Getting Help
A good first step is always to check out the FAQ and documentation. Otherwise, many members of the community hang out on IRC and are happy to answer questions. We are spread out over many timezones though (and have day jobs), so you may need to be patient when waiting for a reply.
Extended or complex issues might be better sent to the relevant mailing list (you'll need to subscribe in order to send messages).
People new to the project, or Open Source generally, are encouraged to read Getting Answers by Mike Ash from Rogue Amoeba. It provides some very good tips on effective communication with groups such as this one. Following the advice it contains will greatly increase the chance of a quick and helpful reply.
Bugs and other problems can also be reported via Bugzilla.
Or if you already know the solution, submit a patch against our GitHub repository.
The development of most of the ClusterLabs-related projects take place as part of the ClusterLabs organization at Github, and the source code and issue trackers for these projects can be found there.
Providing Help
If you find this project useful, you may want to consider supporting its future development. There are a number of ways to support the project (in no particular order):
- Spread the word
- Help others on the mailing list
- Contribute patches
- Contribute documentation and examples or update the wiki
- Use it on Red Hat Enterprise Linux or SUSE Linux Enterprise Server. Red Hat and SuSE fund the majority of our work, using it on their products helps ensure they continue to see it as a priority.
Thank you for using Pacemaker
Professional Support
- SUSE supports Pacemaker and DRBD as part of their High Availability Extension
- Red Hat supports ClusterLabs software as part of the RHEL High Availability Add-on
- Michael Schwartzkopff (author of the book "Clusterbau: Hochverfuegbarkeit mit Pacemaker, OpenAIS, Heartbeat und LVS]") offers consulting and support for Linux clusters (HA, LVS, DRBD, etc.), as well as training through Heinlein Support.
- LINBIT provides global support for DRBD, Linux-HA, Pacemaker and other HA-software suites. Philipp Reisner and Lars Ellenberg, the authors of DRBD, oversee LINBIT's Professional Services. In addition, they offer training services, certification, consultancy, and turnkey solutions around DRBD and Pacemaker
- Alteeve is a software and systems design company specializing in server uptime and operational continuity. Their Anvil! product offers an all-in-one supported clustering solution using ClusterLabs software.
- B1 Systems provides support (troubleshooting, maintenance, debugging, ...), consulting and training for Linux clusters, load balancing, storage clusters, virtual system cluster and high availability. This includes Pacemaker, Heartbeat and LVS as well as various cluster filesystems (OCFS2, GPFS, GFS, ...)
- Gurulabs offers training on many topics, including Linux high availability (HA) clustering and HA storage administration.
Does your company provide Pacemaker training or support? Let us know!