6. Managing Kea with keactrl¶
6.1. Overview¶
keactrl is a shell script which controls the startup, shutdown, and
reconfiguration of the Kea servers (kea-dhcp4
, kea-dhcp6
,
kea-dhcp-ddns
, kea-ctrl-agent
, and kea-netconf
). It also
provides the means for checking the current status of the servers and
determining the configuration files in use.
6.2. Command Line Options¶
keactrl
is run as follows:
# keactrl <command> [-c keactrl-config-file] [-s server[,server,...]]
<command>
is one of the commands described in Commands.
The optional -c keactrl-config-file
switch allows specification of
an alternate keactrl
configuration file. (--ctrl-config
is a
synonym for -c
.) In the absence of -c
, keactrl
will use the
default configuration file [kea-install-dir]/etc/kea/keactrl.conf
.
The optional -s server[,server,...]
switch selects the servers to
which the command is issued. (--server
is a synonym for -s
.) If
absent, the command is sent to all servers enabled in the keactrl
configuration file. If multiple servers are specified, they should be
separated by commas with no intervening spaces.
6.3. The keactrl Configuration File¶
Depending on requirements, not all of the available servers need to be
run. The keactrl configuration file sets which servers are enabled and
which are disabled. The default configuration file is
[kea-install-dir]/etc/kea/keactrl.conf
, but this can be overridden
on a per-command basis using the -c
switch.
The contents of keactrl.conf
are:
# This is a configuration file for keactrl script which controls
# the startup, shutdown, reconfiguration and gathering the status
# of the Kea's processes.
# prefix holds the location where the Kea is installed.
prefix=@prefix@
# Location of Kea configuration file.
kea_dhcp4_config_file=@sysconfdir@/@PACKAGE@/kea-dhcp4.conf
kea_dhcp6_config_file=@sysconfdir@/@PACKAGE@/kea-dhcp6.conf
kea_dhcp_ddns_config_file=@sysconfdir@/@PACKAGE@/kea-dhcp-ddns.conf
kea_ctrl_agent_config_file=@sysconfdir@/@PACKAGE@/kea-ctrl-agent.conf
kea_netconf_config_file=@sysconfdir@/@PACKAGE@/kea-netconf.conf
# Location of Kea binaries.
exec_prefix=@exec_prefix@
dhcp4_srv=@sbindir@/kea-dhcp4
dhcp6_srv=@sbindir@/kea-dhcp6
dhcp_ddns_srv=@sbindir@/kea-dhcp-ddns
ctrl_agent_srv=@sbindir@/kea-ctrl-agent
netconf_srv=@sbindir@/kea-netconf
# Start DHCPv4 server?
dhcp4=yes
# Start DHCPv6 server?
dhcp6=yes
# Start DHCP DDNS server?
dhcp_ddns=no
# Start Control Agent?
ctrl_agent=yes
# Start Netconf?
netconf=no
# Be verbose?
kea_verbose=no
Note
In the example above, strings of the form @something@ are replaced by the appropriate values when Kea is installed.
The dhcp4
, dhcp6
, dhcp_ddns
, ctrl_agent
, and netconf
parameters set to “yes” will configure keactrl
to manage (start,
reconfigure) all servers, i.e. kea-dhcp4
, kea-dhcp6
,
kea-dhcp-ddns
, kea-ctrl-agent
, and kea-netconf
. When any of
these parameters is set to “no”, the keactrl
will ignore the
corresponding server when starting or reconfiguring Kea. Some daemons
(ddns and netconf) are disabled by default.
By default, Kea servers managed by keactrl
are located in
[kea-install-dir]/sbin
. This should work for most installations. If
the default location needs to be altered for any reason, the paths
specified with the dhcp4_srv
, dhcp6_srv
, dhcp_ddns_srv
,
ctrl_agent_srv
, and netconf_srv
parameters should be modified.
The kea_verbose
parameter specifies the verbosity of the servers
being started. When kea_verbose
is set to “yes” the logging level of
the server is set to DEBUG. Modification of the logging severity in a
configuration file, as described in Logging, will have no
effect as long as the kea_verbose
is set to “yes.” Setting it to
“no” will cause the server to use the logging levels specified in the
Kea configuration file. If no logging configuration is specified, the
default settings will be used.
Note
The verbosity for the server is set when it is started. Once started, the verbosity can be only changed by stopping the server and starting it again with the new value of the
kea_verbose
parameter.
6.4. Commands¶
The following commands are supported by keactrl
:
start
- starts selected servers.stop
- stops all running servers.reload
- triggers reconfiguration of the selected servers by sending the SIGHUP signal to them.status
- returns the status of the servers (active or inactive) and the names of the configuration files in use.version
- prints out the version of the keactrl tool itself, together with the versions of the Kea daemons.
Typical output from keactrl
when starting the servers looks similar
to the following:
$ keactrl start
INFO/keactrl: Starting kea-dhcp4 -c /usr/local/etc/kea/kea-dhcp4.conf -d
INFO/keactrl: Starting kea-dhcp6 -c /usr/local/etc/kea/kea-dhcp6.conf -d
INFO/keactrl: Starting kea-dhcp-ddns -c /usr/local/etc/kea/kea-dhcp-ddns.conf -d
INFO/keactrl: Starting kea-ctrl-agent -c /usr/local/etc/kea/kea-ctrl-agent.conf -d
INFO/keactrl: Starting kea-netconf -c /usr/local/etc/kea/kea-netconf.conf -d
Kea’s servers create PID files upon startup. These files are used by keactrl to determine whether a given server is running. If one or more servers are running when the start command is issued, the output will look similar to the following:
$ keactrl start
INFO/keactrl: kea-dhcp4 appears to be running, see: PID 10918, PID file: /usr/local/var/run/kea/kea.kea-dhcp4.pid.
INFO/keactrl: kea-dhcp6 appears to be running, see: PID 10924, PID file: /usr/local/var/run/kea/kea.kea-dhcp6.pid.
INFO/keactrl: kea-dhcp-ddns appears to be running, see: PID 10930, PID file: /usr/local/var/run/kea/kea.kea-dhcp-ddns.pid.
INFO/keactrl: kea-ctrl-agent appears to be running, see: PID 10931, PID file: /usr/local/var/run/kea/kea.kea-ctrl-agent.pid.
INFO/keactrl: kea-netconf appears to be running, see: PID 10123, PID file: /usr/local/var/run/kea/kea.kea-netconf.pid.
During normal shutdowns these PID files are deleted. They may, however, be left over as remnants following a system crash. It is possible, though highly unlikely, that upon system restart the PIDs they contain may actually refer to processes unrelated to Kea. This condition will cause keactrl to decide that the servers are running, when in fact they are not. In such a case the PID files listed in the keactrl output must be manually deleted.
The following command stops all servers:
$ keactrl stop
INFO/keactrl: Stopping kea-dhcp4...
INFO/keactrl: Stopping kea-dhcp6...
INFO/keactrl: Stopping kea-dhcp-ddns...
INFO/keactrl: Stopping kea-ctrl-agent...
INFO/keactrl: Stopping kea-netconf...
Note that the stop
command will attempt to stop all servers
regardless of whether they are “enabled” in keactrl.conf
. If any
of the servers are not running, an informational message is displayed as
in the stop
command output below.
$ keactrl stop
INFO/keactrl: kea-dhcp4 isn't running.
INFO/keactrl: kea-dhcp6 isn't running.
INFO/keactrl: kea-dhcp-ddns isn't running.
INFO/keactrl: kea-ctrl-agent isn't running.
INFO/keactrl: kea-netconf isn't running.
As already mentioned, the reconfiguration of each Kea server is
triggered by the SIGHUP signal. The reload
command sends the SIGHUP
signal to any servers that are enabled in the keactrl
configuration
file and that are currently running. When a server receives the SIGHUP signal
it re-reads its configuration file and, if the new configuration is
valid, uses the new configuration. A reload is executed as follows:
$ keactrl reload
INFO/keactrl: Reloading kea-dhcp4...
INFO/keactrl: Reloading kea-dhcp6...
INFO/keactrl: Reloading kea-dhcp-ddns...
INFO/keactrl: Reloading kea-ctrl-agent...
If any of the servers are not running, an informational message is
displayed as in the reload
command output below. Note that as of
version 1.5.0, kea-netconf does not support the SIGHUP signal. If its
configuration has changed, please stop and restart it for the change to
take effect. This limitation will be removed in a future release.
$ keactrl stop
INFO/keactrl: kea-dhcp4 isn't running.
INFO/keactrl: kea-dhcp6 isn't running.
INFO/keactrl: kea-dhcp-ddns isn't running.
INFO/keactrl: kea-ctrl-agent isn't running.
INFO/keactrl: kea-netconf isn't running.
Note
NETCONF is an optional feature that is disabled by default and can be enabled during compilation. If Kea was compiled without NETCONF support, keactrl will do its best to not bother the user with information about it. The NETCONF entries will still be present in the keactrl.conf file, but NETCONF status will not be shown and other commands will ignore it.
Note
Currently keactrl
does not report configuration failures when the
server is started or reconfigured. To check if the server’s
configuration succeeded, the Kea log must be examined for errors. By
default, this is written to the syslog file.
Sometimes it is useful to check which servers are running. The
status
command reports this, with typical output that looks like:
$ keactrl status
DHCPv4 server: active
DHCPv6 server: inactive
DHCP DDNS: active
Control Agent: active
Netconf agent: inactive
Kea configuration file: /usr/local/etc/kea/kea.conf
Kea DHCPv4 configuration file: /usr/local/etc/kea/kea-dhcp4.conf
Kea DHCPv6 configuration file: /usr/local/etc/kea/kea-dhcp6.conf
Kea DHCP DDNS configuration file: /usr/local/etc/kea/kea-dhcp-ddns.conf
Kea Control Agent configuration file: /usr/local/etc/kea/kea-ctrl-agent.conf
Kea Netconf configuration file: /usr/local/etc/kea/kea-netconf.conf
keactrl configuration file: /usr/local/etc/kea/keactrl.conf
6.5. Overriding the Server Selection¶
The optional -s
switch allows the selection of the server(s) to which
the keactrl
command is issued. For example, the following instructs
keactrl
to stop the kea-dhcp4
and kea-dhcp6
servers and
leave the kea-dhcp-ddns
and kea-ctrl-agent
running:
$ keactrl stop -s dhcp4,dhcp6
Similarly, the following will start only the kea-dhcp4
and
kea-dhcp-ddns
servers, but not kea-dhcp6
or kea-ctrl-agent
.
$ keactrl start -s dhcp4,dhcp_ddns
Note that the behavior of the -s
switch with the start
and
reload
commands is different from its behavior with the stop
command. On start
and reload
, keactrl
will check if the
servers given as parameters to the -s
switch are enabled in the
keactrl
configuration file; if not, the server will be ignored. For
stop
, however, this check is not made; the command is applied to all
listed servers, regardless of whether they have been enabled in the
file.
The following keywords can be used with the -s
command line option:
dhcp4
forkea-dhcp4
.dhcp6
forkea-dhcp6
.dhcp_ddns
forkea-dhcp-ddns
.ctrl_agent
forkea-ctrl-agent
.netconf
forkea-netconf
.all
for all servers (default).