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			The mysqlmon simple failover mode allows it to direct write traffic to a secondary node. This enables a very simple failover mode with MaxScale when it is used in a two node master-slave setup.
		
			
				
	
	
		
			196 lines
		
	
	
		
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			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			196 lines
		
	
	
		
			7.4 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
| # MySQL Monitor
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| 
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| ## Overview
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| 
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| The MySQL Monitor is a monitoring module for MaxScale that monitors a Master-Slave replication cluster. It assigns master and slave roles inside MaxScale according to the actual replication tree in the cluster.
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| 
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| ## Configuration
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| 
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| A minimal configuration for a  monitor requires a set of servers for monitoring and a username and a password to connect to these servers.
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| 
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| ```
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| [MySQL Monitor]
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| type=monitor
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| module=mysqlmon
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| servers=server1,server2,server3
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| user=myuser
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| passwd=mypwd
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| 
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| ```
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| 
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| The user requires the REPLICATION CLIENT privilege to successfully monitor the state of the servers.
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| 
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| ```
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| MariaDB [(none)]> grant replication client on *.* to 'maxscale'@'maxscalehost';
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| Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
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| ```
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| 
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| ## Common Monitor Parameters
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| 
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| For a list of optional parameters that all monitors support, read the [Monitor Common](Monitor-Common.md) document.
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| 
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| ## MySQL Monitor optional parameters
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| 
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| These are optional parameters specific to the MySQL Monitor.
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| 
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| ### `detect_replication_lag`
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| 
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| A truth value which controls if replication lag between the master and the
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| slaves is monitored. This allows the routers to route read queries to only
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| slaves that are up to date. Default value for this parameter is false.
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| 
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| To detect the replication lag, MaxScale uses the _maxscale_schema.replication_heartbeat_
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| table. This table is created on the master server and it is updated at every heartbeat
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| with the current timestamp. The updates are then replicated to the slave servers
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| and when the replicated timestamp is read from the slave servers, the lag between
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| the slave and the master can be calculated.
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| 
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| The monitor user requires INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE and SELECT permissions on the
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| maxscale_schema.replication_heartbeat table and CREATE permissions on the
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| maxscale_schema database. The monitor user will always try to create the database
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| and the table if they do not exist.
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| 
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| ### `detect_stale_master`
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| 
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| Allow previous master to be available even in case of stopped or misconfigured
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| replication.
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| 
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| Starting from MaxScale 2.0.0 this feature is enabled by default. It is disabled
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| by default in MaxScale 1.4.3 and below.
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| 
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| This allows services that depend on master and slave roles to continue
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| functioning as long as the master server is available. This is a situation
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| which can happen if all slave servers are unreachable or the replication
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| breaks for some reason.
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| 
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| ```
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| detect_stale_master=true
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| ```
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| 
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| ### `detect_stale_slave`
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| 
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| Treat running slaves servers without a master server as valid slave servers.
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| 
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| This feature is enabled by default.
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| 
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| If a slave server loses its master server, the replication is considered broken.
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| With this parameter, slaves that have lost their master but have been slaves of
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| a master server can retain their slave status even without a master. This means
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| that when a slave loses its master, it can still be used for reads.
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| 
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| If this feature is disabled, a server is considered a valid slave if and only if
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| it has a running master server monitored by this monitor.
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| 
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| ```
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| detect_stale_slave=true
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| ```
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| 
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| ### `mysql51_replication`
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| 
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| Enable support for MySQL 5.1 replication monitoring. This is needed if a MySQL server older than 5.5 is used as a slave in replication.
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| 
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| ```
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| mysql51_replication=true
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| ```
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| 
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| ### `multimaster`
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| 
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| Detect multi-master replication topologies. This feature is disabled by default.
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| 
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| When enabled, the multi-master detection looks for the root master servers in
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| the replication clusters. These masters can be found by detecting cycles in the
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| graph created by the servers. When a cycle is detected, it is assigned a master
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| group ID. Every master in a master group will receive the Master status. The
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| special group ID 0 is assigned to all servers which are not a part of a
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| multi-master replication cycle.
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| 
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| If one or more masters in a group has the `@@read_only` system variable set to
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| `ON`, those servers will receive the Slave status even though they are in the
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| multi-master group. Slave servers with `@@read_only` disabled will never receive
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| the master status.
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| 
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| By setting the servers into read-only mode, the user can control which
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| server receive the master status. To do this:
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| 
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| - Enable `@@read_only` on all servers (preferrably through the configuration file)
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| - Manually disable `@@read_only` on the server which should be the master
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| 
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| This functionality is similar to the [Multi-Master Monitor](MM-Monitor.md)
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| functionality. The only difference is that the MySQL monitor will also detect
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| traditional Master-Slave topologies.
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| 
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| ### `failover`
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| 
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| Failover mode. This feature takes a boolean parameter is disabled by default.
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| 
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| This parameter is intended to be used with simple, two node master-slave pairs
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| where the failure of the master can be resolved by "promoting" the slave as the
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| new master. Normally this is done by using an external agent of some sort
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| (possibly triggered by MaxScale's monitor scripts), like
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| [MariaDB Replication Manager](https://github.com/tanji/replication-manager)
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| or [MHA](https://code.google.com/p/mysql-master-ha/).
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| 
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| The failover mode in mysqlmon is completely passive in the sense that it does
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| not modify the cluster or any servers in it. It labels a slave server as a
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| master server when there is only one running server. Before a failover can be
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| initiated, the following conditions must have been met:
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| 
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| - The monitor has repeatedly failed to connect to the failed servers
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| - There is only one running server among the monitored servers
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| - @@read_only is not enabled on the last running server
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| 
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| When these conditions are met, the monitor assigns the last remaining server the
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| master status and puts all other servers into maintenance mode. This is done to
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| prevent accidental use of the failed servers if they came back online.
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| 
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| When the failed servers come back up, the maintenance mode needs to be manually
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| cleared once replication has been set up.
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| 
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| **Note**: A failover will cause permanent changes in the data of the promoted
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|   server. Only use this feature if you know that the slave servers are capable
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|   of acting as master servers.
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| 
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| ### `failcount`
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| 
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| Number of failures that must occur on all failed servers before a failover is
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| initiated. The default value is 5 failures.
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| 
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| The monitor will attemt to contact all servers once per monitoring cycle. When
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| _failover_ mode is enabled, all of the failed servers must fail _failcount_
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| number of connection attemps before a failover is initiated.
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| 
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| The formula for calculating the actual number of milliseconds before failover
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| can start is `monitor_interval * failcount`. This means that to trigger a
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| failover after 10 seconds of master failure with a _monitor_interval_ of 1000
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| milliseconds, the value of _failcount_ must be 10.
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| 
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| ## Example 1 - Monitor script
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| 
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| Here is an example shell script which sends an email to an admin when a server goes down.
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| 
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| ```
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| #!/usr/bin/env bash
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| 
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| #This script assumes that the local mail server is configured properly
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| #The second argument is the event type
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| event=${$2/.*=/}
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| server=${$3/.*=/}
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| message="A server has gone down at `date`."
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| echo $message|mail -s "The event was $event for server $server." admin@my.org
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| 
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| ```
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| 
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| Here is a monitor configuration that only triggers the script when a master or a slave server goes down.
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| 
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| ```
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| [Database Monitor]
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| type=monitor
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| module=mysqlmon
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| servers=server1,server2
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| script=mail_to_admin.sh
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| events=master_down,slave_down
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| ```
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| 
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| When a master or a slave server goes down, the script is executed, a mail is sent and the administrator will be immediately notified of any possible problems.
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| This is just a simple example showing what you can do with MaxScale and monitor scripts.
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