You can set:

*osd_scrub_during_recovery = false*

and in addition maybe set the noscrub and nodeep-scrub flags to let it
settle.

Kind regards,
Caspar


Op di 25 sep. 2018 om 12:39 schreef Sergey Malinin <[email protected]>:

> Just let it recover.
>
>   data:
>     pools:   1 pools, 4096 pgs
>     objects: 8.95 M objects, 17 TiB
>     usage:   34 TiB used, 577 TiB / 611 TiB avail
>     pgs:     94.873% pgs not active
>              48475/17901254 objects degraded (0.271%)
>              1/8950627 objects unfound (0.000%)
>              2631 peering
>              637  activating
>              562  down
>              159  active+clean
>              44   activating+degraded
>              30   active+recovery_wait+degraded
>              12   activating+undersized+degraded
>              10   active+recovering+degraded
>              10   active+undersized+degraded
>              1    active+clean+scrubbing+deep
>
> You've got deep scrubbed PGs which put considerable IO load on OSDs.
>
> September 25, 2018 1:23 PM, "by morphin" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
> > What should I do now?
> >
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