You may have to remount the volume so that the already leaked memory is
reclaimed by the system. If you still see the leaks, please provide the
updated statedumps.
Pranith
On 08/05/2014 07:30 PM, Tamas Papp wrote:
Just an update, the settings below did not help for me.
Current settings:
Volume Name: w-vol
Type: Distribute
Volume ID: 89e31546-cc2e-4a27-a448-17befda04726
Status: Started
Number of Bricks: 5
Transport-type: tcp
Bricks:
Brick1: gl0:/mnt/brick1/export
Brick2: gl1:/mnt/brick1/export
Brick3: gl2:/mnt/brick1/export
Brick4: gl3:/mnt/brick1/export
Brick5: gl4:/mnt/brick1/export
Options Reconfigured:
nfs.mount-udp: on
nfs.addr-namelookup: off
nfs.ports-insecure: on
nfs.port: 2049
cluster.stripe-coalesce: on
nfs.disable: off
performance.flush-behind: on
performance.io-thread-count: 64
performance.quick-read: off
performance.stat-prefetch: on
performance.io-cache: off
performance.write-behind: on
performance.read-ahead: on
performance.write-behind-window-size: 4MB
performance.cache-refresh-timeout: 1
performance.cache-size: 4GB
network.frame-timeout: 60
performance.cache-max-file-size: 1GB
Cheers,
tamas
On 08/04/2014 09:22 AM, Tamas Papp wrote:
hi Poornima,
I don't really have any advice, how you could reproduce this issue
also I don't have coredump (the process killed after oom issue).
I will see, what can I do.
I set the two settings you wrote.
Cheers,
tamas
On 08/04/2014 08:36 AM, Poornima Gurusiddaiah wrote:
Hi,
From the statedump it is evident that the iobufs are leaking.
Also the hot count of the pool-name=w-vol-io-cache:rbthash_entry_t
is 10053, implies io-cache xlator could be the cause of the leak.
From the logs, it looks like, quick-read performance xlator is
calling iobuf_free with NULL pointers, implies quick-read could be
leaking iobufs as well.
As a temperory solution, could you disable io-cache and/or
quick-read and see if the leak still persists?
$gluster volume set io-cache off
$gluster volume set quick-read off
This may reduce the performance to certain extent.
For further debugging, could you provide the core dump or steps to
reproduce if avaiable?
Regards,
Poornima
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tamas Papp" <tompos@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Poornima Gurusiddaiah" <pgurusid@xxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: Gluster-users@xxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Sunday, August 3, 2014 10:33:17 PM
Subject: Re: high memory usage of mount
On 07/31/2014 09:17 AM, Tamas Papp wrote:
On 07/31/2014 09:02 AM, Poornima Gurusiddaiah wrote:
Hi,
hi,
Can you provide the statedump of the process, it can be obtained as
follows:
$ gluster --print-statedumpdir #create this directory if it doesn't
exist.
$ kill -USR1 <pid-of-glusterfs-process> #generates state dump.
http://rtfm.co.hu/glusterdump.2464.dump.1406790562.zip
Also, xporting Gluster via Samba-VFS-plugin method is preferred over
Fuse mount export. For more details refer to:
http://lalatendumohanty.wordpress.com/2014/02/11/using-glusterfs-with-samba-and-samba-vfs-plugin-for-glusterfs-on-fedora-20/
When I tried it about half year ago it didn't work properly. Clients
lost mounts, access errors etc.
But I will give it a try, though it's not included in ubuntu's samba
AFAIK.
Thank you,
tamas
ps. I forget to mention, I can see this issue only one node. The rest
of nodes are fine.
hi Poornima,
Do you have idea, what's going on here?
Thanks,
tamas
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