Hi, Avati In your chained configuration, how to replace whole h1 without replace-brick ? Is there has a better way than replace brick in this situation ? h0:/b1 h1:/b2 h1:/b1 h2:/b2 h2:/b1 h0:/b2 (A new h3 want to replace old h1.) Thanks. Best Regards, KueiHuan-Chen Synology Incorporated. Email: khchen at synology.com Tel: +886-2-25521814 ext.827 2013/9/30 Anand Avati <avati at gluster.org>: > > > > On Fri, Sep 27, 2013 at 1:56 AM, James <purpleidea at gmail.com> wrote: >> >> On Fri, 2013-09-27 at 00:35 -0700, Anand Avati wrote: >> > Hello all, >> Hey, >> >> Interesting timing for this post... >> I've actually started working on automatic brick addition/removal. (I'm >> planning to add this to puppet-gluster of course.) I was hoping you >> could help out with the algorithm. I think it's a bit different if >> there's no replace-brick command as you are proposing. >> >> Here's the problem: >> Given a logically optimal initial volume: >> >> volA: rep=2; h1:/b1 h2:/b1 h3:/b1 h4:/b1 h1:/b2 h2:/b2 h3:/b2 h4:/b2 >> >> suppose I know that I want to add/remove bricks such that my new volume >> (if I had created it new) looks like: >> >> volB: rep=2; h1:/b1 h3:/b1 h4:/b1 h5:/b1 h6:/b1 h1:/b2 h3:/b2 h4:/b2 >> h5:/b2 h6:/b2 >> >> What is the optimal algorithm for determining the correct sequence of >> transforms that are needed to accomplish this task. Obviously there are >> some simpler corner cases, but I'd like to solve the general case. >> >> The transforms are obviously things like running the add-brick {...} and >> remove-brick {...} commands. >> >> Obviously we have to take into account that it's better to add bricks >> and rebalance before we remove bricks and risk the file system if a >> replica is missing. The algorithm should work for any replica N. We want >> to make sure the new layout makes sense to replicate the data on >> different servers. In many cases, this will require creating a circular >> "chain" of bricks as illustrated in the bottom of this image: >> http://joejulian.name/media/uploads/images/replica_expansion.png >> for example. I'd like to optimize for safety first, and then time, I >> imagine. >> >> Many thanks in advance. >> > > I see what you are asking. First of all, when running a 2-replica volume you > almost pretty much always want to have an even number of servers, and add > servers in even numbers. Ideally the two "sides" of the replicas should be > placed in separate failures zones - separate racks with separate power > supplies or separate AZs in the cloud. Having an odd number of servers with > an 2 replicas is a very "odd" configuration. In all these years I am yet to > come across a customer who has a production cluster with 2 replicas and an > odd number of servers. And setting up replicas in such a chained manner > makes it hard to reason about availability, especially when you are trying > recover from a disaster. Having clear and separate "pairs" is definitely > what is recommended. > > That being said, nothing prevents one from setting up a chain like above as > long as you are comfortable with the complexity of the configuration. And > phasing out replace-brick in favor of add-brick/remove-brick does not make > the above configuration impossible either. Let's say you have a chained > configuration of N servers, with pairs formed between every: > > h(i):/b1 h((i+1) % N):/b2 | i := 0 -> N-1 > > Now you add N+1th server. > > Using replace-brick, you have been doing thus far: > > 1. add-brick hN:/b1 h0:/b2a # because h0:/b2 was "part of a previous brick" > 2. replace-brick h0:/b2 hN:/b2 start ... commit > > In case you are doing an add-brick/remove-brick approach, you would now > instead do: > > 1. add-brick h(N-1):/b1a hN:/b2 > 2. add-brick hN:/b1 h0:/b2a > 3. remove-brick h(N-1):/b1 h0:/b2 start ... commit > > You will not be left with only 1 copy of a file at any point in the process, > and achieve the same "end result" as you were with replace-brick. As > mentioned before, I once again request you to consider if you really want to > deal with the configuration complexity of having chained replication, > instead of just adding servers in pairs. > > Please ask if there are any more questions or concerns. > > Avati > > >> >> James >> >> Some comments below, although I'm a bit tired so I hope I said it all >> right. >> >> > DHT's remove-brick + rebalance has been enhanced in the last couple of >> > releases to be quite sophisticated. It can handle graceful >> > decommissioning >> > of bricks, including open file descriptors and hard links. >> Sweet >> >> > >> > This in a way is a feature overlap with replace-brick's data migration >> > functionality. Replace-brick's data migration is currently also used for >> > planned decommissioning of a brick. >> > >> > Reasons to remove replace-brick (or why remove-brick is better): >> > >> > - There are two methods of moving data. It is confusing for the users >> > and >> > hard for developers to maintain. >> > >> > - If server being replaced is a member of a replica set, neither >> > remove-brick nor replace-brick data migration is necessary, because >> > self-healing itself will recreate the data (replace-brick actually uses >> > self-heal internally) >> > >> > - In a non-replicated config if a server is getting replaced by a new >> > one, >> > add-brick <new> + remove-brick <old> "start" achieves the same goal as >> > replace-brick <old> <new> "start". >> > >> > - In a non-replicated config, <replace-brick> is NOT glitch free >> > (applications witness ENOTCONN if they are accessing data) whereas >> > add-brick <new> + remove-brick <old> is completely transparent. >> > >> > - Replace brick strictly requires a server with enough free space to >> > hold >> > the data of the old brick, whereas remove-brick will evenly spread out >> > the >> > data of the bring being removed amongst the remaining servers. >> >> Can you talk more about the replica = N case (where N is 2 or 3?) >> With remove brick, add brick you will need add/remove N (replica count) >> bricks at a time, right? With replace brick, you could just swap out >> one, right? Isn't that a missing feature if you remove replace brick? >> >> > >> > - Replace-brick code is complex and messy (the real reason :p). >> > >> > - No clear reason why replace-brick's data migration is better in any >> > way >> > to remove-brick's data migration. >> > >> > I plan to send out patches to remove all traces of replace-brick data >> > migration code by 3.5 branch time. >> > >> > NOTE that replace-brick command itself will still exist, and you can >> > replace on server with another in case a server dies. It is only the >> > data >> > migration functionality being phased out. >> > >> > Please do ask any questions / raise concerns at this stage :) >> I heard with 3.4 you can somehow change the replica count when adding >> new bricks... What's the full story here please? >> >> Thanks! >> James >> >> > >> > Avati >> > _______________________________________________ >> > Gluster-users mailing list >> > Gluster-users at gluster.org >> > http://supercolony.gluster.org/mailman/listinfo/gluster-users >> > > > _______________________________________________ > Gluster-users mailing list > Gluster-users at gluster.org > http://supercolony.gluster.org/mailman/listinfo/gluster-users