There are 2 hosts involved and we have a replica value of 2. The hosts are called n1c1cl1 and n1c2cl1. Below is the info you requested. The file name in gluster is "/97f52c71-80bd-4c2b-8e47-3c8c77712687". -- From the n1c1cl1 brick -- [root@n1c1cl1 ~]# ll -h /data/brick0/gv0cl1/97f52c71-80bd-4c2b-8e47-3c8c77712687 -rwxr--r--. 2 root root 3.7G May 5 12:10 /data/brick0/gv0cl1/97f52c71-80bd-4c2b-8e47-3c8c77712687 [root@n1c1cl1 ~]# getfattr -d -m . -e hex /data/brick0/gv0cl1/97f52c71-80bd-4c2b-8e47-3c8c77712687 getfattr: Removing leading '/' from absolute path names # file: data/brick0/gv0cl1/97f52c71-80bd-4c2b-8e47-3c8c77712687 security.selinux=0x73797374656d5f753a6f626a6563745f723a64656661756c745f743a733000 trusted.afr.dirty=0xe68000000000000000000000 trusted.bit-rot.version=0x020000000000000057196a8d000e1606 trusted.gfid=0xb1a49bd1ea01479f9a8277992461e85f -- From the n1c2cl1 brick -- [root@n1c2cl1 ~]# ll -h /data/brick0/gv0cl1/97f52c71-80bd-4c2b-8e47-3c8c77712687 -rwxr--r--. 2 root root 3.7G May 5 12:16 /data/brick0/gv0cl1/97f52c71-80bd-4c2b-8e47-3c8c77712687 [root@n1c2cl1 ~]# getfattr -d -m . -e hex /data/brick0/gv0cl1/97f52c71-80bd-4c2b-8e47-3c8c77712687 getfattr: Removing leading '/' from absolute path names # file: data/brick0/gv0cl1/97f52c71-80bd-4c2b-8e47-3c8c77712687 security.selinux=0x73797374656d5f753a6f626a6563745f723a64656661756c745f743a733000 trusted.afr.dirty=0xd38000000000000000000000 trusted.bit-rot.version=0x020000000000000057196a8d000e20ae trusted.gfid=0xb1a49bd1ea01479f9a8277992461e85f -- The "trusted.afr.dirty" is changing about 2 or 3 times a minute on both files. Let me know if you need further info and thanks. Richard Klein RSI From: Ravishankar N [mailto:ravishankar@xxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Wednesday, May 04, 2016 8:52 PM To: Richard Klein (RSI); gluster-users@xxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: Question about "Possibly undergoing heal" on a file being reported. >On 05/05/2016 01:50 AM, Richard Klein (RSI) wrote: >First time e-mailer to the group, greetings all. We are using Gluster 3.7.6 in Cloudstack on CentOS7 with KVM. Gluster is our primary storage. All is going well >but we have a test VM QCOW2 volume that gets stuck in the "Possibly undergoing healing". By stuck I mean it stays in that state for over 24 hrs. This is a test VM >with no activity on it and we have removed the swap file on the guest as well thinking that may be causing high I/O. All the tools show that the VM is basically idle >with low I/O. The only way I can clear it up is to power the VM off, move the QCOW2 volume from the Gluster mount then back (basically remove and recreate it) >then power the VM back on. Once I do this process all is well again but then it happened again on the same volume/file. > >One additional note, I have even powered off the VM completely and the QCOW2 file still stays in this state. > >When this happens, can you share the output of the extended attributes of the file in question from all the bricks of the replica in which the file resides? `getfattr -d -m . -e hex /path/to/bricks/file-name` Also what is the size of this VM image file? Thanks, Ravi >Is there a way to stop/abort or force the heal to finish? Any help with a direction would be appreciated. > >Thanks, > >Richard Klein >RSI _______________________________________________ Gluster-users mailing list Gluster-users@xxxxxxxxxxx http://www.gluster.org/mailman/listinfo/gluster-users _______________________________________________ Gluster-users mailing list Gluster-users@xxxxxxxxxxx http://www.gluster.org/mailman/listinfo/gluster-users