If I’m not mistaken, marking an osd out will remap its placement groups temporarily, while removing it from the crush map will remap the placement groups permanently.
Additionally, other placement groups from other osds could get remapped permanently when an osd is removed from the crush map. I would think the only benefit to marking an osd out before stopping it would be a cleaner redirection of client I/O before the osd
disappears, which may be worthwhile if you’re removing a healthy osd. As for reweighting to 0 prior to removing an osd, it seems like that would give the osd the ability to participate in the recovery essentially in read-only fashion
(plus deletes) until it’s empty, so objects wouldn’t become degraded as placement groups are backfilling onto other osds. Again, this would really only be useful if you’re removing a healthy osd. If you’re removing an osd where other osds in different failure
domains are known to be unhealthy, it seems like this would be a really good idea. I usually follow the documented steps you’ve outlined myself, but I’m typically removing osds due to failed/failing drives while the rest of the cluster is healthy. Steve Taylor | Senior Software Engineer |
StorageCraft Technology Corporation If you are not the intended recipient of this message, be advised that any dissemination or copying of this message is prohibited. From: ceph-users [mailto:ceph-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Rafael Lopez Hi all, I am curious what practices other people follow when removing OSDs from a cluster. According to the docs, you are supposed to: 1. ceph osd out 2. stop daemon 3. ceph osd crush remove 4. ceph auth del 5. ceph osd rm What value does ceph osd out (1) add to the removal process and why is it in the docs ? We have found (as have others) that by outing(1) and then crush removing (3), the cluster has to do two recoveries. Is it necessary? Can you just do
a crush remove without step 1? I found this earlier message from GregF which he seems to affirm that just doing the crush remove is fine: This recent blog post from Sebastien that suggests reweighting to 0 first, but havent tested it: I thought that by marking it out, it sets the reweight to 0 anyway, so not sure how this would make a difference in terms of two rebalances but maybe there is a subtle difference.. ? Thanks, Raf -- Senior Storage Engineer - Automation and Delivery |
_______________________________________________ ceph-users mailing list ceph-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.ceph.com/listinfo.cgi/ceph-users-ceph.com