Re: Potential OSD deadlock?

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I downgraded to the hammer gitbuilder branch, but it looks like I've
passed the point of no return:

2015-10-06 09:44:52.210873 7fd3dd8b78c0 -1 ERROR: on disk data
includes unsupported features:
compat={},rocompat={},incompat={7=support shec erasure code}
2015-10-06 09:44:52.210922 7fd3dd8b78c0 -1 error checking features:
(1) Operation not permitted

----------------
Robert LeBlanc
PGP Fingerprint 79A2 9CA4 6CC4 45DD A904  C70E E654 3BB2 FA62 B9F1


On Tue, Oct 6, 2015 at 8:38 AM, Sage Weil <sweil@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Tue, 6 Oct 2015, Robert LeBlanc wrote:
>> Thanks for your time Sage. It sounds like a few people may be helped if you
>> can find something.
>>
>> I did a recursive chown as in the instructions (although I didn't know about
>> the doc at the time). I did an osd debug at 20/20 but didn't see anything.
>> I'll also do ms and make the logs available. I'll also review the document
>> to make sure I didn't miss anything else.
>
> Oh.. I bet you didn't upgrade the osds to 0.94.4 (or latest hammer build)
> first.  They won't be allowed to boot until that happens... all upgrades
> must stop at 0.94.4 first.  And that isn't released yet.. we'll try to
> do that today.  In the meantime, you can use the hammer gitbuilder
> build...
>
> sage
>
>
>>
>> Robert LeBlanc
>>
>> Sent from a mobile device please excuse any typos.
>>
>> On Oct 6, 2015 6:37 AM, "Sage Weil" <sweil@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>       On Mon, 5 Oct 2015, Robert LeBlanc wrote:
>>       > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
>>       > Hash: SHA256
>>       >
>>       > With some off-list help, we have adjusted
>>       > osd_client_message_cap=10000. This seems to have helped a bit
>>       and we
>>       > have seen some OSDs have a value up to 4,000 for client
>>       messages. But
>>       > it does not solve the problem with the blocked I/O.
>>       >
>>       > One thing that I have noticed is that almost exactly 30
>>       seconds elapse
>>       > between an OSD boots and the first blocked I/O message. I
>>       don't know
>>       > if the OSD doesn't have time to get it's brain right about a
>>       PG before
>>       > it starts servicing it or what exactly.
>>
>>       I'm downloading the logs from yesterday now; sorry it's taking
>>       so long.
>>
>>       > On another note, I tried upgrading our CentOS dev cluster from
>>       Hammer
>>       > to master and things didn't go so well. The OSDs would not
>>       start
>>       > because /var/lib/ceph was not owned by ceph. I chowned the
>>       directory
>>       > and all OSDs and the OSD then started, but never became active
>>       in the
>>       > cluster. It just sat there after reading all the PGs. There
>>       were
>>       > sockets open to the monitor, but no OSD to OSD sockets. I
>>       tried
>>       > downgrading to the Infernalis branch and still no luck getting
>>       the
>>       > OSDs to come up. The OSD processes were idle after the initial
>>       boot.
>>       > All packages were installed from gitbuilder.
>>
>>       Did you chown -R ?
>>
>>              https://github.com/ceph/ceph/blob/infernalis/doc/release-notes.rst#upgradin
>>       g-from-hammer
>>
>>       My guess is you only chowned the root dir, and the OSD didn't
>>       throw
>>       an error when it encountered the other files?  If you can
>>       generate a debug
>>       osd = 20 log, that would be helpful.. thanks!
>>
>>       sage
>>
>>
>>       >
>>       > Thanks,
>>       > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
>>       > Version: Mailvelope v1.2.0
>>       > Comment: https://www.mailvelope.com
>>       >
>>       > wsFcBAEBCAAQBQJWE0F5CRDmVDuy+mK58QAAaCYQAJuFcCvRUJ46k0rYrMcc
>>       > YlrSrGwS57GJS/JjaFHsvBV7KTobEMNeMkSv4PTGpwylNV9Dx4Ad74DDqX4g
>>       > 6hZDe0rE+uEI7tW9Lqp+MN7eaU2lDuwLt/pOzZI14jTskUYTlNi3HjlN67mQ
>>       > aiX1rbrJL6FFkuMOn/YqHpMbxI5ZOUZc1s7RDhASOPIs4z/CxpDfluW6fZA/
>>       > y8C+pW6zzS9U/6jZwtGhBq4dvDBO41Lxb9WOehD8Aa/Qt6XNDzGw2KEkEkw7
>>       > 8dBc7UFa2Wx3Tnzy238a/nKhtz6O6OrHsroA+HGWwCoxPWjOsz/xOoOmfwp+
>>       > ALkY3id+t2uJEqzbL8/MgJ2RV1A+AZ7W1VWIJUOkDz0wR+KxQsxduHoD6rQy
>>       > zg0fj2KSAlmVusYOPM1s1+jBsqNF3wcNxpbRoVuFqk0xMgGPrIdUNdZHg6bs
>>       > D5sfkjNKexFe0ifFJ0cfv6UaGIKv4dK2eq3jUKgXHfh/qZmJbEB+zHaqJNyg
>>       > CN6w6xu1FHLeVobKAWe5ZzKY5lxw6b8YG+ce/E2dvW73gSASPTvtv68gaT04
>>       > 2SPF9Ql0fERL5EDY9Pc4MHpQVcS0XxxJA69CgnWgaG6fzq2eY7fALeMBVWlB
>>       > fRj3zQwqJls/X8JZ3c4P4G0R6DP9bmMwGr++oYc3gWGrvgzxw3N7+ornd0jd
>>       > GdXC
>>       > =Aigq
>>       > -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
>>       > ----------------
>>       > Robert LeBlanc
>>       > PGP Fingerprint 79A2 9CA4 6CC4 45DD A904  C70E E654 3BB2 FA62
>>       B9F1
>>       >
>>       >
>>       > On Sun, Oct 4, 2015 at 3:04 PM, Robert LeBlanc
>>       <robert@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>       > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
>>       > > Hash: SHA256
>>       > >
>>       > > I have eight nodes running the fio job rbd_test_real to
>>       different RBD
>>       > > volumes. I've included the CRUSH map in the tarball.
>>       > >
>>       > > I stopped one OSD process and marked it out. I let it
>>       recover for a
>>       > > few minutes and then I started the process again and marked
>>       it in. I
>>       > > started getting block I/O messages during the recovery.
>>       > >
>>       > > The logs are located at
>>       http://162.144.87.113/files/ushou1.tar.xz
>>       > >
>>       > > Thanks,
>>       > > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
>>       > > Version: Mailvelope v1.2.0
>>       > > Comment: https://www.mailvelope.com
>>       > >
>>       > > wsFcBAEBCAAQBQJWEZRcCRDmVDuy+mK58QAALbEQAK5pFiixJarUdLm50zp/
>>       > > 3AGgGBPrieExKmoZZLCoMGfOLfxZDbN2ybtopKDQDfrTqndE/6Xi9UXqTOdW
>>       > > jDc9U1wusgG0CKPsY1SMYnB9akvaDwtdh5q5k4VpN2zsG9R6lRojHeNQR3Nf
>>       > > 56QevJL4/e5lC3sLhVnxXXi2XKnHCVOHT+PYgNour2ZWt6OTLoFFxuSU3zLN
>>       > > OtfXgrFiiNF0mrDpm0gg2l8a8N5SwP9mM233S2U/JiGAqsqoqkfd0okjDenC
>>       > > ksesU/n7zordFpfLN3yjL6+X9pQ4YA6otZrq4wWtjWKO/H0b+6iIsf/AE131
>>       > > R6a4Vufndpd3Ce+FNfM+iu3FmKk0KVfDAaF/tIP6S6XUzGVMAbpvpmqNL17o
>>       > > boh3wPZEyK+7KiF4Qlt2KoI/FV24Yj8XiyMnKin3MbMYbammb4ER977VH7iI
>>       > > sZyelNPSsYmmw/MF+AkA5KVgzQ4DAPflaejIgC5uw3dYKrn2AQE5CE9nN8Gz
>>       > > GVVaGItu1Bvrz21QoT9o5v0dZ85zttFvtrKIYgSi4mdpC6XkzUbg9s9EB1/T
>>       > > SEY+fau7W7TtiLpzCAIQ3zDvgsvkx2P6tKg5U8e93LVv9B+YI8i8mUxxv1j5
>>       > > PHFi7KTgRUPm1FPMJDSyzvOgqyMj9AzaESl1Na6k529ILFIcyfko0niTT1oZ
>>       > > 3EPx
>>       > > =UDIV
>>       > > -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
>>       > >
>>       > > ----------------
>>       > > Robert LeBlanc
>>       > > PGP Fingerprint 79A2 9CA4 6CC4 45DD A904  C70E E654 3BB2
>>       FA62 B9F1
>>       > >
>>       > >
>>       > > On Sun, Oct 4, 2015 at 7:48 AM, Sage Weil <sweil@xxxxxxxxxx>
>>       wrote:
>>       > >> On Sat, 3 Oct 2015, Robert LeBlanc wrote:
>>       > >>> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
>>       > >>> Hash: SHA256
>>       > >>>
>>       > >>> We are still struggling with this and have tried a lot of
>>       different
>>       > >>> things. Unfortunately, Inktank (now Red Hat) no longer
>>       provides
>>       > >>> consulting services for non-Red Hat systems. If there are
>>       some
>>       > >>> certified Ceph consultants in the US that we can do both
>>       remote and
>>       > >>> on-site engagements, please let us know.
>>       > >>>
>>       > >>> This certainly seems to be network related, but somewhere
>>       in the
>>       > >>> kernel. We have tried increasing the network and TCP
>>       buffers, number
>>       > >>> of TCP sockets, reduced the FIN_WAIT2 state. There is
>>       about 25% idle
>>       > >>> on the boxes, the disks are busy, but not constantly at
>>       100% (they
>>       > >>> cycle from <10% up to 100%, but not 100% for more than a
>>       few seconds
>>       > >>> at a time). There seems to be no reasonable explanation
>>       why I/O is
>>       > >>> blocked pretty frequently longer than 30 seconds. We have
>>       verified
>>       > >>> Jumbo frames by pinging from/to each node with 9000 byte
>>       packets. The
>>       > >>> network admins have verified that packets are not being
>>       dropped in the
>>       > >>> switches for these nodes. We have tried different kernels
>>       including
>>       > >>> the recent Google patch to cubic. This is showing up on
>>       three cluster
>>       > >>> (two Ethernet and one IPoIB). I booted one cluster into
>>       Debian Jessie
>>       > >>> (from CentOS 7.1) with similar results.
>>       > >>>
>>       > >>> The messages seem slightly different:
>>       > >>> 2015-10-03 14:38:23.193082 osd.134 10.208.16.25:6800/1425
>>       439 :
>>       > >>> cluster [WRN] 14 slow requests, 1 included below; oldest
>>       blocked for >
>>       > >>> 100.087155 secs
>>       > >>> 2015-10-03 14:38:23.193090 osd.134 10.208.16.25:6800/1425
>>       440 :
>>       > >>> cluster [WRN] slow request 30.041999 seconds old, received
>>       at
>>       > >>> 2015-10-03 14:37:53.151014:
>>       osd_op(client.1328605.0:7082862
>>       > >>> rbd_data.13fdcb2ae8944a.000000000001264f [read
>>       975360~4096]
>>       > >>> 11.6d19c36f ack+read+known_if_redirected e10249) currently
>>       no flag
>>       > >>> points reached
>>       > >>>
>>       > >>> I don't know what "no flag points reached" means.
>>       > >>
>>       > >> Just that the op hasn't been marked as reaching any
>>       interesting points
>>       > >> (op->mark_*() calls).
>>       > >>
>>       > >> Is it possible to gather a lot with debug ms = 20 and debug
>>       osd = 20?
>>       > >> It's extremely verbose but it'll let us see where the op is
>>       getting
>>       > >> blocked.  If you see the "slow request" message it means
>>       the op in
>>       > >> received by ceph (that's when the clock starts), so I
>>       suspect it's not
>>       > >> something we can blame on the network stack.
>>       > >>
>>       > >> sage
>>       > >>
>>       > >>
>>       > >>>
>>       > >>> The problem is most pronounced when we have to reboot an
>>       OSD node (1
>>       > >>> of 13), we will have hundreds of I/O blocked for some
>>       times up to 300
>>       > >>> seconds. It takes a good 15 minutes for things to settle
>>       down. The
>>       > >>> production cluster is very busy doing normally 8,000 I/O
>>       and peaking
>>       > >>> at 15,000. This is all 4TB spindles with SSD journals and
>>       the disks
>>       > >>> are between 25-50% full. We are currently splitting PGs to
>>       distribute
>>       > >>> the load better across the disks, but we are having to do
>>       this 10 PGs
>>       > >>> at a time as we get blocked I/O. We have max_backfills and
>>       > >>> max_recovery set to 1, client op priority is set higher
>>       than recovery
>>       > >>> priority. We tried increasing the number of op threads but
>>       this didn't
>>       > >>> seem to help. It seems as soon as PGs are finished being
>>       checked, they
>>       > >>> become active and could be the cause for slow I/O while
>>       the other PGs
>>       > >>> are being checked.
>>       > >>>
>>       > >>> What I don't understand is that the messages are delayed.
>>       As soon as
>>       > >>> the message is received by Ceph OSD process, it is very
>>       quickly
>>       > >>> committed to the journal and a response is sent back to
>>       the primary
>>       > >>> OSD which is received very quickly as well. I've adjust
>>       > >>> min_free_kbytes and it seems to keep the OSDs from
>>       crashing, but
>>       > >>> doesn't solve the main problem. We don't have swap and
>>       there is 64 GB
>>       > >>> of RAM per nodes for 10 OSDs.
>>       > >>>
>>       > >>> Is there something that could cause the kernel to get a
>>       packet but not
>>       > >>> be able to dispatch it to Ceph such that it could be
>>       explaining why we
>>       > >>> are seeing these blocked I/O for 30+ seconds. Is there
>>       some pointers
>>       > >>> to tracing Ceph messages from the network buffer through
>>       the kernel to
>>       > >>> the Ceph process?
>>       > >>>
>>       > >>> We can really use some pointers no matter how outrageous.
>>       We've have
>>       > >>> over 6 people looking into this for weeks now and just
>>       can't think of
>>       > >>> anything else.
>>       > >>>
>>       > >>> Thanks,
>>       > >>> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
>>       > >>> Version: Mailvelope v1.1.0
>>       > >>> Comment: https://www.mailvelope.com
>>       > >>>
>>       > >>>
>>       wsFcBAEBCAAQBQJWEDY1CRDmVDuy+mK58QAARgoP/RcoL1qVmg7qbQrzStar
>>       > >>>
>>       NK80bqYGeYHb26xHbt1fZVgnZhXU0nN0Dv4ew0e/cYJLELSO2KCeXNfXN6F1
>>       > >>>
>>       prZuzYagYEyj1Q1TOo+4h/nOQRYsTwQDdFzbHb/OUDN55C0QGZ29DjEvrqP6
>>       > >>>
>>       K5l6sAQzvQDpUEEIiOCkS6pH59ira740nSmnYkEWhr1lxF/hMjb6fFlfCFe2
>>       > >>>
>>       h1djM0GfY7vBHFGgI3jkw0BL5AQnWe+SCcCiKZmxY6xiR70FWl3XqK5M+nxm
>>       > >>>
>>       iq74y7Dv6cpenit6boMr6qtOeIt+8ko85hVMh09Hkaqz/m2FzxAKLcahzkGF
>>       > >>>
>>       Fh/M6YBzgnX7QBURTC4YQT/FVyDTW3JMuT3RKQdaX6c0iiOsVdkE+iyidWyY
>>       > >>>
>>       Hr1KzWU23Ur9yBfZ39Y43jrsSiAEwHnKjSqMowSGljdTysNEAAZQhlqZIoHb
>>       > >>>
>>       JlgpB39ugkHI1H5fZ5b2SIDz32/d5ywG4Gay9Rk6hp8VanvIrBbev+JYEoYT
>>       > >>>
>>       8/WX+fhueHt4dqUYWIl3HZ0CEzbXbug0xmFvhrbmL2f3t9XOkDZRbAjlYrGm
>>       > >>>
>>       lswiJMDueY8JkxSnPvCQrHXqjbCcy9rMG7nTnLFz98rTcHNCwtpv0qVYhheg
>>       > >>>
>>       4YRNRVMbfNP/6xsJvG1wVOSQPwxZSPqJh42pDqMRePJl3Zn66MTx5wvdNDpk
>>       > >>> l7OF
>>       > >>> =OI++
>>       > >>> -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
>>       > >>> ----------------
>>       > >>> Robert LeBlanc
>>       > >>> PGP Fingerprint 79A2 9CA4 6CC4 45DD A904  C70E E654 3BB2
>>       FA62 B9F1
>>       > >>>
>>       > >>>
>>       > >>> On Fri, Sep 25, 2015 at 2:40 PM, Robert LeBlanc
>>       <robert@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>       > >>> > We dropped the replication on our cluster from 4 to 3
>>       and it looks
>>       > >>> > like all the blocked I/O has stopped (no entries in the
>>       log for the
>>       > >>> > last 12 hours). This makes me believe that there is some
>>       issue with
>>       > >>> > the number of sockets or some other TCP issue. We have
>>       not messed with
>>       > >>> > Ephemeral ports and TIME_WAIT at this point. There are
>>       130 OSDs, 8 KVM
>>       > >>> > hosts hosting about 150 VMs. Open files is set at 32K
>>       for the OSD
>>       > >>> > processes and 16K system wide.
>>       > >>> >
>>       > >>> > Does this seem like the right spot to be looking? What
>>       are some
>>       > >>> > configuration items we should be looking at?
>>       > >>> >
>>       > >>> > Thanks,
>>       > >>> > ----------------
>>       > >>> > Robert LeBlanc
>>       > >>> > PGP Fingerprint 79A2 9CA4 6CC4 45DD A904  C70E E654 3BB2
>>       FA62 B9F1
>>       > >>> >
>>       > >>> >
>>       > >>> > On Wed, Sep 23, 2015 at 1:30 PM, Robert LeBlanc
>>       <robert@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>       > >>> >> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
>>       > >>> >> Hash: SHA256
>>       > >>> >>
>>       > >>> >> We were able to only get ~17Gb out of the XL710
>>       (heavily tweaked)
>>       > >>> >> until we went to the 4.x kernel where we got ~36Gb (no
>>       tweaking). It
>>       > >>> >> seems that there were some major reworks in the network
>>       handling in
>>       > >>> >> the kernel to efficiently handle that network rate. If
>>       I remember
>>       > >>> >> right we also saw a drop in CPU utilization. I'm
>>       starting to think
>>       > >>> >> that we did see packet loss while congesting our ISLs
>>       in our initial
>>       > >>> >> testing, but we could not tell where the dropping was
>>       happening. We
>>       > >>> >> saw some on the switches, but it didn't seem to be bad
>>       if we weren't
>>       > >>> >> trying to congest things. We probably already saw this
>>       issue, just
>>       > >>> >> didn't know it.
>>       > >>> >> - ----------------
>>       > >>> >> Robert LeBlanc
>>       > >>> >> PGP Fingerprint 79A2 9CA4 6CC4 45DD A904  C70E E654
>>       3BB2 FA62 B9F1
>>       > >>> >>
>>       > >>> >>
>>       > >>> >> On Wed, Sep 23, 2015 at 1:10 PM, Mark Nelson  wrote:
>>       > >>> >>> FWIW, we've got some 40GbE Intel cards in the
>>       community performance cluster
>>       > >>> >>> on a Mellanox 40GbE switch that appear (knock on wood)
>>       to be running fine
>>       > >>> >>> with 3.10.0-229.7.2.el7.x86_64.  We did get feedback
>>       from Intel that older
>>       > >>> >>> drivers might cause problems though.
>>       > >>> >>>
>>       > >>> >>> Here's ifconfig from one of the nodes:
>>       > >>> >>>
>>       > >>> >>> ens513f1: flags=4163  mtu 1500
>>       > >>> >>>         inet 10.0.10.101  netmask 255.255.255.0
>>       broadcast 10.0.10.255
>>       > >>> >>>         inet6 fe80::6a05:caff:fe2b:7ea1  prefixlen 64
>>       scopeid 0x20
>>       > >>> >>>         ether 68:05:ca:2b:7e:a1  txqueuelen 1000
>>       (Ethernet)
>>       > >>> >>>         RX packets 169232242875  bytes 229346261232279
>>       (208.5 TiB)
>>       > >>> >>>         RX errors 0  dropped 0  overruns 0  frame 0
>>       > >>> >>>         TX packets 153491686361  bytes 203976410836881
>>       (185.5 TiB)
>>       > >>> >>>         TX errors 0  dropped 0 overruns 0  carrier 0
>>       collisions 0
>>       > >>> >>>
>>       > >>> >>> Mark
>>       > >>> >>>
>>       > >>> >>>
>>       > >>> >>> On 09/23/2015 01:48 PM, Robert LeBlanc wrote:
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       > >>> >>>> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
>>       > >>> >>>> Hash: SHA256
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       > >>> >>>> OK, here is the update on the saga...
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       > >>> >>>> I traced some more of blocked I/Os and it seems that
>>       communication
>>       > >>> >>>> between two hosts seemed worse than others. I did a
>>       two way ping flood
>>       > >>> >>>> between the two hosts using max packet sizes (1500).
>>       After 1.5M
>>       > >>> >>>> packets, no lost pings. Then then had the ping flood
>>       running while I
>>       > >>> >>>> put Ceph load on the cluster and the dropped pings
>>       started increasing
>>       > >>> >>>> after stopping the Ceph workload the pings stopped
>>       dropping.
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       > >>> >>>> I then ran iperf between all the nodes with the same
>>       results, so that
>>       > >>> >>>> ruled out Ceph to a large degree. I then booted in
>>       the the
>>       > >>> >>>> 3.10.0-229.14.1.el7.x86_64 kernel and with an hour
>>       test so far there
>>       > >>> >>>> hasn't been any dropped pings or blocked I/O. Our 40
>>       Gb NICs really
>>       > >>> >>>> need the network enhancements in the 4.x series to
>>       work well.
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       > >>> >>>> Does this sound familiar to anyone? I'll probably
>>       start bisecting the
>>       > >>> >>>> kernel to see where this issue in introduced. Both of
>>       the clusters
>>       > >>> >>>> with this issue are running 4.x, other than that,
>>       they are pretty
>>       > >>> >>>> differing hardware and network configs.
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       > >>> >>>> Thanks,
>>       > >>> >>>> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
>>       > >>> >>>> Version: Mailvelope v1.1.0
>>       > >>> >>>> Comment: https://www.mailvelope.com
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       wsFcBAEBCAAQBQJWAvOzCRDmVDuy+mK58QAApOMP/1xmCtW++G11qcE8y/sr
>>       > >>> >>>>
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>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       AnARPOjh61TO6cV0CT8O0DlqtHmSd2y0ElgAUl0594eInEn7eI7crz8R543V
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       7I68XU5zL/vNJ9IIx38UqdhtSzXQQL664DGq3DLINK0Yb9XRVBlFip+Slt+j
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       cB64TuWjOPLSH09pv7SUyksodqrTq3K7p6sQkq0MOzBkFQM1FHfOipbo/LYv
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       F42iiQbCvFizArMu20WeOSQ4dmrXT/iecgTfEag/Zxvor2gOi/J6d2XS9ckW
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       byEC5/rbm4yDBua2ZugeNxQLWq0Oa7spZnx7usLsu/6YzeDNI6kmtGURajdE
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       /XC8bESWKveBzmGDzjff5oaMs9A1PZURYnlYADEODGAt6byoaoQEGN6dlFGe
>>       > >>> >>>>
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>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       UWk5xRBgjDCD2gIwc+wpImZbCtiTdf0vad1uLvdxGL29iFta4THzJgUGrp98
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       sUqM3RaTRdJYjFcNP293H7/DC0mqpnmo0Clx3jkdHX+x1EXpJUtocSeI44LX
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       KWIMhe9wXtKAoHQFEcJ0o0+wrXWMevvx33HPC4q1ULrFX0ILNx5Mo0Rp944X
>>       > >>> >>>> 4OEo
>>       > >>> >>>> =P33I
>>       > >>> >>>> -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
>>       > >>> >>>> ----------------
>>       > >>> >>>> Robert LeBlanc
>>       > >>> >>>> PGP Fingerprint 79A2 9CA4 6CC4 45DD A904  C70E E654
>>       3BB2 FA62 B9F1
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       > >>> >>>> On Tue, Sep 22, 2015 at 4:15 PM, Robert LeBlanc
>>       > >>> >>>> wrote:
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
>>       > >>> >>>>> Hash: SHA256
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>> This is IPoIB and we have the MTU set to 64K. There
>>       was some issues
>>       > >>> >>>>> pinging hosts with "No buffer space available"
>>       (hosts are currently
>>       > >>> >>>>> configured for 4GB to test SSD caching rather than
>>       page cache). I
>>       > >>> >>>>> found that MTU under 32K worked reliable for ping,
>>       but still had the
>>       > >>> >>>>> blocked I/O.
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>> I reduced the MTU to 1500 and checked pings (OK),
>>       but I'm still seeing
>>       > >>> >>>>> the blocked I/O.
>>       > >>> >>>>> - ----------------
>>       > >>> >>>>> Robert LeBlanc
>>       > >>> >>>>> PGP Fingerprint 79A2 9CA4 6CC4 45DD A904  C70E E654
>>       3BB2 FA62 B9F1
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>> On Tue, Sep 22, 2015 at 3:52 PM, Sage Weil  wrote:
>>       > >>> >>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>> On Tue, 22 Sep 2015, Samuel Just wrote:
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>> I looked at the logs, it looks like there was a 53
>>       second delay
>>       > >>> >>>>>>> between when osd.17 started sending the osd_repop
>>       message and when
>>       > >>> >>>>>>> osd.13 started reading it, which is pretty weird.
>>       Sage, didn't we
>>       > >>> >>>>>>> once see a kernel issue which caused some messages
>>       to be mysteriously
>>       > >>> >>>>>>> delayed for many 10s of seconds?
>>       > >>> >>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>> Every time we have seen this behavior and diagnosed
>>       it in the wild it
>>       > >>> >>>>>> has
>>       > >>> >>>>>> been a network misconfiguration.  Usually related
>>       to jumbo frames.
>>       > >>> >>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>> sage
>>       > >>> >>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>> What kernel are you running?
>>       > >>> >>>>>>> -Sam
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>> On Tue, Sep 22, 2015 at 2:22 PM, Robert LeBlanc
>>       wrote:
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> Hash: SHA256
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> OK, looping in ceph-devel to see if I can get
>>       some more eyes. I've
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> extracted what I think are important entries from
>>       the logs for the
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> first blocked request. NTP is running all the
>>       servers so the logs
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> should be close in terms of time. Logs for 12:50
>>       to 13:00 are
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> available at
>>       http://162.144.87.113/files/ceph_block_io.logs.tar.xz
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:55:06.500374 - osd.17 gets I/O from
>>       client
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:55:06.557160 - osd.17 submits I/O
>>       to osd.13
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:55:06.557305 - osd.17 submits I/O
>>       to osd.16
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:55:06.573711 - osd.16 gets I/O from
>>       osd.17
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:55:06.595716 - osd.17 gets ondisk
>>       result=0 from osd.16
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:55:06.640631 - osd.16 reports to
>>       osd.17 ondisk result=0
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:55:36.926691 - osd.17 reports slow
>>       I/O > 30.439150 sec
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:55:59.790591 - osd.13 gets I/O from
>>       osd.17
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:55:59.812405 - osd.17 gets ondisk
>>       result=0 from osd.13
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:56:02.941602 - osd.13 reports to
>>       osd.17 ondisk result=0
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> In the logs I can see that osd.17 dispatches the
>>       I/O to osd.13 and
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> osd.16 almost silmutaniously. osd.16 seems to get
>>       the I/O right away,
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> but for some reason osd.13 doesn't get the
>>       message until 53 seconds
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> later. osd.17 seems happy to just wait and
>>       doesn't resend the data
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> (well, I'm not 100% sure how to tell which
>>       entries are the actual data
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> transfer).
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> It looks like osd.17 is receiving responses to
>>       start the communication
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> with osd.13, but the op is not acknowledged until
>>       almost a minute
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> later. To me it seems that the message is getting
>>       received but not
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> passed to another thread right away or something.
>>       This test was done
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> with an idle cluster, a single fio client (rbd
>>       engine) with a single
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> thread.
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> The OSD servers are almost 100% idle during these
>>       blocked I/O
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> requests. I think I'm at the end of my
>>       troubleshooting, so I can use
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> some help.
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> Single Test started about
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:52:36
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:55:36.926680 osd.17
>>       192.168.55.14:6800/16726 56 :
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> cluster [WRN] 1 slow requests, 1 included below;
>>       oldest blocked for >
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 30.439150 secs
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:55:36.926699 osd.17
>>       192.168.55.14:6800/16726 57 :
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> cluster [WRN] slow request 30.439150 seconds old,
>>       received at
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:55:06.487451:
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>   osd_op(client.250874.0:1388
>>       rbd_data.3380e2ae8944a.0000000000000545
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> [set-alloc-hint object_size 4194304 write_size
>>       4194304,write
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 0~4194304] 8.bbf3e8ff
>>       ack+ondisk+write+known_if_redirected e56785)
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>   currently waiting for subops from 13,16
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:55:36.697904 osd.16
>>       192.168.55.13:6800/29410 7 : cluster
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> [WRN] 2 slow requests, 2 included below; oldest
>>       blocked for >
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 30.379680 secs
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:55:36.697918 osd.16
>>       192.168.55.13:6800/29410 8 : cluster
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> [WRN] slow request 30.291520 seconds old,
>>       received at 2015-09-22
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 12:55:06.406303:
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>   osd_op(client.250874.0:1384
>>       rbd_data.3380e2ae8944a.0000000000000541
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> [set-alloc-hint object_size 4194304 write_size
>>       4194304,write
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 0~4194304] 8.5fb2123f
>>       ack+ondisk+write+known_if_redirected e56785)
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>   currently waiting for subops from 13,17
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:55:36.697927 osd.16
>>       192.168.55.13:6800/29410 9 : cluster
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> [WRN] slow request 30.379680 seconds old,
>>       received at 2015-09-22
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 12:55:06.318144:
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>   osd_op(client.250874.0:1382
>>       rbd_data.3380e2ae8944a.000000000000053f
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> [set-alloc-hint object_size 4194304 write_size
>>       4194304,write
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 0~4194304] 8.312e69ca
>>       ack+ondisk+write+known_if_redirected e56785)
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>   currently waiting for subops from 13,14
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:58:03.998275 osd.13
>>       192.168.55.12:6804/4574 130 :
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> cluster [WRN] 1 slow requests, 1 included below;
>>       oldest blocked for >
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 30.954212 secs
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:58:03.998286 osd.13
>>       192.168.55.12:6804/4574 131 :
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> cluster [WRN] slow request 30.954212 seconds old,
>>       received at
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:57:33.044003:
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>   osd_op(client.250874.0:1873
>>       rbd_data.3380e2ae8944a.000000000000070d
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> [set-alloc-hint object_size 4194304 write_size
>>       4194304,write
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 0~4194304] 8.e69870d4
>>       ack+ondisk+write+known_if_redirected e56785)
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>   currently waiting for subops from 16,17
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:58:03.759826 osd.16
>>       192.168.55.13:6800/29410 10 :
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> cluster [WRN] 1 slow requests, 1 included below;
>>       oldest blocked for >
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 30.704367 secs
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:58:03.759840 osd.16
>>       192.168.55.13:6800/29410 11 :
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> cluster [WRN] slow request 30.704367 seconds old,
>>       received at
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 2015-09-22 12:57:33.055404:
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>   osd_op(client.250874.0:1874
>>       rbd_data.3380e2ae8944a.000000000000070e
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> [set-alloc-hint object_size 4194304 write_size
>>       4194304,write
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> 0~4194304] 8.f7635819
>>       ack+ondisk+write+known_if_redirected e56785)
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>   currently waiting for subops from 13,17
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> Server   IP addr              OSD
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> nodev  - 192.168.55.11 - 12
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> nodew  - 192.168.55.12 - 13
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> nodex  - 192.168.55.13 - 16
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> nodey  - 192.168.55.14 - 17
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> nodez  - 192.168.55.15 - 14
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> nodezz - 192.168.55.16 - 15
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> fio job:
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> [rbd-test]
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> readwrite=write
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> blocksize=4M
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> #runtime=60
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> name=rbd-test
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> #readwrite=randwrite
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       #bssplit=4k/85:32k/11:512/3:1m/1,4k/89:32k/10:512k/1
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> #rwmixread=72
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> #norandommap
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> #size=1T
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> #blocksize=4k
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> ioengine=rbd
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> rbdname=test2
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> pool=rbd
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> clientname=admin
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> iodepth=8
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> #numjobs=4
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> #thread
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> #group_reporting
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> #time_based
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> #direct=1
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> #ramp_time=60
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> Thanks,
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> Version: Mailvelope v1.1.0
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> Comment: https://www.mailvelope.com
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       wsFcBAEBCAAQBQJWAcaKCRDmVDuy+mK58QAAPMsQAKBnS94fwuw0OqpPU3/z
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       tL8Z6TVRxrNigf721+2ClIu4LIH71bupDc3DgrrysQmmqGuvEMn68spmasWu
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       h9I/CqqgRpHqe4lUVoUEjyWA9/6Dbb6NiHSdpJ6p5jpGc8kZCvNS+ocDgFOl
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       903i0M0E9eEMeci5O/hrMrx1FG8SN2LS8nI261aNHMOwQK0bw8wWiCJEvqVB
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       sz1/+jK1BJoeIYfaT9HfUXBAvfo/W3tY/vj9KbJuZJ5AMpeYPvEHu/LAr1N7
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       FzzUc7a6EMlaxmSd0ML49JbV0cY9BMDjfrkKEQNKlzszlEHm3iif98QtsxbF
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       pPJ0hZ0G53BY3k976OWVMFm3WFRWUVOb/oiLF8H6PCm59b4LBNAg6iPNH1AI
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       5XhEcPpg06M03vqUaIiY9P1kQlvnn0yCXf82IUEgmg///vhxDsHWmcwClLEn
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       B0VszouStTzlMYnc/2vlUiI4gFVeilWLMW00VGTWV+7V1oIzIYvWHyl2QpBq
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       4/ZwVjQ43qLfuDTS4o+IJ4ztOMd26vIv6Mn6WVwKCjoCXJc8ajywR9Dy+6lL
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       o8oJ+tn7hMc9Qy1iBhu3/QIP4WCsUf9RVeu60oahNEpde89qW32S9CZlrJDO
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       gf4iTryRjkAhdmZIj9JiaE8jQ6dvN817D9cqs/CXKV9vhzYoM7p5YWHghBKB
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> J3hS
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> =0J7F
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> ----------------
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> Robert LeBlanc
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> PGP Fingerprint 79A2 9CA4 6CC4 45DD A904  C70E
>>       E654 3BB2 FA62 B9F1
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> On Tue, Sep 22, 2015 at 8:31 AM, Gregory Farnum
>>       wrote:
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>> On Tue, Sep 22, 2015 at 7:24 AM, Robert LeBlanc
>>       wrote:
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>> Hash: SHA256
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>> Is there some way to tell in the logs that this
>>       is happening?
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>> You can search for the (mangled) name
>>       _split_collection
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>> I'm not
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>> seeing much I/O, CPU usage during these times.
>>       Is there some way to
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>> prevent the splitting? Is there a negative side
>>       effect to doing so?
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>> Bump up the split and merge thresholds. You can
>>       search the list for
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>> this, it was discussed not too long ago.
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>> We've had I/O block for over 900 seconds and as
>>       soon as the sessions
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>> are aborted, they are reestablished and
>>       complete immediately.
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>> The fio test is just a seq write, starting it
>>       over (rewriting from
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>> the
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>> beginning) is still causing the issue. I was
>>       suspect that it is not
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>> having to create new file and therefore split
>>       collections. This is
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>> on
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>> my test cluster with no other load.
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>> Hmm, that does make it seem less likely if
>>       you're really not creating
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>> new objects, if you're actually running fio in
>>       such a way that it's
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>> not allocating new FS blocks (this is probably
>>       hard to set up?).
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>> I'll be doing a lot of testing today. Which log
>>       options and depths
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>> would be the most helpful for tracking this
>>       issue down?
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>> If you want to go log diving "debug osd = 20",
>>       "debug filestore =
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>> 20",
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>> "debug ms = 1" are what the OSD guys like to
>>       see. That should spit
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>> out
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>> everything you need to track exactly what each
>>       Op is doing.
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>> -Greg
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> --
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line
>>       "unsubscribe ceph-devel"
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> in
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> the body of a message to
>>       majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>> More majordomo info at
>>       http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
>>       > >>> >>>>> Version: Mailvelope v1.1.0
>>       > >>> >>>>> Comment: https://www.mailvelope.com
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       wsFcBAEBCAAQBQJWAdMSCRDmVDuy+mK58QAAoEgP/AqpH7i1BLpoz6fTlfWG
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       a6swvF8xvsyR15PDiPINYT0N7MgoikikGrMmhWpJ6utEr1XPW0MPFgzvNIsf
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       a1eMtNzyww4rAo6JCq6BtjmUsSKmOrBNhRNr6It9v4Nv+biqZHkiY8x/rRtV
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       s9z0cv3Q9Wqa6y/zKZg3H1XtbtUAx0r/DUwzSsP3omupZgNyaKkCgdkil9Vc
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       iyzBxFZU4+qXNT2FBG4dYDjxSHQv4psjvKR3AWXSN4yEn286KyMDjFrsDY5B
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       izS3h603QPoErqsUQngDE8COcaTAHHrV7gNJTikmGoNW6oQBjFq/z/zindTz
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       caXshVQQ+OTLo/qzJM8QPswh0TGU74SVbDkTq+eTOb5pBhQbp+42Pkkqh7jj
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       efyyYgDzpB1WrWRbUlWMNqmnjq7DT3lnAtuHyKbkwVs8x3JMPEiCl6PBvJbx
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       GnNSCqgDJrpb4fHQ2iqfQeh8Ai6AL1C1Ai19RZPrAUhpDW0/DbUvuoKSR8m7
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       glYYuH3hpy+oPYRhFcHm2fpNJ3u9npyk2Dai9RpzQ+mWmp3xi7becYmL482H
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       +WyvLeY+8AiJQDpA0CdD8KeSlOC9bw5TPmihAIn9dVTJ1O2RlapCLqL3YAJg
>>       > >>> >>>>>
>>       pGyDs8ercTEJLmvEyElj5XWh5DarsGscd2LELNS/UpyuYurbPcyPKUQ0uPjp
>>       > >>> >>>>> gcZm
>>       > >>> >>>>> =CjwB
>>       > >>> >>>>> -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       > >>> >>>> --
>>       > >>> >>>> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line
>>       "unsubscribe ceph-devel" in
>>       > >>> >>>> the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>>       > >>> >>>> More majordomo info at
>>       http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
>>       > >>> >>>>
>>       > >>> >>>
>>       > >>> >>
>>       > >>> >> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
>>       > >>> >> Version: Mailvelope v1.1.0
>>       > >>> >> Comment: https://www.mailvelope.com
>>       > >>> >>
>>       > >>> >>
>>       wsFcBAEBCAAQBQJWAv3QCRDmVDuy+mK58QAABr4QAJcQj8zjl606aMdkmQG7
>>       > >>> >>
>>       S46iMXVav/Tv2os9GCUsQmMPx2u1w3/WmPfjByd6Divczfo0JLDDqrbsqre2
>>       > >>> >>
>>       lq0GNK6e8fq6FXHhPpnL+t4uFV4UZ289cma3yklRqEBDXWHlP59Hu7VpxC5l
>>       > >>> >>
>>       0MIcCg4wM5VM/LkrfcMven5em5CnjyFJYbActGzw9043rZoyUwCM+eL7sotl
>>       > >>> >>
>>       JYHMcNWnqwdt8TLFDhUfVGiAQyV8/6E33CuCNUEuFGdtiBKzs9IZadOI8Ce0
>>       > >>> >>
>>       dod2DQNyFSvomqNq6t0DuTCSA+pT8uuks2O0NcrHjoqwIWVkxQGPYlpbpckf
>>       > >>> >>
>>       nxQdVM7vkqapVeQ0qUZx43Db9A5wDTC3PaEfVJZPZzWsSDjh9z7o6qHs3Kvp
>>       > >>> >>
>>       krfyS+dJaZ3tOYAP1VFDfasj06sOTFu3mfGYToKA75zz5HN7QZ13Zau/qhDu
>>       > >>> >>
>>       FHxsgk4oIXJsjj22LiSpoiigH5Ls+aVqtIbg8/vWp+EO6pK1fovEtJVeGAfE
>>       > >>> >>
>>       tLOdxfJJLVjMCAScFG9BRl1ePPLeptivKV0v9ruWsTpn+Q96VtqAR5GQCkYE
>>       > >>> >>
>>       hFrlxM+oIzHeArhhiIxSPCYLlnzxoD5IYXmTrWUYBCGvlY1mrI3j80mZ4VTj
>>       > >>> >>
>>       BErsSlqnjUyFKmaI7YNKyARCloMroz3wqdy/wpg/63Io62nmh5IyY+WO8hPo
>>       > >>> >> ae22
>>       > >>> >> =AX+L
>>       > >>> >> -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
>>       > >>> _______________________________________________
>>       > >>> ceph-users mailing list
>>       > >>> ceph-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>>       > >>> http://lists.ceph.com/listinfo.cgi/ceph-users-ceph.com
>>       > >>>
>>       > >>>
>>       > _______________________________________________
>>       > ceph-users mailing list
>>       > ceph-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>>       > http://lists.ceph.com/listinfo.cgi/ceph-users-ceph.com
>>       >
>>       >
>>
>>
>>
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