Hi Jon,
Good question, I'm not sure if we're using NVMe, I don't see /dev/nvme but
we could still be using it.
We using *Cisco UCS C220 M4 SFF* so I'm just going to check the spec.
Our Kernal is the following, we're using REDHAT so I'm told we can't
upgrade the version until the next major releas
Any chance you're using NVMe with an older Linux kernel? I've seen a *lot*
filesystem errors from using older CentOS versions. You'll want to be
using a version > 4.15.
On Thu, Aug 8, 2019 at 9:31 AM Philip Ó Condúin
wrote:
> *@Jeff *- If it was hardware that would explain it all, but do you t
*@Jeff *- If it was hardware that would explain it all, but do you think
it's possible to have every server in the cluster with a hardware issue?
The data is sensitive and the customer would lose their mind if I sent it
off-site which is a pity cause I could really do with the help.
The corruption
Did you check if packets are NOT being dropped for network interfaces Cassandra
instances are consuming (ifconfig –a) internode compression is set for all
endpoint – may be network is playing any role here?
is this corruption limited so certain keyspace/table | DCs or is that wide
spread – the l
The corrupt block exception from the compressor in 2.1/2.2 is something I don’t
recall ever being attributed to anything other than bad hardware, so that seems
by far the most likely option.
The corruption that the compressor is catching says the checksum written
immediately after the compress
Thanks Jeff, that’s the type of parameter I was looking for but I missed it
when I first read it. We’ll ensure that dynamic snitch is enabled.
—
Cyril Scetbon
> On Aug 5, 2019, at 11:23 PM, Jeff Jirsa wrote:
>
> You can make THAT less likely with some snitch trickery (setting the badness
> for
Hi All,
Thank you so much for the replies.
Currently, I have the following list that can potentially cause some sort
of corruption in a Cassandra cluster.
- Sudden Power cut - *We have had no power cuts in the datacenters*
- Network Issues - *no network issues from what I can tell*
-
Hi Ayub,
DSE is a DataStax product and this is the Apache Cassandra mailing list. Could
you reach out to DataStax?
Dinesh
> On Aug 7, 2019, at 11:17 PM, Ayub M wrote:
>
> Hello, we are using DSE Search workload with Search and Cass running on same
> nodes/jvm.
>
> 1. When repairs are run,