Re: How Does Gluster Failover

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Kind-of. That just tells the client what other nodes it can use to retrieve that volume configuration. It's only used during that initial fetch.

On 8/31/22 8:26 AM, Péter Károly JUHÁSZ wrote:
You can also add the mount option: backupvolfile-server to let the client know the other nodes.

Matthew J Black <duluxoz@xxxxxxxxx> 于 2022年8月31日周三 17:21写道:

Ah, it all now falls into place: I was unaware that the client receives that file upon initial contact with the cluster, and thus has that information at hand independently of the cluster nodes.

Thank you for taking the time to educate a poor newbie - it is very much appreciated.

Cheers

Dulux-Oz

On 01/09/2022 01:16, Joe Julian wrote:

You know when you do a `gluster volume info` and you get the whole volume definition, the client graph is built from the same info. In fact, if you look in /var/lib/glusterd/vols/$volume_name you'll find some ".vol" files. `$volume_name.tcp-fuse.vol` is the configuration that the clients receive from whichever server they initially connect to. You'll notice that file has multiple "type/client" sections, each establishing a tcp connection to a server.

Sidenote: You can also see in that file, how the microkernels are used to build all the logic that forms the volume, which is kinda cool. Back when I first started using gluster, there was no glusterd and you have to build those .vol files by hand.

On 8/31/22 8:04 AM, Matthew J Black wrote:

Hi Joe,

Thanks for getting back to me about this, it was helpful, and I really appreciate it.

I am, however, still (slightly) confused - *how* does the client "know" the addresses of the other servers in the cluster (for read or write purposes), when all the client has is the line in the fstab file: "gfs1:gv1  /data/gv1  glusterfs  defaults  0 2"? I'm missing something, somewhere, in all of this, and I can't work out what that "something" is.  :-)

Your help truely is appreciated

Cheers

Dulux-Oz

On 01/09/2022 00:55, Joe Julian wrote:

With a replica volume the client connects and writes to all the replicas directly. For reads, when a filename is looked up the client checks with all the replicas and, if the file is healthy, opens a read connection to the first replica to respond (by default).

If a server is shut down, the client receives the tcp messages that close the connection. For read operations, it chooses the next server. Writes will just continue to the remaining replicas (metadata is stored in extended attributes to inform future lookups and the self-healer of file health).

If a server crashes (no tcp finalization) the volume will pause for ping-timeout seconds (42 by default). Then continue as above. BTW, that 42 second timeout shouldn't be a big deal. The MTBF should be sufficiently far apart that this should still easily get you five or six nines.

On 8/30/22 11:55 PM, duluxoz wrote:

Hi Guys & Gals,

A Gluster newbie question for sure, but something I just don't "get" (or I've missed in the doco, mailing lists, etc):

What happens to a Gluster Client when a Gluster Cluster Node goes off-line / fails-over?

How does the Client "know" to use (connect to) another Gluster Node in the Gluster Cluster?

Let me elaborate.

I've got four hosts: gfs1, gfs2, gfs3, and client4 sitting on 192.168.1.1/24, .2, .3, and .4 respectively.

DNS is set up and working correctly.

gfs1, gs2, and gfs3 form a "Gluster Cluster" with a Gluster Volume (gv1) replicated across all three nodes. This is all working correctly (ie a file (file1) created/modified on gfs1:/gv1 is replicated correctly to gfs2:/gv1 and gfs3:/gv1).

client4 has an entry in its /etc/fstab file which reads: "gfs1:gv1  /data/gv1  glusterfs  defaults  0 2". This is also all working correctly (ie client4:/data/gv1/file1 is accessible and replicated).

So, (and I haven't tested this yet) what happens to client4:/data/gv1/file1 when gfs1 fails (ie is turned off, crashes, etc)?

Does client4 "automatically" switch to using one of the other two Gluster Nodes, or do I have something wrong in clients4's /etc/fstab file, or an error/mis-configuration somewhere else?

I thought about setting some DNS entries along the lines of:

~~~

glustercluster  IN  A  192.168.0.1

glustercluster  IN  A  192.168.0.2

glustercluster  IN  A  192.168.0.3

~~~

and having clients4's /etc/fstab file read: "glustercluster:gv1  /data/gv1  glusterfs  defaults  0 2", but this is a Round-Robin DNS config and I'm not sure how Gluster treats this situation.

So, if people could comment / point me in the correct direction I would really appreciate it - thanks.

Dulux-Oz


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