On 1/29/2018 12:19 AM, Nithya Balachandran wrote:
Csaba,
Could this be the problem of the inodes not getting freed in the fuse
process?
Daniel,
as Ravi requested, please provide access to the statedumps. You can strip
out the filepath information.
Working on filing a bug report and getting you the dumps now. Will
update soon.
Does your data set include a lot of directories?
The volume in question has 1M+ files and 77k+ directories.
Cheers!
Dan
Thanks,
Nithya
On 27 January 2018 at 10:23, Ravishankar N <ravishankar@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 01/27/2018 02:29 AM, Dan Ragle wrote:
On 1/25/2018 8:21 PM, Ravishankar N wrote:
On 01/25/2018 11:04 PM, Dan Ragle wrote:
*sigh* trying again to correct formatting ... apologize for the earlier
mess.
Having a memory issue with Gluster 3.12.4 and not sure how to
troubleshoot. I don't *think* this is expected behavior.
This is on an updated CentOS 7 box. The setup is a simple two node
replicated layout where the two nodes act as both server and
client.
The volume in question:
Volume Name: GlusterWWW
Type: Replicate
Volume ID: 8e9b0e79-f309-4d9b-a5bb-45d065faaaa3
Status: Started
Snapshot Count: 0
Number of Bricks: 1 x 2 = 2
Transport-type: tcp
Bricks:
Brick1: vs1dlan.mydomain.com:/glusterfs_bricks/brick1/www
Brick2: vs2dlan.mydomain.com:/glusterfs_bricks/brick1/www
Options Reconfigured:
nfs.disable: on
cluster.favorite-child-policy: mtime
transport.address-family: inet
I had some other performance options in there, (increased cache-size,
md invalidation, etc) but stripped them out in an attempt to
isolate the issue. Still got the problem without them.
The volume currently contains over 1M files.
When mounting the volume, I get (among other things) a process as such:
/usr/sbin/glusterfs --volfile-server=localhost --volfile-id=/GlusterWWW
/var/www
This process begins with little memory, but then as files are accessed
in the volume the memory increases. I setup a script that
simply reads the files in the volume one at a time (no writes). It's
been running on and off about 12 hours now and the resident
memory of the above process is already at 7.5G and continues to grow
slowly. If I stop the test script the memory stops growing,
but does not reduce. Restart the test script and the memory begins
slowly growing again.
This is obviously a contrived app environment. With my intended
application load it takes about a week or so for the memory to get
high enough to invoke the oom killer.
Can you try debugging with the statedump (https://gluster.readthedocs.i
o/en/latest/Troubleshooting/statedump/#read-a-statedump) of
the fuse mount process and see what member is leaking? Take the
statedumps in succession, maybe once initially during the I/O and
once the memory gets high enough to hit the OOM mark.
Share the dumps here.
Regards,
Ravi
Thanks for the reply. I noticed yesterday that an update (3.12.5) had
been posted so I went ahead and updated and repeated the test overnight.
The memory usage does not appear to be growing as quickly as is was with
3.12.4, but does still appear to be growing.
I should also mention that there is another process beyond my test app
that is reading the files from the volume. Specifically, there is an rsync
that runs from the second node 2-4 times an hour that reads from the
GlusterWWW volume mounted on node 1. Since none of the files in that mount
are changing it doesn't actually rsync anything, but nonetheless it is
running and reading the files in addition to my test script. (It's a part
of my intended production setup that I forgot was still running.)
The mount process appears to be gaining memory at a rate of about 1GB
every 4 hours or so. At that rate it'll take several days before it runs
the box out of memory. But I took your suggestion and made some statedumps
today anyway, about 2 hours apart, 4 total so far. It looks like there may
already be some actionable information. These are the only registers where
the num_allocs have grown with each of the four samples:
[mount/fuse.fuse - usage-type gf_fuse_mt_gids_t memusage]
---> num_allocs at Fri Jan 26 08:57:31 2018: 784
---> num_allocs at Fri Jan 26 10:55:50 2018: 831
---> num_allocs at Fri Jan 26 12:55:15 2018: 877
---> num_allocs at Fri Jan 26 14:58:27 2018: 908
[mount/fuse.fuse - usage-type gf_common_mt_fd_lk_ctx_t memusage]
---> num_allocs at Fri Jan 26 08:57:31 2018: 5
---> num_allocs at Fri Jan 26 10:55:50 2018: 10
---> num_allocs at Fri Jan 26 12:55:15 2018: 15
---> num_allocs at Fri Jan 26 14:58:27 2018: 17
[cluster/distribute.GlusterWWW-dht - usage-type gf_dht_mt_dht_layout_t
memusage]
---> num_allocs at Fri Jan 26 08:57:31 2018: 24243596
---> num_allocs at Fri Jan 26 10:55:50 2018: 27902622
---> num_allocs at Fri Jan 26 12:55:15 2018: 30678066
---> num_allocs at Fri Jan 26 14:58:27 2018: 33801036
Not sure the best way to get you the full dumps. They're pretty big, over
1G for all four. Also, I noticed some filepath information in there that
I'd rather not share. What's the recommended next step?
I've CC'd the fuse/ dht devs to see if these data types have potential
leaks. Could you raise a bug with the volume info and a (dropbox?) link
from which we can download the dumps? You can remove/replace the filepaths
from them.
Regards.
Ravi
Cheers!
Dan
Is there potentially something misconfigured here?
I did see a reference to a memory leak in another thread in this list,
but that had to do with the setting of quotas, I don't have
any quotas set on my system.
Thanks,
Dan Ragle
daniel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On 1/25/2018 11:04 AM, Dan Ragle wrote:
Having a memory issue with Gluster 3.12.4 and not sure how to
troubleshoot. I don't *think* this is expected behavior. This is on an
updated CentOS 7 box. The setup is a simple two node replicated layout
where the two nodes act as both server and client. The volume in
question: Volume Name: GlusterWWW Type: Replicate Volume ID:
8e9b0e79-f309-4d9b-a5bb-45d065faaaa3 Status: Started Snapshot Count: 0
Number of Bricks: 1 x 2 = 2 Transport-type: tcp Bricks: Brick1:
vs1dlan.mydomain.com:/glusterfs_bricks/brick1/www Brick2:
vs2dlan.mydomain.com:/glusterfs_bricks/brick1/www Options
Reconfigured:
nfs.disable: on cluster.favorite-child-policy: mtime
transport.address-family: inet I had some other performance options in
there, (increased cache-size, md invalidation, etc) but stripped them
out in an attempt to isolate the issue. Still got the problem without
them. The volume currently contains over 1M files. When mounting the
volume, I get (among other things) a process as such:
/usr/sbin/glusterfs --volfile-server=localhost --volfile-id=/GlusterWWW
/var/www This process begins with little memory, but then as files are
accessed in the volume the memory increases. I setup a script that
simply reads the files in the volume one at a time (no writes). It's
been running on and off about 12 hours now and the resident memory of
the above process is already at 7.5G and continues to grow slowly. If I
stop the test script the memory stops growing, but does not reduce.
Restart the test script and the memory begins slowly growing again.
This
is obviously a contrived app environment. With my intended application
load it takes about a week or so for the memory to get high enough to
invoke the oom killer. Is there potentially something misconfigured
here? Thanks, Dan Ragle daniel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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