[Gluster-users] Frequent glusterd restarts needed to, avoid NFS performance degradation
Dan Bretherton
d.a.bretherton at reading.ac.uk
Wed Apr 18 12:58:35 UTC 2012
On 04/18/2012 01:48 PM, gluster-users-request at gluster.org wrote:
> Date: Tue, 17 Apr 2012 19:06:31 -0500 (CDT)
> From: Gerald Brandt<gbr at majentis.com>
> Subject: Re: [Gluster-users] Frequent glusterd restarts needed to
> avoid NFS performance degradation
> To: Dan Bretherton<d.a.bretherton at reading.ac.uk>
> Cc: gluster-users<gluster-users at gluster.org>
> Message-ID:<22749685.104.1334707572319.JavaMail.gbr at thinkpad>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
>
> Hi,
>
> ----- Original Message -----
>> > Dear All-
>> > I find that I have to restart glusterd every few days on my servers
>> > to
>> > stop NFS performance from becoming unbearably slow. When the problem
>> > occurs, volumes can take several minutes to mount and there are long
>> > delays responding to "ls". Mounting from a different server, i.e.
>> > one
>> > not normally used for NFS export, results in normal NFS access
>> > speeds.
>> > This doesn't seem to have anything to do with load because it happens
>> > whether or not there is anything running on the compute servers.
>> > Even
>> > when the system is mostly idle there are often a lot of glusterfsd
>> > processes running, and on several of the servers I looked at this
>> > evening there is a process called glusterfs using 100% of one CPU. I
>> > can't find anything unusual in nfs.log or
>> > etc-glusterfs-glusterd.vol.log
>> > on the servers affected. Restarting glusterd seems to stop this
>> > strange
>> > behaviour and make NFS access run smoothly again, but this usually
>> > only
>> > lasts for a day or two.
>> >
>> > This behaviour is not necessarily related to the length of time since
>> > glusterd was started, but has more to do with the amount of work the
>> > GlusterFS processes on each server have to do. I use a different
>> > server
>> > to export each of my 8 different volumes, and the NFS performance
>> > degradation seems to affect the most heavily used volumes more than
>> > the
>> > others. I really need to find a solution to this problem; all I can
>> > think of doing is setting up a cron job on each server to restart
>> > glusterd every day, but I am worried about what side effects that
>> > might
>> > have. I am using GlusterFS version 3.2.5. All suggestions would be
>> > much appreciated.
>> >
>> > Regards,
>> > Dan.
> I run GlusterFS 3.2.5 and only access is via NFS. I'm running Citrix XenServer with about 23 VM's off of it. I haven't seen any degradation at all.
>
> One thing I don't have is replication or anything else set up. The server is ready to replicate, but I'm waiting for 3.3
>
> Gerald
>
Hello Gerald,
Thanks for your comments. I should have mentioned that I do use
replication in my cluster, but I'm not sure that the replication is
causing the problem. Another thing to mention about my system is that
there is a lot of data transfer going on most of the time, including
models and data processing applications running on the compute cluster
and data transfers from other sites. I wouldn't be surprised if the
Gluster-NFS handles several terabytes of data before it starts to grind
to a halt. Perhaps this problem hasn't been noticed before because my
usage isn't typical. However, it should be fairly easy to reproduce if
it's just a matter of transferring a large volume of data.
-Dan.
More information about the Gluster-users
mailing list