Thanks for the advice John.

Our CentOS 7 clients use linux kernel v3.10 so I upgraded one of them to use 
v4.17 and have run 10 more node fail tests. Unfortunately, the kernel upgrade 
on the client hasn't resolved the issue. 

With each test I took down the active MDS node and monitored how long the two 
v3.10 clients and the v4.17 client lost the ceph mount for. There wasn't much 
difference between them i.e. the v3.10 clients lost the mount for between 0 and 
21 seconds and the v4.17 client for between 0 and 16 seconds. Sometimes each 
node lost the mount at different times i.e. seconds apart. Other times, 2 nodes 
would lose and recover the mount at exactly the same time and the third node 
would lose/recover some time later. 

We are novices with Ceph so are not really sure what we should expect from it 
regarding resilience i.e. is it normal for clients to lose the mount point for 
a period of time and if so, how long should we consider an abnormal period. 

William Lawton

-----Original Message-----
From: John Spray <jsp...@redhat.com> 
Sent: Tuesday, July 31, 2018 11:17 AM
To: William Lawton <william.law...@irdeto.com>
Cc: ceph-users@lists.ceph.com; Mark Standley <mark.stand...@irdeto.com>
Subject: Re: [ceph-users] Intermittent client reconnect delay following node 
fail

On Tue, Jul 31, 2018 at 12:33 AM William Lawton <william.law...@irdeto.com> 
wrote:
>
> Hi.
>
>
>
> We have recently setup our first ceph cluster (4 nodes) but our node failure 
> tests have revealed an intermittent problem. When we take down a node (i.e. 
> by powering it off) most of the time all clients reconnect to the cluster 
> within milliseconds, but occasionally it can take them 30 seconds or more. 
> All clients are Centos7 instances and have the ceph cluster mount point 
> configured in /etc/fstab as follows:

The first thing I'd do is make sure you've got recent client code -- there are 
backports in RHEL but I'm unclear on how much of that (if
any) makes it into centos.  You may find it simpler to just install a recent 
4.x kernel from ELRepo.  Even if you don't want to use that in production, it 
would be useful to try and isolate any CephFS client issues you're encountering.

John

>
>
>
> 10.18.49.35:6789,10.18.49.204:6789,10.18.49.101:6789,10.18.49.183:6789:/ 
> /mnt/ceph ceph name=admin,secretfile=/etc/ceph_key,noatime,_netdev    0       
> 2
>
>
>
> On rare occasions, using the ls command, we can see that a failover has left 
> a client’s /mnt/ceph directory with the following state: “???????????  ? ?    
> ?       ?            ? ceph”. When this occurs, we think that the client has 
> failed to connect within 45 seconds (the mds_reconnect_timeout period) so the 
> client has been evicted. We can reproduce this circumstance by reducing the 
> mds reconnect timeout down to 1 second.
>
>
>
> We’d like to know why our clients sometimes struggle to reconnect after a 
> cluster node failure and how to prevent this i.e. how can we ensure that all 
> clients consistently reconnect to the cluster quickly following a node 
> failure.
>
>
>
> We are using the default configuration options.
>
>
>
> Ceph Status:
>
>
>
>   cluster:
>
>     id:     ea2d9095-3deb-4482-bf6c-23229c594da4
>
>     health: HEALTH_OK
>
>
>
>   services:
>
>     mon: 4 daemons, quorum 
> dub-ceph-01,dub-ceph-03,dub-ceph-04,dub-ceph-02
>
>     mgr: dub-ceph-02(active), standbys: dub-ceph-04.ott.local, 
> dub-ceph-01, dub-ceph-03
>
>     mds: cephfs-1/1/1 up  {0=dub-ceph-03=up:active}, 3 up:standby
>
>     osd: 4 osds: 4 up, 4 in
>
>
>
>   data:
>
>     pools:   2 pools, 200 pgs
>
>     objects: 2.36 k objects, 8.9 GiB
>
>     usage:   31 GiB used, 1.9 TiB / 2.0 TiB avail
>
>     pgs:     200 active+clean
>
>
>
> Thanks
>
> William Lawton
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> ceph-users mailing list
> ceph-users@lists.ceph.com
> http://lists.ceph.com/listinfo.cgi/ceph-users-ceph.com
_______________________________________________
ceph-users mailing list
ceph-users@lists.ceph.com
http://lists.ceph.com/listinfo.cgi/ceph-users-ceph.com

Reply via email to