rabbitmq-upgrade
—
RabbitMQ installation upgrade tools
rabbitmq-upgrade |
[-q ] [-s ]
[-l ] [-n
node] [-t
timeout] command
[command_options] |
rabbitmq-upgrade
is a command line tool that provides
commands used during the upgrade of RabbitMQ nodes. See the
RabbitMQ upgrade
guide to learn more about RabbitMQ installation upgrades.
-n
node
- Default node is
“rabbit@target-hostname”, where
target-hostname is the local host. On a host named
“myserver.example.com”, the node name will usually be
“rabbit@myserver” (unless
RABBITMQ_NODENAME
has been overridden). The output
of “hostname -s” is usually the correct suffix to use after
the “@” sign. See
rabbitmq-server(8)
for details of configuring a RabbitMQ node.
-q
,
--quiet
- Quiet output mode is selected. Informational messages are reduced when
quiet mode is in effect.
-s
,
--silent
- Silent output mode is selected. Informational messages are reduced and
table headers are suppressed when silent mode is in effect.
-t
timeout, --timeout
timeout
- Operation timeout in seconds. Not all commands support timeouts. Default
is
infinity
.
-l
,
--longnames
- Must be specified when the cluster is configured to use long (FQDN) node
names. To learn more, see the
RabbitMQ
Clustering guide
--erlang-cookie
cookie
- Shared secret to use to authenticate to the target node. Prefer using a
local file or the
RABBITMQ_ERLANG_COOKIE
environment variable instead of specifying this option on the command
line. To learn more, see the
RabbitMQ CLI Tools
guide
help
-
Displays general help and commands supported by
rabbitmq-upgrade
.
post_upgrade
-
Runs post-upgrade tasks. In the current version, it performs
the rebalance of mirrored and quorum queues across all nodes in the
cluster.
await_online_quorum_plus_one
-
Waits for all quorum queues to have an above minimum online
quorum. This makes sure that no queues would lose their quorum if the
target node is shut down.
drain
-
Puts the node in maintenance mode. Such nodes will not serve
any client traffic or considered for hosting any queue leader
replicas.
To learn more, see the
RabbitMQ
Upgrade guide
revive
-
Puts the node out of maintenance and into regular operating
mode. Such nodes will again serve client traffic and considered for
queue leader replica placement.
To learn more, see the
RabbitMQ
Upgrade guide