Re: detecting replication issues

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Hi Mohammed,

You are right that mounting it this way will do the appropriate replication. However, there are problems with that for my use case:

1. I want the mount /etc/fstab to be able to fail over to any one of the three servers that I have. so if one server is down, the client can still mount from servers 2 and 3.
2. i have configured SSL on the I/O path and I need to be able to configure the client to use TLS when it connects to the brick. I was only able to get that to work with: transport.socket.ssl-enabled off in the configuration file.

In other words, I was only able to get HA during a mount and TLS to work by using the volume config file and setting that in the /etc/fstab.

https://www.jamescoyle.net/how-to/439-mount-a-glusterfs-volume

Is there a better way to handle this?

Thanks,
Joe

On Fri, Feb 24, 2017 at 6:24 AM, Mohammed Rafi K C <rkavunga@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Hi Joseph,

I think there is gap in understanding your problem. Let me try to give more clear picture on this,

First , couple of clarification points here

1) client graph is an internally generated configuration file based on your volume, that said you don't need to create or edit your own. If you want a 3-way replicated volume you have to mention that when you create the volume.

2) When you mount a gluster volume, you don't need to provide any client graph, you just need to give server hostname and volname, it will automatically fetches the graph and start working on it (so it does the replication based on the graph generated by gluster management daemon)


Now let me briefly describe the procedure for creating a 3-way replicated volume

1) gluster volume create <volname> replica 3 <hostname>:/<brick_path1> <hostname>:/<brick_path2> <hostname>:/<brick_path3>

     Note : if you give 3 more bricks , then it will create 2-way distributed 3 way replicated volume (you can increase the distribution by adding multiple if 3)

     this step will automatically create the configuration file in /var/lib/glusterd/vols/<volname>/trusted-<volname>.tcp-fuse.vol

2) Now start the volume using gluster volume start <volname>

3) Fuse mount the volume in client machine using the command mount -t glusterfs <server_hostname>:/<volname>   /<mnt>

    this will automatically fetches the configuration file and will do the replication. You don't need to do anything


Let me know if this helps.


Regards

Rafi KC


On 02/24/2017 05:13 PM, Joseph Lorenzini wrote:
HI Mohammed,

Its not a bug per se, its a configuration and documentation issue. I searched the gluster documentation pretty thoroughly and I did not find anything that discussed the 1) client's call graph and 2) how to specifically configure a native glusterfs client to properly specify that call graph so that replication will happen across multiple bricks. If its there, then there's a pretty severe organization issue in the documentation (I am pretty sure I ended up reading almost every page actually).

As a result, because I was a new to gluster, my initial set up really confused me. I would follow the instructions as documented in official gluster docs (execute the mount command), write data on the mount...and then only see it replicated to a single brick. It was only after much furious googling did I manage to figure out that that 1) i needed a client configuration file which should be specified in /etc/fstab and 2) that configuration block mentioned above was the key.

I am actually planning on submitting a PR to the documentation to cover all this. To be clear, I am sure this is obvious to a seasoned gluster user -- but it is not at all obvious to someone who is new to gluster such as myself.

So I am an operations engineer. I like reproducible deployments and I like monitoring to alert me when something is wrong. Due to human error or a bug in our deployment code, its possible that something like not setting the client call graph properly could happen. I wanted a way to detect this problem so that if it does happen, it can be remediated immediately.

Your suggestion sounds promising. I shall definitely look into that. Though that might be a useful information to surface up in a CLI command in a future gluster release IMHO.

Joe



On Thu, Feb 23, 2017 at 11:51 PM, Mohammed Rafi K C <rkavunga@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:



On 02/23/2017 11:12 PM, Joseph Lorenzini wrote:
Hi all,

I have a simple replicated volume with a replica count of 3. To ensure any file changes (create/delete/modify) are replicated to all bricks, I have this setting in my client configuration.

 volume gv0-replicate-0
    type cluster/replicate
    subvolumes gv0-client-0 gv0-client-1 gv0-client-2
end-volume

And that works as expected. My question is how one could detect if this was not happening which could poise a severe problem with data consistency and replication. For example, those settings could be omitted from the client config and then the client will only write data to one brick and all kinds of terrible things will start happening. I have not found a way the gluster volume cli to detect when that kind of problem is occurring. For example gluster volume heal <volname> info does not detect this problem. 

Is there any programmatic way to detect when this problem is occurring?


I couldn't understand how you will end up in this situation. There is only one possibility (assuming there is no bug :) ), ie you changed the client graph in a way that there is only one subvolume to replica server.

To check that the simply way is, there is a xlator called meta, which provides meta data information through mount point, similiar to linux proc file system. So you can check the active graph through meta and see the number of subvolumes for replica xlator

for example : the directory   <mount point>/.meta/graphs/active/<volname>-replicate-0/subvolumes will have entries for each replica clients , so in your case you should see 3 directories.


Let me know if this helps.

Regards
Rafi KC


Thanks,
Joe





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