What happens in this case then? I'm thinking about a situation where the servers are kept in an environment that we don't control - i.e. the cloud. If the VMs are forcibly rebooted without enough time to complete a heal before the next one goes down, then it cannot be guaranteed that the data is safe? This has happened to me with Azure before, during the Meltdown/Spectre incident. From: Xavi Hernandez <jahernan@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, March 15, 2018 11:46:52 PM To: Victor T Cc: gluster-users@xxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: Disperse volume recovery and healing On Fri, Mar 16, 2018 at 4:57 AM, Victor T
<hero_of_nothing_1@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
No. After bringing up one brick and before stopping the next one, you need to be sure that there are no damaged files. You shouldn't reboot a node if "gluster volume heal <volname> info" shows damaged files.
The command "gluster volume heal <volname>" is only a tool to force heal to progress (until the bug is fixed).
Xavi
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