[Gluster-users] 3.8.3 Shards Healing Glacier Slow

David Gossage dgossage at carouselchecks.com
Tue Aug 30 12:37:32 UTC 2016


On Tue, Aug 30, 2016 at 7:18 AM, Krutika Dhananjay <kdhananj at redhat.com>
wrote:

> Could you also share the glustershd logs?
>

I'll get them when I get to work sure.


>
> I tried the same steps that you mentioned multiple times, but heal is
> running to completion without any issues.
>
> It must be said that 'heal full' traverses the files and directories in a
> depth-first order and does heals also in the same order. But if it gets
> interrupted in the middle (say because self-heal-daemon was either
> intentionally or unintentionally brought offline and then brought back up),
> self-heal will only pick up the entries that are so far marked as
> new-entries that need heal which it will find in indices/xattrop directory.
> What this means is that those files and directories that were not visited
> during the crawl, will remain untouched and unhealed in this second
> iteration of heal, unless you execute a 'heal-full' again.
>

So should it start healing shards as it crawls or not until after it crawls
the entire .shard directory?  At the pace it was going that could be a week
with one node appearing in the cluster but with no shard files if anything
tries to access a file on that node.  From my experience other day telling
it to heal full again did nothing regardless of node used.


> My suspicion is that this is what happened on your setup. Could you
> confirm if that was the case?
>

Brick was brought online with force start then a full heal launched.  Hours
later after it became evident that it was not adding new files to heal I
did try restarting self-heal daemon and relaunching full heal again. But
this was after the heal had basically already failed to work as intended.


> As for those logs, I did manager to do something that caused these warning
> messages you shared earlier to appear in my client and server logs.
> Although these logs are annoying and a bit scary too, they didn't do any
> harm to the data in my volume. Why they appear just after a brick is
> replaced and under no other circumstances is something I'm still
> investigating.
>
> But for future, it would be good to follow the steps Anuradha gave as that
> would allow self-heal to at least detect that it has some repairing to do
> whenever it is restarted whether intentionally or otherwise.
>

I followed those steps as described on my test box and ended up with exact
same outcome of adding shards at an agonizing slow pace and no creation of
.shard directory or heals on shard directory.  Directories visible from
mount healed quickly.  This was with one VM so it has only 800 shards as
well.  After hours at work it had added a total of 33 shards to be healed.
I sent those logs yesterday as well though not the glustershd.

Does replace-brick command copy files in same manner?  For these purposes I
am contemplating just skipping the heal route.


> -Krutika
>
> On Tue, Aug 30, 2016 at 2:22 AM, David Gossage <
> dgossage at carouselchecks.com> wrote:
>
>> attached brick and client logs from test machine where same behavior
>> occurred not sure if anything new is there.  its still on 3.8.2
>>
>> Number of Bricks: 1 x 3 = 3
>> Transport-type: tcp
>> Bricks:
>> Brick1: 192.168.71.10:/gluster2/brick1/1
>> Brick2: 192.168.71.11:/gluster2/brick2/1
>> Brick3: 192.168.71.12:/gluster2/brick3/1
>> Options Reconfigured:
>> cluster.locking-scheme: granular
>> performance.strict-o-direct: off
>> features.shard-block-size: 64MB
>> features.shard: on
>> server.allow-insecure: on
>> storage.owner-uid: 36
>> storage.owner-gid: 36
>> cluster.server-quorum-type: server
>> cluster.quorum-type: auto
>> network.remote-dio: on
>> cluster.eager-lock: enable
>> performance.stat-prefetch: off
>> performance.io-cache: off
>> performance.quick-read: off
>> cluster.self-heal-window-size: 1024
>> cluster.background-self-heal-count: 16
>> nfs.enable-ino32: off
>> nfs.addr-namelookup: off
>> nfs.disable: on
>> performance.read-ahead: off
>> performance.readdir-ahead: on
>> cluster.granular-entry-heal: on
>>
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Aug 29, 2016 at 2:20 PM, David Gossage <
>> dgossage at carouselchecks.com> wrote:
>>
>>> On Mon, Aug 29, 2016 at 7:01 AM, Anuradha Talur <atalur at redhat.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>>> > From: "David Gossage" <dgossage at carouselchecks.com>
>>>> > To: "Anuradha Talur" <atalur at redhat.com>
>>>> > Cc: "gluster-users at gluster.org List" <Gluster-users at gluster.org>,
>>>> "Krutika Dhananjay" <kdhananj at redhat.com>
>>>> > Sent: Monday, August 29, 2016 5:12:42 PM
>>>> > Subject: Re: [Gluster-users] 3.8.3 Shards Healing Glacier Slow
>>>> >
>>>> > On Mon, Aug 29, 2016 at 5:39 AM, Anuradha Talur <atalur at redhat.com>
>>>> wrote:
>>>> >
>>>> > > Response inline.
>>>> > >
>>>> > > ----- Original Message -----
>>>> > > > From: "Krutika Dhananjay" <kdhananj at redhat.com>
>>>> > > > To: "David Gossage" <dgossage at carouselchecks.com>
>>>> > > > Cc: "gluster-users at gluster.org List" <Gluster-users at gluster.org>
>>>> > > > Sent: Monday, August 29, 2016 3:55:04 PM
>>>> > > > Subject: Re: [Gluster-users] 3.8.3 Shards Healing Glacier Slow
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > > Could you attach both client and brick logs? Meanwhile I will try
>>>> these
>>>> > > steps
>>>> > > > out on my machines and see if it is easily recreatable.
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > > -Krutika
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > > On Mon, Aug 29, 2016 at 2:31 PM, David Gossage <
>>>> > > dgossage at carouselchecks.com
>>>> > > > > wrote:
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > > Centos 7 Gluster 3.8.3
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > > Brick1: ccgl1.gl.local:/gluster1/BRICK1/1
>>>> > > > Brick2: ccgl2.gl.local:/gluster1/BRICK1/1
>>>> > > > Brick3: ccgl4.gl.local:/gluster1/BRICK1/1
>>>> > > > Options Reconfigured:
>>>> > > > cluster.data-self-heal-algorithm: full
>>>> > > > cluster.self-heal-daemon: on
>>>> > > > cluster.locking-scheme: granular
>>>> > > > features.shard-block-size: 64MB
>>>> > > > features.shard: on
>>>> > > > performance.readdir-ahead: on
>>>> > > > storage.owner-uid: 36
>>>> > > > storage.owner-gid: 36
>>>> > > > performance.quick-read: off
>>>> > > > performance.read-ahead: off
>>>> > > > performance.io-cache: off
>>>> > > > performance.stat-prefetch: on
>>>> > > > cluster.eager-lock: enable
>>>> > > > network.remote-dio: enable
>>>> > > > cluster.quorum-type: auto
>>>> > > > cluster.server-quorum-type: server
>>>> > > > server.allow-insecure: on
>>>> > > > cluster.self-heal-window-size: 1024
>>>> > > > cluster.background-self-heal-count: 16
>>>> > > > performance.strict-write-ordering: off
>>>> > > > nfs.disable: on
>>>> > > > nfs.addr-namelookup: off
>>>> > > > nfs.enable-ino32: off
>>>> > > > cluster.granular-entry-heal: on
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > > Friday did rolling upgrade from 3.8.3->3.8.3 no issues.
>>>> > > > Following steps detailed in previous recommendations began proces
>>>> of
>>>> > > > replacing and healngbricks one node at a time.
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > > 1) kill pid of brick
>>>> > > > 2) reconfigure brick from raid6 to raid10
>>>> > > > 3) recreate directory of brick
>>>> > > > 4) gluster volume start <> force
>>>> > > > 5) gluster volume heal <> full
>>>> > > Hi,
>>>> > >
>>>> > > I'd suggest that full heal is not used. There are a few bugs in
>>>> full heal.
>>>> > > Better safe than sorry ;)
>>>> > > Instead I'd suggest the following steps:
>>>> > >
>>>> > > Currently I brought the node down by systemctl stop glusterd as I
>>>> was
>>>> > getting sporadic io issues and a few VM's paused so hoping that will
>>>> help.
>>>> > I may wait to do this till around 4PM when most work is done in case
>>>> it
>>>> > shoots load up.
>>>> >
>>>> >
>>>> > > 1) kill pid of brick
>>>> > > 2) to configuring of brick that you need
>>>> > > 3) recreate brick dir
>>>> > > 4) while the brick is still down, from the mount point:
>>>> > >    a) create a dummy non existent dir under / of mount.
>>>> > >
>>>> >
>>>> > so if noee 2 is down brick, pick node for example 3 and make a test
>>>> dir
>>>> > under its brick directory that doesnt exist on 2 or should I be dong
>>>> this
>>>> > over a gluster mount?
>>>> You should be doing this over gluster mount.
>>>> >
>>>> > >    b) set a non existent extended attribute on / of mount.
>>>> > >
>>>> >
>>>> > Could you give me an example of an attribute to set?   I've read a
>>>> tad on
>>>> > this, and looked up attributes but haven't set any yet myself.
>>>> >
>>>> Sure. setfattr -n "user.some-name" -v "some-value" <path-to-mount>
>>>> > Doing these steps will ensure that heal happens only from updated
>>>> brick to
>>>> > > down brick.
>>>> > > 5) gluster v start <> force
>>>> > > 6) gluster v heal <>
>>>> > >
>>>> >
>>>> > Will it matter if somewhere in gluster the full heal command was run
>>>> other
>>>> > day?  Not sure if it eventually stops or times out.
>>>> >
>>>> full heal will stop once the crawl is done. So if you want to trigger
>>>> heal again,
>>>> run gluster v heal <>. Actually even brick up or volume start force
>>>> should
>>>> trigger the heal.
>>>>
>>>
>>> Did this on test bed today.  its one server with 3 bricks on same
>>> machine so take that for what its worth.  also it still runs 3.8.2.  Maybe
>>> ill update and re-run test.
>>>
>>> killed brick
>>> deleted brick dir
>>> recreated brick dir
>>> created fake dir on gluster mount
>>> set suggested fake attribute on it
>>> ran volume start <> force
>>>
>>> looked at files it said needed healing and it was just 8 shards that
>>> were modified for few minutes I ran through steps
>>>
>>> gave it few minutes and it stayed same
>>> ran gluster volume <> heal
>>>
>>> it healed all the directories and files you can see over mount including
>>> fakedir.
>>>
>>> same issue for shards though.  it adds more shards to heal at glacier
>>> pace.  slight jump in speed if I stat every file and dir in VM running but
>>> not all shards.
>>>
>>> It started with 8 shards to heal and is now only at 33 out of 800 and
>>> probably wont finish adding for few days at rate it goes.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>> > >
>>>> > > > 1st node worked as expected took 12 hours to heal 1TB data. Load
>>>> was
>>>> > > little
>>>> > > > heavy but nothing shocking.
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > > About an hour after node 1 finished I began same process on
>>>> node2. Heal
>>>> > > > proces kicked in as before and the files in directories visible
>>>> from
>>>> > > mount
>>>> > > > and .glusterfs healed in short time. Then it began crawl of
>>>> .shard adding
>>>> > > > those files to heal count at which point the entire proces ground
>>>> to a
>>>> > > halt
>>>> > > > basically. After 48 hours out of 19k shards it has added 5900 to
>>>> heal
>>>> > > list.
>>>> > > > Load on all 3 machnes is negligible. It was suggested to change
>>>> this
>>>> > > value
>>>> > > > to full cluster.data-self-heal-algorithm and restart volume
>>>> which I
>>>> > > did. No
>>>> > > > efffect. Tried relaunching heal no effect, despite any node
>>>> picked. I
>>>> > > > started each VM and performed a stat of all files from within it,
>>>> or a
>>>> > > full
>>>> > > > virus scan and that seemed to cause short small spikes in shards
>>>> added,
>>>> > > but
>>>> > > > not by much. Logs are showing no real messages indicating
>>>> anything is
>>>> > > going
>>>> > > > on. I get hits to brick log on occasion of null lookups making me
>>>> think
>>>> > > its
>>>> > > > not really crawling shards directory but waiting for a shard
>>>> lookup to
>>>> > > add
>>>> > > > it. I'll get following in brick log but not constant and sometime
>>>> > > multiple
>>>> > > > for same shard.
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > > [2016-08-29 08:31:57.478125] W [MSGID: 115009]
>>>> > > > [server-resolve.c:569:server_resolve] 0-GLUSTER1-server: no
>>>> resolution
>>>> > > type
>>>> > > > for (null) (LOOKUP)
>>>> > > > [2016-08-29 08:31:57.478170] E [MSGID: 115050]
>>>> > > > [server-rpc-fops.c:156:server_lookup_cbk] 0-GLUSTER1-server:
>>>> 12591783:
>>>> > > > LOOKUP (null) (00000000-0000-0000-00
>>>> > > > 00-000000000000/241a55ed-f0d5-4dbc-a6ce-ab784a0ba6ff.221) ==>
>>>> (Invalid
>>>> > > > argument) [Invalid argument]
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > > This one repeated about 30 times in row then nothing for 10
>>>> minutes then
>>>> > > one
>>>> > > > hit for one different shard by itself.
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > > How can I determine if Heal is actually running? How can I kill
>>>> it or
>>>> > > force
>>>> > > > restart? Does node I start it from determine which directory gets
>>>> > > crawled to
>>>> > > > determine heals?
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > > David Gossage
>>>> > > > Carousel Checks Inc. | System Administrator
>>>> > > > Office 708.613.2284
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > > _______________________________________________
>>>> > > > Gluster-users mailing list
>>>> > > > Gluster-users at gluster.org
>>>> > > > http://www.gluster.org/mailman/listinfo/gluster-users
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > >
>>>> > > > _______________________________________________
>>>> > > > Gluster-users mailing list
>>>> > > > Gluster-users at gluster.org
>>>> > > > http://www.gluster.org/mailman/listinfo/gluster-users
>>>> > >
>>>> > > --
>>>> > > Thanks,
>>>> > > Anuradha.
>>>> > >
>>>> >
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Thanks,
>>>> Anuradha.
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>
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