Hi Saumitra,

It looks like the over replicated blocks root cause is not the issue that
the cluster is experiencing.   I can only think of miss configuring the
dfs.data.dir parameter. Can you ensure that each one of the data
directories is using only one partition(mount) and there is no other data
directory sharing the same partition(mount)?
The role should be one data directory per partition(mount). Also, please
check inside the dfs.data.dir for a third party files/directories. Hope
this helps.


Thanks
-Rahman


On Tue, Apr 15, 2014 at 6:54 AM, Saumitra Shahapure <
saumitra.offic...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi Rahman,
>
> These are few lines from hadoop fsck / -blocks -files -locations
>
> /mnt/hadoop/hive/warehouse/user.db/table1/000255_0 44323326 bytes, 1
> block(s):  OK
> 0. blk_-7919979022650423857_446500 len=44323326 repl=3 [ip1:50010,
> ip2:50010, ip3:50010]
>
> /mnt/hadoop/hive/warehouse/user.db/table1/000256_0 44566965 bytes, 1
> block(s):  OK
> 0. blk_-5768999994812882540_446288 len=44566965 repl=3 [ip1:50010,
> ip2:50010, ip4:50010]
>
>
> Biswa may have guessed replication factor from fsck summary that I posted
> earlier. I am posting it again for today's run:
>
> Status: HEALTHY
>  Total size:    58143055251 B
>  Total dirs:    307
>  Total files:   5093
>  Total blocks (validated):      3903 (avg. block size 14897016 B)
>  Minimally replicated blocks:   3903 (100.0 %)
>
>  Over-replicated blocks:        0 (0.0 %)
>  Under-replicated blocks:       92 (2.357161 %)
>
>  Mis-replicated blocks:         0 (0.0 %)
>  Default replication factor:    2
>  Average block replication:     3.1401486
>  Corrupt blocks:                0
>  Missing replicas:              92 (0.75065273 %)
>
>  Number of data-nodes:          9
>  Number of racks:               1
> FSCK ended at Tue Apr 15 13:20:25 UTC 2014 in 655 milliseconds
>
>
> The filesystem under path '/' is HEALTHY
>
> I have not overridden dfs.datanode.du.reserved. It defaults to 0.
>
> $ less $HADOOP_HOME/conf/hdfs-site.xml |grep -A3 'dfs.datanode.du.reserved'
> $ less $HADOOP_HOME/src/hdfs/hdfs-default.xml |grep -A3
> 'dfs.datanode.du.reserved'
>   <name>dfs.datanode.du.reserved</name>
>   <value>0</value>
>   <description>Reserved space in bytes per volume. Always leave this much
> space free for non dfs use.
>   </description>
>
> Below is du -h on every node. FYI, my dfs.data.dir is /mnt/hadoop/dfs/data
> and all hadoop/hive logs are dumped in /mnt/logs in various directories.
> All machines have 400GB for /mnt.
>
> $for i in `echo $dfs_slaves`; do  ssh $i 'du -sh /mnt/hadoop; du -sh
> /mnt/hadoop/dfs/data; du -sh /mnt/logs;'; done
>
>
> 225G    /mnt/hadoop
> 224G    /mnt/hadoop/dfs/data
> 61M     /mnt/logs
>
> 281G    /mnt/hadoop
> 281G    /mnt/hadoop/dfs/data
> 63M     /mnt/logs
>
> 139G    /mnt/hadoop
> 139G    /mnt/hadoop/dfs/data
> 68M     /mnt/logs
>
> 135G    /mnt/hadoop
> 134G    /mnt/hadoop/dfs/data
> 92M     /mnt/logs
>
> 165G    /mnt/hadoop
> 164G    /mnt/hadoop/dfs/data
> 75M     /mnt/logs
>
> 137G    /mnt/hadoop
> 137G    /mnt/hadoop/dfs/data
> 95M     /mnt/logs
>
> 160G    /mnt/hadoop
> 160G    /mnt/hadoop/dfs/data
> 74M     /mnt/logs
>
> 180G    /mnt/hadoop
> 122G    /mnt/hadoop/dfs/data
> 23M     /mnt/logs
>
> 139G    /mnt/hadoop
> 138G    /mnt/hadoop/dfs/data
> 76M     /mnt/logs
>
>
>
> All these numbers are for today, and may differ bit from yesterday.
>
> Today hadoop dfs -dus is 58GB and namenode is reporting DFS Used as 1.46TB.
>
> Pardon me for making the mail dirty by lot of copy-pastes, hope it's still
> readable,
>
> -- Saumitra S. Shahapure
>
>
> On Tue, Apr 15, 2014 at 2:57 AM, Abdelrahman Shettia <
> ashet...@hortonworks.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi Biswa,
>>
>> Are you sure that the replication factor of the files are three? Please
>> run a 'hadoop fsck / -blocks -files -locations' and see the replication
>> factor for each file.  Also, Post the configuration of <name>dfs.datanode.
>> du.reserved</name> and please check the real space presented by a
>> DataNode by running 'du -h'
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Rahman
>>
>> On Apr 14, 2014, at 2:07 PM, Saumitra <saumitra.offic...@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>> Hello,
>>
>> Biswanath, looks like we have confusion in calculation, 1TB would be
>> equal to 1024GB, not 114GB.
>>
>>
>> Sandeep, I checked log directory size as well. Log directories are hardly
>> in few GBs, I have configured log4j properties so that logs won't be too
>> large.
>>
>> In our slave machines, we have 450GB disk partition for hadoop logs and
>> DFS. Over there logs directory is < 10GBs and rest space is occupied by
>> DFS. 10GB partition is for /.
>>
>> Let me quote my confusion point once again:
>>
>>  Basically I wanted to point out discrepancy in name node status page and 
>> hadoop
>>>> dfs -dus. In my case, earlier one reports DFS usage as 1TB and later
>>>> one reports it to be 35GB. What are the factors that can cause this
>>>> difference? And why is just 35GB data causing DFS to hit its limits?
>>>>
>>>
>>
>> I am talking about name node status page on 50070 port. Here is the
>> screenshot of my name node status page
>>
>> <Screen Shot 2014-04-15 at 2.07.19 am.png>
>>
>> As I understand, 'DFS used' is the space taken by DFS, non-DFS used is
>> spaces taken by non-DFS data like logs or other local files from users.
>> Namenode shows that DFS used is ~1TB but hadoop dfs -dus shows it to be
>> ~38GB.
>>
>>
>>
>> On 14-Apr-2014, at 12:33 pm, Sandeep Nemuri <nhsande...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>  Please check your logs directory usage.
>>
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Apr 14, 2014 at 12:08 PM, Biswajit Nayak <
>> biswajit.na...@inmobi.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Whats the replication factor you have? I believe it should be 3. hadoop
>>> dus shows that disk usage without replication. While name node ui page
>>> gives with replication.
>>>
>>> 38gb * 3 =114gb ~ 1TB
>>>
>>> ~Biswa
>>> -----oThe important thing is not to stop questioning o-----
>>>
>>>
>>> On Mon, Apr 14, 2014 at 9:38 AM, Saumitra 
>>> <saumitra.offic...@gmail.com>wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hi Biswajeet,
>>>>
>>>> Non-dfs usage is ~100GB over the cluster. But still the number are
>>>> nowhere near 1TB.
>>>>
>>>> Basically I wanted to point out discrepancy in name node status page
>>>> and hadoop dfs -dus. In my case, earlier one reports DFS usage as 1TB
>>>> and later one reports it to be 35GB. What are the factors that can cause
>>>> this difference? And why is just 35GB data causing DFS to hit its limits?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On 14-Apr-2014, at 8:31 am, Biswajit Nayak <biswajit.na...@inmobi.com>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hi Saumitra,
>>>>
>>>> Could you please check the non-dfs usage. They also contribute to
>>>> filling up the disk space.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> ~Biswa
>>>> -----oThe important thing is not to stop questioning o-----
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Mon, Apr 14, 2014 at 1:24 AM, Saumitra 
>>>> <saumitra.offic...@gmail.com>wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Hello,
>>>>>
>>>>> We are running HDFS on 9-node hadoop cluster, hadoop version is 1.2.1.
>>>>> We are using default HDFS block size.
>>>>>
>>>>> We have noticed that disks of slaves are almost full. From name node's
>>>>> status page (namenode:50070), we could see that disks of live nodes are 
>>>>> 90%
>>>>> full and DFS Used% in cluster summary page  is ~1TB.
>>>>>
>>>>> However hadoop dfs -dus / shows that file system size is merely 38GB.
>>>>> 38GB number looks to be correct because we keep only few Hive tables and
>>>>> hadoop's /tmp (distributed cache and job outputs) in HDFS. All other data
>>>>> is cleaned up. I cross-checked this from hadoop dfs -ls. Also I think
>>>>> that there is no internal fragmentation because the files in our Hive
>>>>> tables are well-chopped in ~50MB chunks. Here are last few lines of
>>>>> hadoop fsck / -files -blocks
>>>>>
>>>>> Status: HEALTHY
>>>>>  Total size: 38086441332 B
>>>>>  Total dirs: 232
>>>>>  Total files: 802
>>>>>  Total blocks (validated): 796 (avg. block size 47847288 B)
>>>>>  Minimally replicated blocks: 796 (100.0 %)
>>>>>  Over-replicated blocks: 0 (0.0 %)
>>>>>  Under-replicated blocks: 6 (0.75376886 %)
>>>>>  Mis-replicated blocks: 0 (0.0 %)
>>>>>  Default replication factor: 2
>>>>>  Average block replication: 3.0439699
>>>>>  Corrupt blocks: 0
>>>>>  Missing replicas: 6 (0.24762692 %)
>>>>>  Number of data-nodes: 9
>>>>>  Number of racks: 1
>>>>> FSCK ended at Sun Apr 13 19:49:23 UTC 2014 in 135 milliseconds
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> My question is that why disks of slaves are getting full even though
>>>>> there are only few files in DFS?
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
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>>
>> --
>> --Regards
>>   Sandeep Nemuri
>>
>>
>>
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