+ */" -f"- *"  /var/lib/samba/sysvol root@DC2:/var/lib/samba  && /usr/bin/unison -silent
Warning: Make sure that the destination folder is really your SysVol folder, because the command will replicate to the given directory and sync everything in it that isn't also on the source! You could damage your system! So check the output carefully if the replication is doing, what you expect!

When you try to resync the folder

Warning: Please follow the steps below OR you can end up with an empty sysvol folder.
  1. Disable Cron on DC1, like Add a "#" on the line with crontab -e
  2. Check is any rsync or unison are currently running in ps -aux if yes, wait for it to finished OR kill it (if it is zombie)
  3. Remove the hash files on both DC1 and DC2 on /root/.unison
  4. Now check your sysvol and resync
  5. Confirm that everything is ok again
  6. Re-enable the Cron on DC1 again

FAQ

  • How can I do this on windows?
    • I don't have an answer, please post on the mailing list


  • What to do if I've more than one DC?
    • In Theory, We would just make more cron jobs on DC1 and the complete sync will be perform next sync to all server.


  • Why can't I simply use a distributed filesystem like GlusterFS, Lustre, etc. for SysVol?
    • A cluster file system with Samba requires CTDB to be able to do it safely. And CTDB and AD DC are incompatible.