common/config thinks the default log_file for non-daemons should be "".
Override that so that the default is
/var/log/ceph/{cluster}-{name}.{pid}.log
since ceph-rest-api is more of a daemon than a client.
Fixes: #6099
Backport: dumpling
Signed-off-by: Dan Mick <dan.mick@inktank.com>
CephFS currently deadlocks under CTDB's ping_pong POSIX locking test
when run concurrently on multiple nodes.
The deadlock is caused by failed removal of a waiting_locks entry when
the waiting lock is merged with an existing lock, e.g:
Initial MDS state (two clients, same file):
held_locks -- start: 0, length: 1, client: 4116, pid: 7899, type: 2
start: 2, length: 1, client: 4110, pid: 40767, type: 2
waiting_locks -- start: 1, length: 1, client: 4116, pid: 7899, type: 2
Waiting lock entry 4116@1:1 fires:
handle_client_file_setlock: start: 1, length: 1,
client: 4116, pid: 7899, type: 2
MDS state after lock is obtained:
held_locks -- start: 0, length: 2, client: 4116, pid: 7899, type: 2
start: 2, length: 1, client: 4110, pid: 40767, type: 2
waiting_locks -- start: 1, length: 1, client: 4116, pid: 7899, type: 2
Note that the waiting 4116@1:1 lock entry is merged with the existing
4116@0:1 held lock to become a 4116@0:2 held lock. However, the now
handled 4116@1:1 waiting_locks entry remains.
When handling a lock request, the MDS calls adjust_locks() to merge
the new lock with available neighbours. If the new lock is merged,
then the waiting_locks entry is not located in the subsequent
remove_waiting() call because adjust_locks changed the new lock to
include the old locks.
This fix ensures that the waiting_locks entry is removed prior to
modification during merge.
Signed-off-by: David Disseldorp <ddiss@suse.de>
Reviewed-by: Greg Farnum <greg@inktank.com>
On LevelDBStore, instead of using leveldb's GetApproximateSizes() function,
we will instead assess what's the store's raw size from the contents of
the store dir (this means .sst's, .log's, etc). The reason behind this
approach is that GetApproximateSizes() would expect us to provide a range
of keys for which to obtain an approximate size; on the other hand, what we
really want is to obtain the size of the store -- not the size of the
data (besides, with the compaction issues we've been seeing, we wonder
how reliable such approximation would be).
Signed-off-by: Joao Eduardo Luis <jecluis@gmail.com>
It is possible that we begin the paxos recovery with an uncommitted
value for, say, commit 100. During last/collect we discover 100 has been
committed already. But also, another node provides an uncommitted value
for 101 with the same pn. Currently, we refuse to learn it, because the
pn is not strictly > than our current uncommitted pn... even though it is
the next last_committed+1 value that we need.
There are two possible fixes here:
- make this a >= as we can accept newer values from the same pn.
- discard our uncommitted value metadata when we commit the value.
Let's do both!
Fixes: #6090
Signed-off-by: Sage Weil <sage@inktank.com>
Fixes: #6056
When removing a bucket metadata entry we first unlink the bucket
and then we remove the bucket entrypoint object. Originally
when unlinking the bucket we first overwrote the bucket entrypoint
entry marking it as 'unlinked'. However, this is not really needed
as we're just about to remove it. The original version triggered
a bug, as we needed to propagate the new header version first (which
we didn't do, so the subsequent bucket removal failed).
Reviewed-by: Greg Farnum <greg@inktank.com>
Signed-off-by: Yehuda Sadeh <yehuda@inktank.com>
Some distro's have a lack of ltp-kernel packages and all we need is
fstress. This just modified the shell script to download/compile
fstress from source and copy it to the right location if it doesn't
currently exist where it is expected. It is a very small/quick
compile and currently only SLES and debian do not have it already.
Reviewed-by: Sage Weil <sage@inktank.com>
Signed-off-by: Sandon Van Ness <sandon@inktank.com>
Some distro's have a lack of ltp-kernel packages and all we need is
fstress. This just modified the shell script to download/compile
fstress from source and copy it to the right location if it doesn't
currently exist where it is expected. It is a very small/quick
compile and currently only SLES and debian do not have it already.
Reviewed-by: Sage Weil <sage@inktank.com>
Signed-off-by: Sandon Van Ness <sandon@inktank.com>
Moving the watch/notify init before the zone init,
as we might need to send a notification.
Reviewed-by: Sage Weil <sage@inktank.com>
Signed-off-by: Yehuda Sadeh <yehuda@inktank.com>
If the redhat-rpm-config package is installed, the debuginfo rpms will
be built by default. The build will fail when the package installed
and the specfile also invokes the macro.
Signed-off-by: Gary Lowell <gary.lowell@inktank.com>
This is from Intel's ISA-L library and licensed under BSD 3-clause.
It needs to build with yasm, which means we go through all sorts of pain
to make this work with libtool:
- strip out args it doesn't understand with yasm-wrapper
- detect whether it is recent enough during configure
The code is conditional on:
- build-time support (yasm)
- run-time support (sse4.2)
Signed-off-by: Sage Weil <sage@inktank.com>
libtool passes all kinds of crap to yasm that yasm does not understand.
Hide it with this ugly wrapper. Sigh.
Signed-off-by: Sage Weil <sage@inktank.com>
When the parent xattrs of active inodes that the mds attempts to open
during rejoin lack pool info (struct_v < 5), this field will be filled
in with -1, causing the mds to retry fetching a backtrace with a pool
number that matches the expected value, which fails and causes the
err==-ENOENT branch to be taken and retry pool 1, which succeeds, but
with pool -1, and so keeps on bouncing between the two retry cases
forever.
This patch arranges for the mds to go along with pool -1 instead of
insisting that it be refetched, enabling it to complete recovery
instead of eating cpu, network bandwidth and metadata osd's resources
like there's no tomorrow, in what AFAICT is an infinite and very busy
loop.
This is not a new problem: I've had it even before upgrading from
Cuttlefish to Dumpling, I'd just never managed to track it down, and
force-unmounting the filesystem and then restarting the mds was an
easier (if inconvenient) work-around, particularly because it always
hit when the filesystem was under active, heavy-ish use (or there
wouldn't be much reason for caps recovery ;-)
There are two issues not addressed in this patch, however. One is
that nothing seems to proactively update the parent xattr when it is
found to be outdated, so it remains out of date forever. Not even
renaming top-level directories causes the xattrs to be recursively
rewritten. AFAICT that's a bug.
The other is that inodes that don't have a parent xattr (created by
even older versions of ceph) are reported as non-existing in the mds
rejoin message, because the absence of the parent xattr is signaled as
a missing inode (?failed to reconnect caps for missing inodes?). I
suppose this may cause more serious recovery problems.
I suppose a global pass over the filesystem tree updating parent
xattrs that are out-of-date would be desirable, if we find any parent
xattrs still lacking current information; it might make sense to
activate it as a background thread from the backtrace decoding
function, when it finds a parent xattr that's too out-of-date, or as a
separate client (ceph-fsck?).
Backport: dumpling, cuttlefish
Signed-off-by: Alexandre Oliva <oliva@gnu.org>
Reviewed-by: Zheng, Yan <zheng.z.yan@intel.com>
All new ObjectContext are replaced with calls to
SharedPtrRegistry::lookup_or_create to ensure that they are all
registered. Because the constructor is invoked with no argument, care
is taken to always initialize the destructor_callback data member
immediately afterwards.
ReplicatedPG::get_object_context contains a redundant call to
get_snapset_context that is removed.
http://tracker.ceph.com/issues/5510 refs #5510
Signed-off-by: Loic Dachary <loic@dachary.org>