X-Git-Url: https://gerrit.opnfv.org/gerrit/gitweb?a=blobdiff_plain;f=src%2Fceph%2Fdoc%2Frados%2Ftroubleshooting%2Ftroubleshooting-osd.rst;fp=src%2Fceph%2Fdoc%2Frados%2Ftroubleshooting%2Ftroubleshooting-osd.rst;h=88307fe2a9bcf0d0fd95ac781f83fca54e89aba3;hb=812ff6ca9fcd3e629e49d4328905f33eee8ca3f5;hp=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000;hpb=15280273faafb77777eab341909a3f495cf248d9;p=stor4nfv.git diff --git a/src/ceph/doc/rados/troubleshooting/troubleshooting-osd.rst b/src/ceph/doc/rados/troubleshooting/troubleshooting-osd.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..88307fe --- /dev/null +++ b/src/ceph/doc/rados/troubleshooting/troubleshooting-osd.rst @@ -0,0 +1,536 @@ +====================== + Troubleshooting OSDs +====================== + +Before troubleshooting your OSDs, check your monitors and network first. If +you execute ``ceph health`` or ``ceph -s`` on the command line and Ceph returns +a health status, it means that the monitors have a quorum. +If you don't have a monitor quorum or if there are errors with the monitor +status, `address the monitor issues first <../troubleshooting-mon>`_. +Check your networks to ensure they +are running properly, because networks may have a significant impact on OSD +operation and performance. + + + +Obtaining Data About OSDs +========================= + +A good first step in troubleshooting your OSDs is to obtain information in +addition to the information you collected while `monitoring your OSDs`_ +(e.g., ``ceph osd tree``). + + +Ceph Logs +--------- + +If you haven't changed the default path, you can find Ceph log files at +``/var/log/ceph``:: + + ls /var/log/ceph + +If you don't get enough log detail, you can change your logging level. See +`Logging and Debugging`_ for details to ensure that Ceph performs adequately +under high logging volume. + + +Admin Socket +------------ + +Use the admin socket tool to retrieve runtime information. For details, list +the sockets for your Ceph processes:: + + ls /var/run/ceph + +Then, execute the following, replacing ``{daemon-name}`` with an actual +daemon (e.g., ``osd.0``):: + + ceph daemon osd.0 help + +Alternatively, you can specify a ``{socket-file}`` (e.g., something in ``/var/run/ceph``):: + + ceph daemon {socket-file} help + + +The admin socket, among other things, allows you to: + +- List your configuration at runtime +- Dump historic operations +- Dump the operation priority queue state +- Dump operations in flight +- Dump perfcounters + + +Display Freespace +----------------- + +Filesystem issues may arise. To display your filesystem's free space, execute +``df``. :: + + df -h + +Execute ``df --help`` for additional usage. + + +I/O Statistics +-------------- + +Use `iostat`_ to identify I/O-related issues. :: + + iostat -x + + +Diagnostic Messages +------------------- + +To retrieve diagnostic messages, use ``dmesg`` with ``less``, ``more``, ``grep`` +or ``tail``. For example:: + + dmesg | grep scsi + + +Stopping w/out Rebalancing +========================== + +Periodically, you may need to perform maintenance on a subset of your cluster, +or resolve a problem that affects a failure domain (e.g., a rack). If you do not +want CRUSH to automatically rebalance the cluster as you stop OSDs for +maintenance, set the cluster to ``noout`` first:: + + ceph osd set noout + +Once the cluster is set to ``noout``, you can begin stopping the OSDs within the +failure domain that requires maintenance work. :: + + stop ceph-osd id={num} + +.. note:: Placement groups within the OSDs you stop will become ``degraded`` + while you are addressing issues with within the failure domain. + +Once you have completed your maintenance, restart the OSDs. :: + + start ceph-osd id={num} + +Finally, you must unset the cluster from ``noout``. :: + + ceph osd unset noout + + + +.. _osd-not-running: + +OSD Not Running +=============== + +Under normal circumstances, simply restarting the ``ceph-osd`` daemon will +allow it to rejoin the cluster and recover. + +An OSD Won't Start +------------------ + +If you start your cluster and an OSD won't start, check the following: + +- **Configuration File:** If you were not able to get OSDs running from + a new installation, check your configuration file to ensure it conforms + (e.g., ``host`` not ``hostname``, etc.). + +- **Check Paths:** Check the paths in your configuration, and the actual + paths themselves for data and journals. If you separate the OSD data from + the journal data and there are errors in your configuration file or in the + actual mounts, you may have trouble starting OSDs. If you want to store the + journal on a block device, you should partition your journal disk and assign + one partition per OSD. + +- **Check Max Threadcount:** If you have a node with a lot of OSDs, you may be + hitting the default maximum number of threads (e.g., usually 32k), especially + during recovery. You can increase the number of threads using ``sysctl`` to + see if increasing the maximum number of threads to the maximum possible + number of threads allowed (i.e., 4194303) will help. For example:: + + sysctl -w kernel.pid_max=4194303 + + If increasing the maximum thread count resolves the issue, you can make it + permanent by including a ``kernel.pid_max`` setting in the + ``/etc/sysctl.conf`` file. For example:: + + kernel.pid_max = 4194303 + +- **Kernel Version:** Identify the kernel version and distribution you + are using. Ceph uses some third party tools by default, which may be + buggy or may conflict with certain distributions and/or kernel + versions (e.g., Google perftools). Check the `OS recommendations`_ + to ensure you have addressed any issues related to your kernel. + +- **Segment Fault:** If there is a segment fault, turn your logging up + (if it is not already), and try again. If it segment faults again, + contact the ceph-devel email list and provide your Ceph configuration + file, your monitor output and the contents of your log file(s). + + + +An OSD Failed +------------- + +When a ``ceph-osd`` process dies, the monitor will learn about the failure +from surviving ``ceph-osd`` daemons and report it via the ``ceph health`` +command:: + + ceph health + HEALTH_WARN 1/3 in osds are down + +Specifically, you will get a warning whenever there are ``ceph-osd`` +processes that are marked ``in`` and ``down``. You can identify which +``ceph-osds`` are ``down`` with:: + + ceph health detail + HEALTH_WARN 1/3 in osds are down + osd.0 is down since epoch 23, last address 192.168.106.220:6800/11080 + +If there is a disk +failure or other fault preventing ``ceph-osd`` from functioning or +restarting, an error message should be present in its log file in +``/var/log/ceph``. + +If the daemon stopped because of a heartbeat failure, the underlying +kernel file system may be unresponsive. Check ``dmesg`` output for disk +or other kernel errors. + +If the problem is a software error (failed assertion or other +unexpected error), it should be reported to the `ceph-devel`_ email list. + + +No Free Drive Space +------------------- + +Ceph prevents you from writing to a full OSD so that you don't lose data. +In an operational cluster, you should receive a warning when your cluster +is getting near its full ratio. The ``mon osd full ratio`` defaults to +``0.95``, or 95% of capacity before it stops clients from writing data. +The ``mon osd backfillfull ratio`` defaults to ``0.90``, or 90 % of +capacity when it blocks backfills from starting. The +``mon osd nearfull ratio`` defaults to ``0.85``, or 85% of capacity +when it generates a health warning. + +Full cluster issues usually arise when testing how Ceph handles an OSD +failure on a small cluster. When one node has a high percentage of the +cluster's data, the cluster can easily eclipse its nearfull and full ratio +immediately. If you are testing how Ceph reacts to OSD failures on a small +cluster, you should leave ample free disk space and consider temporarily +lowering the ``mon osd full ratio``, ``mon osd backfillfull ratio`` and +``mon osd nearfull ratio``. + +Full ``ceph-osds`` will be reported by ``ceph health``:: + + ceph health + HEALTH_WARN 1 nearfull osd(s) + +Or:: + + ceph health detail + HEALTH_ERR 1 full osd(s); 1 backfillfull osd(s); 1 nearfull osd(s) + osd.3 is full at 97% + osd.4 is backfill full at 91% + osd.2 is near full at 87% + +The best way to deal with a full cluster is to add new ``ceph-osds``, allowing +the cluster to redistribute data to the newly available storage. + +If you cannot start an OSD because it is full, you may delete some data by deleting +some placement group directories in the full OSD. + +.. important:: If you choose to delete a placement group directory on a full OSD, + **DO NOT** delete the same placement group directory on another full OSD, or + **YOU MAY LOSE DATA**. You **MUST** maintain at least one copy of your data on + at least one OSD. + +See `Monitor Config Reference`_ for additional details. + + +OSDs are Slow/Unresponsive +========================== + +A commonly recurring issue involves slow or unresponsive OSDs. Ensure that you +have eliminated other troubleshooting possibilities before delving into OSD +performance issues. For example, ensure that your network(s) is working properly +and your OSDs are running. Check to see if OSDs are throttling recovery traffic. + +.. tip:: Newer versions of Ceph provide better recovery handling by preventing + recovering OSDs from using up system resources so that ``up`` and ``in`` + OSDs are not available or are otherwise slow. + + +Networking Issues +----------------- + +Ceph is a distributed storage system, so it depends upon networks to peer with +OSDs, replicate objects, recover from faults and check heartbeats. Networking +issues can cause OSD latency and flapping OSDs. See `Flapping OSDs`_ for +details. + +Ensure that Ceph processes and Ceph-dependent processes are connected and/or +listening. :: + + netstat -a | grep ceph + netstat -l | grep ceph + sudo netstat -p | grep ceph + +Check network statistics. :: + + netstat -s + + +Drive Configuration +------------------- + +A storage drive should only support one OSD. Sequential read and sequential +write throughput can bottleneck if other processes share the drive, including +journals, operating systems, monitors, other OSDs and non-Ceph processes. + +Ceph acknowledges writes *after* journaling, so fast SSDs are an +attractive option to accelerate the response time--particularly when +using the ``XFS`` or ``ext4`` filesystems. By contrast, the ``btrfs`` +filesystem can write and journal simultaneously. (Note, however, that +we recommend against using ``btrfs`` for production deployments.) + +.. note:: Partitioning a drive does not change its total throughput or + sequential read/write limits. Running a journal in a separate partition + may help, but you should prefer a separate physical drive. + + +Bad Sectors / Fragmented Disk +----------------------------- + +Check your disks for bad sectors and fragmentation. This can cause total throughput +to drop substantially. + + +Co-resident Monitors/OSDs +------------------------- + +Monitors are generally light-weight processes, but they do lots of ``fsync()``, +which can interfere with other workloads, particularly if monitors run on the +same drive as your OSDs. Additionally, if you run monitors on the same host as +the OSDs, you may incur performance issues related to: + +- Running an older kernel (pre-3.0) +- Running Argonaut with an old ``glibc`` +- Running a kernel with no syncfs(2) syscall. + +In these cases, multiple OSDs running on the same host can drag each other down +by doing lots of commits. That often leads to the bursty writes. + + +Co-resident Processes +--------------------- + +Spinning up co-resident processes such as a cloud-based solution, virtual +machines and other applications that write data to Ceph while operating on the +same hardware as OSDs can introduce significant OSD latency. Generally, we +recommend optimizing a host for use with Ceph and using other hosts for other +processes. The practice of separating Ceph operations from other applications +may help improve performance and may streamline troubleshooting and maintenance. + + +Logging Levels +-------------- + +If you turned logging levels up to track an issue and then forgot to turn +logging levels back down, the OSD may be putting a lot of logs onto the disk. If +you intend to keep logging levels high, you may consider mounting a drive to the +default path for logging (i.e., ``/var/log/ceph/$cluster-$name.log``). + + +Recovery Throttling +------------------- + +Depending upon your configuration, Ceph may reduce recovery rates to maintain +performance or it may increase recovery rates to the point that recovery +impacts OSD performance. Check to see if the OSD is recovering. + + +Kernel Version +-------------- + +Check the kernel version you are running. Older kernels may not receive +new backports that Ceph depends upon for better performance. + + +Kernel Issues with SyncFS +------------------------- + +Try running one OSD per host to see if performance improves. Old kernels +might not have a recent enough version of ``glibc`` to support ``syncfs(2)``. + + +Filesystem Issues +----------------- + +Currently, we recommend deploying clusters with XFS. + +We recommend against using btrfs or ext4. The btrfs filesystem has +many attractive features, but bugs in the filesystem may lead to +performance issues and suprious ENOSPC errors. We do not recommend +ext4 because xattr size limitations break our support for long object +names (needed for RGW). + +For more information, see `Filesystem Recommendations`_. + +.. _Filesystem Recommendations: ../configuration/filesystem-recommendations + + +Insufficient RAM +---------------- + +We recommend 1GB of RAM per OSD daemon. You may notice that during normal +operations, the OSD only uses a fraction of that amount (e.g., 100-200MB). +Unused RAM makes it tempting to use the excess RAM for co-resident applications, +VMs and so forth. However, when OSDs go into recovery mode, their memory +utilization spikes. If there is no RAM available, the OSD performance will slow +considerably. + + +Old Requests or Slow Requests +----------------------------- + +If a ``ceph-osd`` daemon is slow to respond to a request, it will generate log messages +complaining about requests that are taking too long. The warning threshold +defaults to 30 seconds, and is configurable via the ``osd op complaint time`` +option. When this happens, the cluster log will receive messages. + +Legacy versions of Ceph complain about 'old requests`:: + + osd.0 192.168.106.220:6800/18813 312 : [WRN] old request osd_op(client.5099.0:790 fatty_26485_object789 [write 0~4096] 2.5e54f643) v4 received at 2012-03-06 15:42:56.054801 currently waiting for sub ops + +New versions of Ceph complain about 'slow requests`:: + + {date} {osd.num} [WRN] 1 slow requests, 1 included below; oldest blocked for > 30.005692 secs + {date} {osd.num} [WRN] slow request 30.005692 seconds old, received at {date-time}: osd_op(client.4240.0:8 benchmark_data_ceph-1_39426_object7 [write 0~4194304] 0.69848840) v4 currently waiting for subops from [610] + + +Possible causes include: + +- A bad drive (check ``dmesg`` output) +- A bug in the kernel file system bug (check ``dmesg`` output) +- An overloaded cluster (check system load, iostat, etc.) +- A bug in the ``ceph-osd`` daemon. + +Possible solutions + +- Remove VMs Cloud Solutions from Ceph Hosts +- Upgrade Kernel +- Upgrade Ceph +- Restart OSDs + +Debugging Slow Requests +----------------------- + +If you run "ceph daemon osd. dump_historic_ops" or "dump_ops_in_flight", +you will see a set of operations and a list of events each operation went +through. These are briefly described below. + +Events from the Messenger layer: + +- header_read: when the messenger first started reading the message off the wire +- throttled: when the messenger tried to acquire memory throttle space to read + the message into memory +- all_read: when the messenger finished reading the message off the wire +- dispatched: when the messenger gave the message to the OSD +- Initiated: : the primary marks this when it + hears about the above, but for a particular replica +- commit_sent: we sent a reply back to the client (or primary OSD, for sub ops) + +Many of these events are seemingly redundant, but cross important boundaries in +the internal code (such as passing data across locks into new threads). + +Flapping OSDs +============= + +We recommend using both a public (front-end) network and a cluster (back-end) +network so that you can better meet the capacity requirements of object +replication. Another advantage is that you can run a cluster network such that +it is not connected to the internet, thereby preventing some denial of service +attacks. When OSDs peer and check heartbeats, they use the cluster (back-end) +network when it's available. See `Monitor/OSD Interaction`_ for details. + +However, if the cluster (back-end) network fails or develops significant latency +while the public (front-end) network operates optimally, OSDs currently do not +handle this situation well. What happens is that OSDs mark each other ``down`` +on the monitor, while marking themselves ``up``. We call this scenario +'flapping`. + +If something is causing OSDs to 'flap' (repeatedly getting marked ``down`` and +then ``up`` again), you can force the monitors to stop the flapping with:: + + ceph osd set noup # prevent OSDs from getting marked up + ceph osd set nodown # prevent OSDs from getting marked down + +These flags are recorded in the osdmap structure:: + + ceph osd dump | grep flags + flags no-up,no-down + +You can clear the flags with:: + + ceph osd unset noup + ceph osd unset nodown + +Two other flags are supported, ``noin`` and ``noout``, which prevent +booting OSDs from being marked ``in`` (allocated data) or protect OSDs +from eventually being marked ``out`` (regardless of what the current value for +``mon osd down out interval`` is). + +.. note:: ``noup``, ``noout``, and ``nodown`` are temporary in the + sense that once the flags are cleared, the action they were blocking + should occur shortly after. The ``noin`` flag, on the other hand, + prevents OSDs from being marked ``in`` on boot, and any daemons that + started while the flag was set will remain that way. + + + + + + +.. _iostat: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iostat +.. _Ceph Logging and Debugging: ../../configuration/ceph-conf#ceph-logging-and-debugging +.. _Logging and Debugging: ../log-and-debug +.. _Debugging and Logging: ../debug +.. _Monitor/OSD Interaction: ../../configuration/mon-osd-interaction +.. _Monitor Config Reference: ../../configuration/mon-config-ref +.. _monitoring your OSDs: ../../operations/monitoring-osd-pg +.. _subscribe to the ceph-devel email list: mailto:majordomo@vger.kernel.org?body=subscribe+ceph-devel +.. _unsubscribe from the ceph-devel email list: mailto:majordomo@vger.kernel.org?body=unsubscribe+ceph-devel +.. _subscribe to the ceph-users email list: mailto:ceph-users-join@lists.ceph.com +.. _unsubscribe from the ceph-users email list: mailto:ceph-users-leave@lists.ceph.com +.. _OS recommendations: ../../../start/os-recommendations +.. _ceph-devel: ceph-devel@vger.kernel.org