FAQ: Automation
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- What versions of MongoDB does Ops Manager manage?
- What are the upgrade paths for Ops Manager versions 1.8.x and 2.0.x?
- How does Ops Manager manage MongoDB deployments?
- How does Ops Manager perform maintenance on cluster nodes?
- How many Automations do I need?
- Is any MongoDB data transferred by the agent?
- Will Ops Manager handle failures during an upgrade?
- What types of deployment can I create in Ops Manager?
This addresses common questions about Ops Manager and its Automation features.
Ops Manager can automate management operations for your monitored MongoDB processes, allowing you to reconfigure, stop, and restart MongoDB through the Ops Manager interface.
Ops Manager Automation can run only on 64-bit architectures.
What versions of MongoDB does Ops Manager manage?
For specific Ops Manager functions and supported MongoDB versions, see MongoDB Compatibility Matrix.
What are the upgrade paths for Ops Manager versions 1.8.x and 2.0.x?
For upgrade paths, see Upgrade Ops Manager.
How does Ops Manager manage MongoDB deployments?
After you deploy the agent in the environment of the MongoDB deployment, each agent periodically communicates with Ops Manager and performs any required work.
Agents constantly reassess their environment to adapt their work as necessary. As part of this routine activity, the agent establishes frequent short-lived connections to the cluster members. If an agent encounters an issue, such as network connectivity problems or Ops Manager failure, the agents adjust their work to compensate and safely arrive at their goal state.
Agents create plans to move from their current state to a goal state. Plans execute in steps, where each step is autonomous and independent of other steps.
Example
For an installation, the plan involves downloading MongoDB, starting the process with the appropriate command line options, initializing the replica set, waiting for a healthy majority. The configuration reaches goal state when the replica set is active and has a healthy majority.
How does Ops Manager perform maintenance on cluster nodes?
Ops Manager performs a rolling restart when you perform maintenance on nodes in a cluster. The agent updates nodes in a cluster one-by-one, always maintaining a primary node, until all nodes are updated to maintain cluster availability during a maintenance period.
For each secondary node in the cluster, the agent:
Restarts the
mongod
process running on the node instandalone
mode.Performs the maintenance task.
Restarts the
mongod
process running on the node inreplSet
mode.
After the secondary nodes are updated, the agent:
Steps the primary down using the rs.stepDown() command.
Triggers an election for a new primary node.
Performs the maintenance task on the former primary node.
Restarts the
mongod
process running on the former primary node inreplSet
mode to join the cluster as a secondary node.
In Ops Manager, the agent performs rolling restarts on cluster nodes for maintenance tasks, including the following:
Rotating KMIP keys.
Rotating keyfiles.
Changing
mongod
configuration arguments.Upgrading or downgrading TLS,
auth
, orclusterAuth
mode.Changing the MongoDB version.
Changing the oplog size.
Removing a process from a replica set.
Cancelling a restore from backup.
Enabling the Profiler
How many Automations do I need?
To use Automation, you must have an agent running on every host where a managed MongoDB instance runs.
Is any MongoDB data transferred by the agent?
Agents do not transmit any data records from a MongoDB deployment. The agents only communicate deployment configuration information and MongoDB logs.
Will Ops Manager handle failures during an upgrade?
Generally speaking, yes. The design of the management and automation components of Ops Manager do not account for all possible failures; however the architecture of the system can work around many types of failures.
What types of deployment can I create in Ops Manager?
Using Ops Manager, you can configure all MongoDB deployment types: sharded clusters, replica sets, and standalones.
The shards in a sharded cluster must be replica sets. That is, a shard cannot be a standalone mongod. If you must run a shard as a single mongod (which provides no redundancy or failover), run the shard as a single-member replica set.
Note
You may not upgrade a sharded MongoDB deployment to version 3.4 if the deployment uses mirrored mongod instances as config servers. To allow the sharded deployment to be upgraded, see Convert Config Servers to a Replica Set. The conversion requires that the sharded deployment run MongoDB version 3.2.4 or later. Deployments running previous versions must upgrade to version 3.2.4 before an upgrade to version 3.4.