ArangoDB v3.13 is under development and not released yet. This documentation is not final and potentially incomplete.
ArangoDB Starter Options
The Starter provides options to control various aspects of a cluster or other deployment you want to run
Common options
--starter.data-dir=path
path
is the directory in which all data is stored. (default “./”)
In the directory, a setup.json
file is created, which is used for restarts,
as well as a directory for each instance that runs on this machine.
Different instances of arangodb
must use different data directories.
--starter.join=address
Join a cluster with the leader (master) Starter at address address
(default “”).
You can also point to any other Starter that is connected to the initial Starter.
The address can be a host address or name, optionally followed by a port number
to match another Starter’s --starter.port
if it is not the default 8528
.
These are valid arguments, for example:
--starter.join=localhost
--starter.join=localhost:5678
--starter.join=192.168.23.1:8528
--starter.join=192.168.23.1
You can also supply multiple addresses. See Using multiple join arguments for details.
--starter.local
Start a local (test) cluster. Since all servers are running on a single machine this is really not intended for production setups.
--starter.mode=cluster|single
Select what kind of database configuration you want.
This can be a cluster
configuration (which is the default) or a
single
server configuration.
Note that when running a single
server configuration you lose all
high availability features that a cluster provides you.
--cluster.agency-size=int
number of Agents in Agency (default 3).
This number has to be positive and odd, and anything beyond 5 probably does not make sense. The default 3 allows for the failure of one Agent.
--starter.address=addr
addr
is the address under which this server is reachable from the
outside.
Use this option only in the case that --cluster.agency-size
is set to 1.
In a single Agent setup, the sole starter has to start on its own with
no reliable way to learn its own address. Using this option, the leader (master)
Starter knows under which address it can be reached from the outside. If you specify
localhost
here, then all instances must run on the local machine.
--starter.host=addr
addr
is the address to which this server binds. (default “0.0.0.0”)
Usually there is no need to specify this option.
Only when you want to bind the starter to specific network device,
would you set this.
Note that setting this option to 127.0.0.1
makes this starter
unreachable for other starters, which is only allowed for
single
server deployments or when using --starter.local
.
--docker.image=image
image
is the name of a Docker image to run instead of the normal
executable. For each started instance a Docker container is launched.
Usually one would use the Docker image arangodb/arangodb
.
--docker.container=containerName
containerName
is the name of a Docker container that is used to run the
executable. If you do not provide this argument but run the starter inside
a Docker container, the starter auto-detects its container name.
Authentication options
The arango starter by default creates a cluster that uses no authentication.
To create a cluster that uses authentication, create a file containing a random
JWT secret (single line) and pass it through the --auth.jwt-secret
option.
For example:
arangodb create jwt-secret --secret=jwtSecret
arangodb --auth.jwt-secret=./jwtSecret
All starters used in the cluster must have the same JWT secret.
To use a JWT secret to access the database, use arangodb auth header
.
See Using authentication tokens
for details.
SSL options
The ArangoDB Starter creates a cluster that uses unencrypted connections by default (no SSL/TLS).
To create a cluster that uses encrypted connections, you can use an existing
server key file (.pem
format) or let the starter create one for you.
To use an existing server key file use the --ssl.keyfile
option like this:
arangodb --ssl.keyfile=myServer.pem
Use arangodb create tls keyfile
to create a
server key file.
To let the starter created a self-signed server key file, use the
--ssl.auto-key
option like this:
arangodb --ssl.auto-key
All starters used to make a cluster must be using SSL or not. You cannot have one starter using SSL and another not using SSL.
If you start a starter using SSL, its own HTTP server (see API) also uses SSL.
Note that all starters can use different server key files.
Additional SSL options:
--ssl.cafile=path
Configure the servers to require a client certificate in their communication to the servers using the CA certificate in a file with given path.
--ssl.auto-server-name=name
The name of the server that is used in the self-signed certificate created by
the --ssl.auto-key
option.
--ssl.auto-organization=name
The name of the server that is used in the self-signed certificate created by
the --ssl.auto-key
option.
Passing through other database options
Options for arangod
that are not supported by the starter can still be passed to
the DB-Servers using a pass through option.
Every option that start with a pass through prefix is passed through to the
command-line of one or more server instances.
--args.all.<section>.<key>=<value>
is passed as--<section>.<key>=<value>
to all servers started by this starter.--args.coordinators.<section>.<key>=<value>
is passed as--<section>.<key>=<value>
to all Coordinators started by this starter.--args.dbservers.<section>.<key>=<value>
is passed as--<section>.<key>=<value>
to all DB-Servers started by this starter.--args.agents.<section>.<key>=<value>
is passed as--<section>.<key>=<value>
to all Agents started by this starter.
Some options are essential to the function of the starter. Therefore these options cannot be passed through like this.
Example:
To activate HTTP request logging at debug level for all Coordinators, use a command like this:
arangodb --args.coordinators.log.level=requests=debug
Passing environment variables
Environment variables by default gonna be passed from arangodb process by default. However, variables can be overridden using arangodb command line option.
--envs.<group>.<env name>=<value>
--envs.all.ARANGODB_OVERRIDE_DETECTED_TOTAL_MEMORY=2G
setsARANGODB_OVERRIDE_DETECTED_TOTAL_MEMORY=2G
for all instances started by this starter.--envs.coordinators.ARANGODB_OVERRIDE_DETECTED_TOTAL_MEMORY=4G
setsARANGODB_OVERRIDE_DETECTED_TOTAL_MEMORY=4G
for all Coordinators started by this starter.--envs.dbservers.ARANGODB_OVERRIDE_DETECTED_TOTAL_MEMORY=8G
setsARANGODB_OVERRIDE_DETECTED_TOTAL_MEMORY=8G
for all DB-Servers started by this starter.
Example:
arangodb --envs.all.ARANGODB_OVERRIDE_DETECTED_TOTAL_MEMORY=2G --envs.coordinators.ARANGODB_OVERRIDE_DETECTED_TOTAL_MEMORY=4G --envs.dbservers.ARANGODB_OVERRIDE_DETECTED_TOTAL_MEMORY=8G ...
Miscellaneous options
--version
Show the version of the starter.
--starter.port=int
The network port for the Starter (default 8528).
This is the port used for communication of the arangodb
instances
amongst each other.
The Starter uses the subsequent ports for the arangod
processes it starts.
--starter.disable-ipv6=bool
If disabled, the starter configures the arangod
servers
to bind to address 0.0.0.0
(all IPv4 interfaces)
instead of binding to [::]
(all IPv4 and all IPv6 interfaces).
This is useful when IPv6 has actively been disabled on your machine.
--server.arangod=path
The path to the arangod
executable (default varies from platform to
platform, an executable is searched in various places).
This option only has to be specified if the standard search fails.
--server.js-dir=path
The path to JavaScript library directory (default varies from platform to platform, this is coupled to the search for the executable).
This option only has to be specified if the standard search fails.
--server.storage-engine=rocksdb
Sets the storage engine used by the arangod
servers.
Defaults to rocksdb
, which is also the only available option for
ArangoDB v3.7 and above.
--cluster.start-coordinator=bool
This indicates whether or not a Coordinator instance should be started (default true).
--cluster.start-dbserver=bool
This indicates whether or not a DB-Server instance should be started (default true).
--server.rr=path
The path to the rr
executable to use if non-empty (default “”). Expert and
debugging only.
--log.color=bool
If set to true
, console log output is colorized.
The default is true
when a terminal is attached to stdin,
false
otherwise.
--log.console=bool
If set to true
, log output is written to the console (default true
).
--log.file=bool
If set to true
, log output is written to the file (default true
).
The log file, called arangodb.log
, can be found in the directory
specified using --log.dir
or if that is not set, the directory
specified using --starter.data-dir
.
--log.verbose=bool
show more information (default false
).
--log.dir=path
Set a custom directory to which all log files are written to. When using the Starter in docker, make sure that this directory is mounted as a volume for the Starter.
Note: When using a custom log directory, all DB-Server files are named like
arangod-<role>-<port>.log
. The log for the starter itself is still called
arangodb.log
.
--log.rotate-files-to-keep=int
Set the number of old log files to keep when rotating log files of server components (default 5).
--log.rotate-interval=duration
Set the interval between rotations of log files of server components (default 24h
).
Use a value of 0
to disable automatic log rotation.
Note: The starter always performs log rotation when it receives a HUP
signal.
--starter.unique-port-offsets=bool
If set to true
, all port offsets (of follower Starters) are made globally unique.
By default, the value is false
and port offsets are unique per follower address only.
--docker.user=user
user
is an expression to be used for docker run
with the --user
option. One can give a user id or a user id and a group id, separated
by a colon. The purpose of this option is to limit the access rights
of the process in the Docker container.
--docker.endpoint=endpoint
endpoint
is the URL used to reach the docker host. This is needed to run
the executable in docker. The default value is “unix:///var/run/docker.sock”.
--docker.imagePullPolicy=Always|IfNotPresent|Never
docker.imagePullPolicy
determines if the Docker image is being pulled from
Docker Hub.
- If set to
Always
, the image is always pulled and an error causes the starter to fail. - If set to
IfNotPresent
, the image is not pull if it is always available locally. - If set to
Never
, the image is never pulled (when it is not available locally an error occurs).
The default value is Always
is the docker.image
has the :latest
tag or IfNotPresent
otherwise.
--docker.net-mode=mode
If docker.net-mode
is set, all Docker container are started
with the --net=<mode>
option.
--docker.privileged=bool
If docker.privileged
is set, all Docker containers are started
with the --privileged
option turned on.
--docker.tty=bool
If docker.tty
is set, all Docker containers are started with a TTY.
If the starter itself is running in a docker container without a TTY
this option is overwritten to false
.
--starter.debug-cluster=bool
If starter.debug-cluster
is set, the starter records the status codes it receives
upon “server ready” requests to the log. This option is mainly intended for internal testing.
Starting and stopping in detached mode
If you want the starter to detach and run as a background process, use the start
command. This is typically used by developers running tests only.
arangodb start --starter.local=true [--starter.wait]
This command makes the Starter run another starter process in the background (that starts all ArangoDB servers), wait for its HTTP API to be available and then exit. The Starter that was started in the background keeps running until you stop it.
The --starter.wait
option makes the start
command wait until all ArangoDB
servers are really up before ending the process of the leader Starter.
To stop a Starter, use this command:
arangodb stop
Make sure to match the arguments given to start the Starter
(--starter.port
& --ssl.*
).
Environment variables
It is possible to replace all command-line arguments for the starter with
environment variables. To do so, set an environment variable named
ARANGODB_
+ <name of command line option in uppercase>
, where all dashes,
underscores and dots are replaced with underscores.
For example,
ARANGODB_DOCKER_TTY=true arangodb
is equal to:
arangodb --docker.tty=true