Krishna Srinivas wrote:
> On Tue, Oct 21, 2008 at 5:54 PM, Gordan Bobic <address@hidden>
> wrote:
> > I'm starting to see lock-ups when using a single-file client/server
> > setup.
> >
> > machine1 (x86): =================================
> > volume home2
> > type protocol/client
> > option transport-type tcp/client
> > option remote-host 192.168.3.1
> > option remote-subvolume home2
> > end-volume
> >
> > volume home-store
> > type storage/posix
> > option directory /gluster/home
> > end-volume
> >
> > volume home1
> > type features/posix-locks
> > subvolumes home-store
> > end-volume
> >
> > volume server
> > type protocol/server
> > option transport-type tcp/server
> > subvolumes home1
> > option auth.ip.home1.allow 127.0.0.1,192.168.*
> > end-volume
> >
> > volume home
> > type cluster/afr
> > subvolumes home1 home2
> > option read-subvolume home1
> > end-volume
> >
> > machine2 (x86-64): =================================
> > volume home1
> > type protocol/client
> > option transport-type tcp/client
> > option remote-host 192.168.0.1
> > option remote-subvolume home1
> > end-volume
> >
> > volume home-store
> > type storage/posix
> > option directory /gluster/home
> > end-volume
> >
> > volume home2
> > type features/posix-locks
> > subvolumes home-store
> > end-volume
> >
> > volume server
> > type protocol/server
> > option transport-type tcp/server
> > subvolumes home2
> > option auth.ip.home2.allow 127.0.0.1,192.168.*
> > end-volume
> >
> > volume home
> > type cluster/afr
> > subvolumes home1 home2
> > option read-subvolume home2
> > end-volume
> >
> > ==================
> >
> > Do those configs look sane?
> >
> > When one machine is running on it's own, it's fine. Other client-only
> > machines can connect to it without any problems. However, as soon as
> > the
> > second client/server comes up, typically the first ls access on the
> > directory will lock the whole thing up solid.
> >
> > Interestingly, on the x86 machine, the glusterfs process can always
> > be
> > killed. Not so on the x86-64 machine (the 2nd machine that comes up).
> > kill
> > -9 doesn't kill it. The only way to clear the lock-up is to reboot.
> >
> > Using the 1.3.12 release compiled into an RPM on both machines
> > (CentOS 5.2).
> >
> > One thing worthy of note is that machine2 is nfsrooted / network
> > booted. It
> > has local disks in it, and a local dmraid volume is mounted under
> > /gluster
> > on it (machine1 has a disk-backed root).
> >
> > So, on machine1:
> > / is local disk
> > on machine2:
> > / is NFS
> > /gluster is local disk
> > /gluster/home is exported in the volume spec for AFR.
> >
> > If /gluster/home is newly created, it tends to get a little further,
> > but
> > still locks up pretty quickly. If I try to execute find /home once it
> > is
> > mounted, it will eventually hang, and the only thing of note I could
> > see in
> > the logs is that it said "active lock found" at the point where it
>
> Do you see this error on server1 or server2? Any other clues in the
> logs?
Access to the FS locks up on both server1 and server2.
I have split up the setup to separate cliend and server on server2
(x86-64), and have tried to get it to sync up just the file placeholders
(find . at the root of the glusterfs mounted tree), and this, too causes a
lock-up. I have managed to kill the glusterfsd process, but only after
killing the glusterfs process first.
This ends up in the logs on server2, in the glusterfs (client) log:
2008-10-27 18:44:31 C [client-protocol.c:212:call_bail] home2: bailing
transport
2008-10-27 18:44:31 E [client-protocol.c:4834:client_protocol_cleanup]
home2: forced unwinding frame type(1) op(36) address@hidden
2008-10-27 18:44:31 E [client-protocol.c:4215:client_setdents_cbk] home2:
no proper reply from server, returning ENOTCONN
2008-10-27 18:44:31 E [afr_self_heal.c:155:afr_lds_setdents_cbk] mirror:
op_ret=-1 op_errno=107
2008-10-27 18:44:31 E [client-protocol.c:4834:client_protocol_cleanup]
home2: forced unwinding frame type(1) op(34) address@hidden
2008-10-27 18:44:31 E [client-protocol.c:4430:client_lookup_cbk] home2: no
proper reply from server, returning ENOTCONN
2008-10-27 18:44:31 E [fuse-bridge.c:468:fuse_entry_cbk] glusterfs-fuse:
19915: (34) /gordan/bin => -1 (5)
2008-10-27 18:45:51 C [client-protocol.c:212:call_bail] home2: bailing
transport
2008-10-27 18:45:51 E [client-protocol.c:4834:client_protocol_cleanup]
home2: forced unwinding frame type(1) op(0) address@hidden
2008-10-27 18:45:51 E [client-protocol.c:2688:client_stat_cbk] home2: no
proper reply from server, returning ENOTCONN
2008-10-27 18:45:51 E [afr.c:3298:afr_stat_cbk] mirror: (child=home2)
op_ret=-1 op_errno=107
2008-10-27 18:45:51 E [client-protocol.c:4834:client_protocol_cleanup]
home2: forced unwinding frame type(1) op(34) address@hidden
2008-10-27 18:45:51 E [client-protocol.c:4430:client_lookup_cbk] home2: no
proper reply from server, returning ENOTCONN
2008-10-27 18:45:51 E [client-protocol.c:325:client_protocol_xfer] home2:
transport_submit failed
2008-10-27 18:45:51 E [client-protocol.c:325:client_protocol_xfer] home2:
transport_submit failed
2008-10-27 18:45:51 E [client-protocol.c:4834:client_protocol_cleanup]
home2: forced unwinding frame type(1) op(34) address@hidden
2008-10-27 18:45:51 E [client-protocol.c:4430:client_lookup_cbk] home2: no
proper reply from server, returning ENOTCONN
2008-10-27 18:46:23 E [protocol.c:271:gf_block_unserialize_transport]
home1: EOF from peer (192.168.0.1:6996)
2008-10-27 18:46:23 E [client-protocol.c:4834:client_protocol_cleanup]
home1: forced unwinding frame type(2) op(5) address@hidden
1230
2008-10-27 18:46:23 E [client-protocol.c:4246:client_lock_cbk] home1: no
proper reply from server, returning ENOTCONN
I think this was generated in the logs only after the server2 client was
forcefully killed, not when the lock-up occured, though.
If I merge the client and server config into a single volume definition on
server2, the lock-up happens as soon as the FS is mounted. If
server2-server gets brought up first, the server1-combined, then
server2-client, it seems to last a bit longer.
I'm wondering now if it fails on a particular file/file type (e.g. a
socket).
But whatever is causing it, it is completely reproducible. I haven't been
able to keep it running under these circumstances for long enough to
finish loading X with the home directory mounted over glusterfs with both
servers running.