STONITH explained

STONITH ("Shoot The Other Node In The Head" or "Shoot The Offending Node In The Head"), sometimes called STOMITH ("Shoot The Other Member/Machine In The Head"), is a technique for fencing in computer clusters.[1]

Fencing is the isolation of a failed node so that it does not cause disruption to a computer cluster. As its name suggests, STONITH fences failed nodes by resetting or powering down the failed node.

Multi-node error-prone contention in a cluster can have catastrophic results, such as if both nodes try writing to a shared storage resource. STONITH provides effective, if rather drastic, protection against these problems.

Single node systems use a comparable mechanism called a watchdog timer. A watchdog timer will reset the node if the node does not tell the watchdog circuit that it is operating well. A STONITH decision can be based on various decisions which can be customer specific plugins.

Google's inclusive language developer documentation[2] discourages usage of this term.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Alan Robertson Resource fencing using STONITH . IBM Linux Research Center, 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210105195318/https://mirrors.sinuspl.net/www.linux-ha.org/heartbeat/ResourceFencing_Stonith.pdf . 2021-01-05.
  2. Web site: Word list Google developer documentation style guide. 2024-03-13. Google Developers. en.