If it's having problems, it's usually detected pretty quickly, and when it
gets detected it screams about it on the console and in the syslog, and
disconnects the FS. The node most likely gets fenced at that point.
What distribution, kernel, gfs tools, etc. are you using? What is your
shared storage?
Gordan
On Thu, 21 Feb 2008, Ray Charles wrote:
Well that is a way to respond to an issue. Anyone
know of a way to detect when GFS is having problems,
say by way of messages or logging or perhaps even
somewhere in /proc ?
-tia
--- Pedro Espinoza <raindoctor@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
We ran into such problems few times: my collegue
just reboots that node;)
On 2/19/08, Ray Charles <raycharles_man@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Hi all,
GFS ver 6.1, not gfs2.
I am looking for an intelligent way to defend the
use
of gfs on a prod cluster. Every time there's an
issue
I hear a cacophony of voices that declare that
"GFS
caused ... whatever."
Most recently there was an instance where doing an
ls
of a certain sub dir that happened to be on a GFS
partition just hung. All other sub dir in that
same
partition could be navigated. Does that sound like
a
typical scenario? Aside from the system log is
there
any other place to check??
If gfs gets into a funny state how can i detect it
or
test for it?
tia-
-Ray
____________________________________________________________________________________
Never miss a thing. Make Yahoo your home page.
http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs
--
Linux-cluster mailing list
Linux-cluster@xxxxxxxxxx
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster
--
Linux-cluster mailing list
Linux-cluster@xxxxxxxxxx
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster
____________________________________________________________________________________
Never miss a thing. Make Yahoo your home page.
http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs
--
Linux-cluster mailing list
Linux-cluster@xxxxxxxxxx
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster
--
Linux-cluster mailing list
Linux-cluster@xxxxxxxxxx
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-cluster