Additional info -- I know that /var/lib/ceph/osd/ceph-{60..69} are not
mounted at this point (i.e. mount | grep ceph-60, and 61-69, returns
nothing.). They don't show up when I run "df", either.
On Mon, Nov 5, 2018 at 10:15 AM, Hayashida, Mami <[email protected]>
wrote:
> Well, over the weekend the whole server went down and is now in the
> emergency mode. (I am running Ubuntu 16.04). When I run "journalctl -p
> err -xb" I see that
>
> systemd[1]: Timed out waiting for device dev-sdh1.device.
> -- Subject: Unit dev-sdh1.device has failed
> -- Defined-By: systemd
> -- Support: http://lists.freeddesktop.org/....
> --
> -- Unit dev-sdh1.device has failed.
>
>
> I see this for every single one of the newly-converted Bluestore OSD disks
> (/dev/sd{h..q}1).
>
>
> --
>
> On Mon, Nov 5, 2018 at 9:57 AM, Alfredo Deza <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> On Fri, Nov 2, 2018 at 5:04 PM Hayashida, Mami <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>> >
>> > I followed all the steps Hector suggested, and almost everything seems
>> to have worked fine. I say "almost" because one out of the 10 osds I was
>> migrating could not be activated even though everything up to that point
>> worked just as well for that osd as the other ones. Here is the output for
>> that particular failure:
>> >
>> > *****
>> > ceph-volume lvm activate --all
>> > ...
>> > --> Activating OSD ID 67 FSID 17cd6755-76f9-4160-906c-XXXXXX
>> > Running command: mount -t tmpfs tmpfs /var/lib/ceph/osd/ceph-67
>> > --> Absolute path not found for executable: restorecon
>> > --> Ensure $PATH environment variable contains common executable
>> locations
>> > Running command: ceph-bluestore-tool --cluster=ceph prime-osd-dir --dev
>> /dev/hdd67/data67 --path /var/lib/ceph/osd/ceph-67
>> > stderr: failed to read label for /dev/hdd67/data67: (2) No such file
>> or directory
>> > --> RuntimeError: command returned non-zero exit status:
>>
>> I wonder if the /dev/sdo device where hdd67/data67 is located is
>> available, or if something else is missing. You could try poking
>> around with `lvs` and see if that LV shows up, also `ceph-volume lvm
>> list hdd67/data67` can help here because it
>> groups OSDs to LVs. If you run `ceph-volume lvm list --format=json
>> hdd67/data67` you will also see all the metadata stored in it.
>>
>> Would be interesting to see that output to verify things exist and are
>> usable for OSD activation.
>>
>> >
>> > *******
>> > I then checked to see if the rest of the migrated OSDs were back in by
>> calling the ceph osd tree command from the admin node. Since they were
>> not, I tried to restart the first of the 10 newly migrated Bluestore osds
>> by calling
>> >
>> > *******
>> > systemctl start ceph-osd@60
>> >
>> > At that point, not only this particular service could not be started,
>> but ALL the OSDs (daemons) on the entire node shut down!!!!!
>> >
>> > ******
>> > root@osd1:~# systemctl status ceph-osd@60
>> > ● [email protected] - Ceph object storage daemon osd.60
>> > Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/[email protected];
>> enabled-runtime; vendor preset: enabled)
>> > Active: inactive (dead) since Fri 2018-11-02 15:47:20 EDT; 1h 9min
>> ago
>> > Process: 3473621 ExecStart=/usr/bin/ceph-osd -f --cluster ${CLUSTER}
>> --id %i --setuser ceph --setgroup ceph (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
>> > Process: 3473147 ExecStartPre=/usr/lib/ceph/ceph-osd-prestart.sh
>> --cluster ${CLUSTER} --id %i (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
>> > Main PID: 3473621 (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
>> >
>> > Oct 29 15:57:53 osd1.xxxxx.uky.edu ceph-osd[3473621]: 2018-10-29
>> 15:57:53.868856 7f68adaece00 -1 osd.60 48106 log_to_monitors {default=true}
>> > Oct 29 15:57:53 osd1.xxxxx.uky.edu ceph-osd[3473621]: 2018-10-29
>> 15:57:53.874373 7f68adaece00 -1 osd.60 48106 mon_cmd_maybe_osd_create fail:
>> 'you must complete the upgrade and 'ceph osd require-osd-release luminous'
>> before using crush device classes': (1) Operation not permitted
>> > Oct 30 06:25:01 osd1.xxxxx.uky.edu ceph-osd[3473621]: 2018-10-30
>> 06:25:01.961720 7f687feb3700 -1 received signal: Hangup from PID: 3485955
>> task name: killall -q -1 ceph-mon ceph-mgr ceph-mds ceph-osd ceph-fuse
>> radosgw UID: 0
>> > Oct 31 06:25:02 osd1.xxxxx.uky.edu ceph-osd[3473621]: 2018-10-31
>> 06:25:02.110898 7f687feb3700 -1 received signal: Hangup from PID: 3500945
>> task name: killall -q -1 ceph-mon ceph-mgr ceph-mds ceph-osd ceph-fuse
>> radosgw UID: 0
>> > Nov 01 06:25:02 osd1.xxxxx.uky.edu ceph-osd[3473621]: 2018-11-01
>> 06:25:02.101548 7f687feb3700 -1 received signal: Hangup from PID: 3514774
>> task name: killall -q -1 ceph-mon ceph-mgr ceph-mds ceph-osd ceph-fuse
>> radosgw UID: 0
>> > Nov 02 06:25:02 osd1.xxxxx.uky.edu ceph-osd[3473621]: 2018-11-02
>> 06:25:01.997557 7f687feb3700 -1 received signal: Hangup from PID: 3528128
>> task name: killall -q -1 ceph-mon ceph-mgr ceph-mds ceph-osd ceph-fuse
>> radosgw UID: 0
>> > Nov 02 15:47:16 osd1.oxxxxx.uky.edu ceph-osd[3473621]: 2018-11-02
>> 15:47:16.322229 7f687feb3700 -1 received signal: Terminated from PID: 1
>> task name: /lib/systemd/systemd --system --deserialize 20 UID: 0
>> > Nov 02 15:47:16 osd1.xxxxx.uky.edu ceph-osd[3473621]: 2018-11-02
>> 15:47:16.322253 7f687feb3700 -1 osd.60 48504 *** Got signal Terminated ***
>> > Nov 02 15:47:16 osd1.xxxxx.uky.edu ceph-osd[3473621]: 2018-11-02
>> 15:47:16.676625 7f687feb3700 -1 osd.60 48504 shutdown
>> > Nov 02 16:34:05 osd1.oxxxxx.uky.edu systemd[1]: Stopped Ceph object
>> storage daemon osd.60.
>> >
>> > **********
>> > And ere is the output for one of the OSDs (osd.70 still using
>> Filestore) that shut down right when I tried to start osd.60
>> >
>> > ********
>> >
>> > root@osd1:~# systemctl status ceph-osd@70
>> > ● [email protected] - Ceph object storage daemon osd.70
>> > Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/[email protected];
>> enabled-runtime; vendor preset: enabled)
>> > Active: inactive (dead) since Fri 2018-11-02 16:34:08 EDT; 2min 6s
>> ago
>> > Process: 3473629 ExecStart=/usr/bin/ceph-osd -f --cluster ${CLUSTER}
>> --id %i --setuser ceph --setgroup ceph (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
>> > Process: 3473153 ExecStartPre=/usr/lib/ceph/ceph-osd-prestart.sh
>> --cluster ${CLUSTER} --id %i (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
>> > Main PID: 3473629 (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
>> >
>> > Oct 29 15:57:51 osd1.xxxx.uky.edu ceph-osd[3473629]: 2018-10-29
>> 15:57:51.300563 7f530eec2e00 -1 osd.70 pg_epoch: 48095 pg[68.ces1( empty
>> local-lis/les=47489/47489 n=0 ec=6030/6030 lis/c 47488/47488 les/c/f
>> 47489/47489/0 47485/47488/47488) [138,70,203]p138(0) r=1 lpr=0 crt=0'0
>> unknown NO
>> > Oct 30 06:25:01 osd1.xxxx.uky.edu ceph-osd[3473629]: 2018-10-30
>> 06:25:01.961743 7f52d8e44700 -1 received signal: Hangup from PID: 3485955
>> task name: killall -q -1 ceph-mon ceph-mgr ceph-mds ceph-osd ceph-fuse
>> radosgw UID: 0
>> > Oct 31 06:25:02 osd1.xxxx.uky.edu ceph-osd[3473629]: 2018-10-31
>> 06:25:02.110920 7f52d8e44700 -1 received signal: Hangup from PID: 3500945
>> task name: killall -q -1 ceph-mon ceph-mgr ceph-mds ceph-osd ceph-fuse
>> radosgw UID: 0
>> > Nov 01 06:25:02 osd1.xxxx.uky.edu ceph-osd[3473629]: 2018-11-01
>> 06:25:02.101568 7f52d8e44700 -1 received signal: Hangup from PID: 3514774
>> task name: killall -q -1 ceph-mon ceph-mgr ceph-mds ceph-osd ceph-fuse
>> radosgw UID: 0
>> > Nov 02 06:25:02 osd1.xxxx.uky.edu ceph-osd[3473629]: 2018-11-02
>> 06:25:01.997633 7f52d8e44700 -1 received signal: Hangup from PID: 3528128
>> task name: killall -q -1 ceph-mon ceph-mgr ceph-mds ceph-osd ceph-fuse
>> radosgw UID: 0
>> > Nov 02 16:34:05 osd1.xxxx.uky.edu ceph-osd[3473629]: 2018-11-02
>> 16:34:05.607714 7f52d8e44700 -1 received signal: Terminated from PID: 1
>> task name: /lib/systemd/systemd --system --deserialize 20 UID: 0
>> > Nov 02 16:34:05 osd1.xxxx.uky.edu ceph-osd[3473629]: 2018-11-02
>> 16:34:05.607738 7f52d8e44700 -1 osd.70 48535 *** Got signal Terminated ***
>> > Nov 02 16:34:05 osd1.xxxx.uky.edu systemd[1]: Stopping Ceph object
>> storage daemon osd.70...
>> > Nov 02 16:34:05 osd1.xxxx.uky.edu ceph-osd[3473629]: 2018-11-02
>> 16:34:05.677348 7f52d8e44700 -1 osd.70 48535 shutdown
>> > Nov 02 16:34:08 osd1.xxxx.uky.edu systemd[1]: Stopped Ceph object
>> storage daemon osd.70.
>> >
>> > **************
>> >
>> > So, at this point, ALL the OSDs on that node have been shut down.
>> >
>> > For your information this is the output of lsblk command (selection)
>> > *****
>> > root@osd1:~# lsblk
>> > NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT
>> > sda 8:0 0 447.1G 0 disk
>> > ├─ssd0-db60 252:0 0 40G 0 lvm
>> > ├─ssd0-db61 252:1 0 40G 0 lvm
>> > ├─ssd0-db62 252:2 0 40G 0 lvm
>> > ├─ssd0-db63 252:3 0 40G 0 lvm
>> > ├─ssd0-db64 252:4 0 40G 0 lvm
>> > ├─ssd0-db65 252:5 0 40G 0 lvm
>> > ├─ssd0-db66 252:6 0 40G 0 lvm
>> > ├─ssd0-db67 252:7 0 40G 0 lvm
>> > ├─ssd0-db68 252:8 0 40G 0 lvm
>> > └─ssd0-db69 252:9 0 40G 0 lvm
>> > sdb 8:16 0 447.1G 0 disk
>> > ├─sdb1 8:17 0 40G 0 part
>> > ├─sdb2 8:18 0 40G 0 part
>> >
>> > .....
>> >
>> > sdh 8:112 0 3.7T 0 disk
>> > └─hdd60-data60 252:10 0 3.7T 0 lvm
>> > sdi 8:128 0 3.7T 0 disk
>> > └─hdd61-data61 252:11 0 3.7T 0 lvm
>> > sdj 8:144 0 3.7T 0 disk
>> > └─hdd62-data62 252:12 0 3.7T 0 lvm
>> > sdk 8:160 0 3.7T 0 disk
>> > └─hdd63-data63 252:13 0 3.7T 0 lvm
>> > sdl 8:176 0 3.7T 0 disk
>> > └─hdd64-data64 252:14 0 3.7T 0 lvm
>> > sdm 8:192 0 3.7T 0 disk
>> > └─hdd65-data65 252:15 0 3.7T 0 lvm
>> > sdn 8:208 0 3.7T 0 disk
>> > └─hdd66-data66 252:16 0 3.7T 0 lvm
>> > sdo 8:224 0 3.7T 0 disk
>> > └─hdd67-data67 252:17 0 3.7T 0 lvm
>> > sdp 8:240 0 3.7T 0 disk
>> > └─hdd68-data68 252:18 0 3.7T 0 lvm
>> > sdq 65:0 0 3.7T 0 disk
>> > └─hdd69-data69 252:19 0 3.7T 0 lvm
>> > sdr 65:16 0 3.7T 0 disk
>> > └─sdr1 65:17 0 3.7T 0 part /var/lib/ceph/osd/ceph-70
>> > .....
>> >
>> > As a Ceph novice, I am totally clueless about the next step at this
>> point. Any help would be appreciated.
>> >
>> > On Thu, Nov 1, 2018 at 3:16 PM, Hayashida, Mami <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>> >>
>> >> Thank you, both of you. I will try this out very soon.
>> >>
>> >> On Wed, Oct 31, 2018 at 8:48 AM, Alfredo Deza <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>> >>>
>> >>> On Wed, Oct 31, 2018 at 8:28 AM Hayashida, Mami <
>> [email protected]> wrote:
>> >>> >
>> >>> > Thank you for your replies. So, if I use the method Hector
>> suggested (by creating PVs, VGs.... etc. first), can I add the --osd-id
>> parameter to the command as in
>> >>> >
>> >>> > ceph-volume lvm prepare --bluestore --data hdd0/data0 --block.db
>> ssd/db0 --osd-id 0
>> >>> > ceph-volume lvm prepare --bluestore --data hdd1/data1 --block.db
>> ssd/db1 --osd-id 1
>> >>> >
>> >>> > so that Filestore -> Bluestore migration will not change the osd ID
>> on each disk?
>> >>>
>> >>> That looks correct.
>> >>>
>> >>> >
>> >>> > And one more question. Are there any changes I need to make to the
>> ceph.conf file? I did comment out this line that was probably used for
>> creating Filestore (using ceph-deploy): osd journal size = 40960
>> >>>
>> >>> Since you've pre-created the LVs the commented out line will not
>> >>> affect anything.
>> >>>
>> >>> >
>> >>> >
>> >>> >
>> >>> > On Wed, Oct 31, 2018 at 7:03 AM, Alfredo Deza <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>> >>> >>
>> >>> >> On Wed, Oct 31, 2018 at 5:22 AM Hector Martin <
>> [email protected]> wrote:
>> >>> >> >
>> >>> >> > On 31/10/2018 05:55, Hayashida, Mami wrote:
>> >>> >> > > I am relatively new to Ceph and need some advice on Bluestore
>> migration.
>> >>> >> > > I tried migrating a few of our test cluster nodes from
>> Filestore to
>> >>> >> > > Bluestore by following this
>> >>> >> > > (http://docs.ceph.com/docs/luminous/rados/operations/bluesto
>> re-migration/)
>> >>> >> > > as the cluster is currently running 12.2.9. The cluster,
>> originally set
>> >>> >> > > up by my predecessors, was running Jewel until I upgraded it
>> recently to
>> >>> >> > > Luminous.
>> >>> >> > >
>> >>> >> > > OSDs in each OSD host is set up in such a way that for ever 10
>> data HDD
>> >>> >> > > disks, there is one SSD drive that is holding their journals.
>> For
>> >>> >> > > example, osd.0 data is on /dev/sdh and its Filestore journal
>> is on a
>> >>> >> > > partitioned part of /dev/sda. So, lsblk shows something like
>> >>> >> > >
>> >>> >> > > sda 8:0 0 447.1G 0 disk
>> >>> >> > > ├─sda1 8:1 0 40G 0 part # journal for osd.0
>> >>> >> > >
>> >>> >> > > sdh 8:112 0 3.7T 0 disk
>> >>> >> > > └─sdh1 8:113 0 3.7T 0 part /var/lib/ceph/osd/ceph-0
>> >>> >> > >
>> >>> >> >
>> >>> >> > The BlueStore documentation states that the wal will
>> automatically use
>> >>> >> > the db volume if it fits, so if you're using a single SSD I think
>> >>> >> > there's no good reason to split out the wal, if I'm
>> understanding it
>> >>> >> > correctly.
>> >>> >>
>> >>> >> This is correct, no need for wal in this case.
>> >>> >>
>> >>> >> >
>> >>> >> > You should be using ceph-volume, since ceph-disk is deprecated.
>> If
>> >>> >> > you're sharing the SSD as wal/db for a bunch of OSDs, I think
>> you're
>> >>> >> > going to have to create the LVs yourself first. The data HDDs
>> should be
>> >>> >> > PVs (I don't think it matters if they're partitions or whole
>> disk PVs as
>> >>> >> > long as LVM discovers them) each part of a separate VG (e.g.
>> hdd0-hdd9)
>> >>> >> > containing a single LV. Then the SSD should itself be an LV for a
>> >>> >> > separate shared SSD VG (e.g. ssd).
>> >>> >> >
>> >>> >> > So something like (assuming sda is your wal SSD and sdb and
>> onwards are
>> >>> >> > your OSD HDDs):
>> >>> >> > pvcreate /dev/sda
>> >>> >> > pvcreate /dev/sdb
>> >>> >> > pvcreate /dev/sdc
>> >>> >> > ...
>> >>> >> >
>> >>> >> > vgcreate ssd /dev/sda
>> >>> >> > vgcreate hdd0 /dev/sdb
>> >>> >> > vgcreate hdd1 /dev/sdc
>> >>> >> > ...
>> >>> >> >
>> >>> >> > lvcreate -L 40G -n db0 ssd
>> >>> >> > lvcreate -L 40G -n db1 ssd
>> >>> >> > ...
>> >>> >> >
>> >>> >> > lvcreate -L 100%VG -n data0 hdd0
>> >>> >> > lvcreate -L 100%VG -n data1 hdd1
>> >>> >> > ...
>> >>> >> >
>> >>> >> > ceph-volume lvm prepare --bluestore --data hdd0/data0 --block.db
>> ssd/db0
>> >>> >> > ceph-volume lvm prepare --bluestore --data hdd1/data1 --block.db
>> ssd/db1
>> >>> >> > ...
>> >>> >> >
>> >>> >> > ceph-volume lvm activate --all
>> >>> >> >
>> >>> >> > I think it might be possible to just let ceph-volume create the
>> PV/VG/LV
>> >>> >> > for the data disks and only manually create the DB LVs, but it
>> shouldn't
>> >>> >> > hurt to do it on your own and just give ready-made LVs to
>> ceph-volume
>> >>> >> > for everything.
>> >>> >>
>> >>> >> Another alternative here is to use the new `lvm batch` subcommand
>> to
>> >>> >> do all of this in one go:
>> >>> >>
>> >>> >> ceph-volume lvm batch /dev/sda /dev/sdb /dev/sdc /dev/sdd /dev/sde
>> >>> >> /dev/sdf /dev/sdg /dev/sdh
>> >>> >>
>> >>> >> Will detect that sda is an SSD and will create the LVs for you for
>> >>> >> block.db (one for each spinning disk). For each spinning disk, it
>> will
>> >>> >> place data on them.
>> >>> >>
>> >>> >> The one caveat is that you no longer control OSD IDs, and they are
>> >>> >> created with whatever the monitors are giving out.
>> >>> >>
>> >>> >> This operation is not supported from ceph-deploy either.
>> >>> >> >
>> >>> >> > --
>> >>> >> > Hector Martin ([email protected])
>> >>> >> > Public Key: https://marcan.st/marcan.asc
>> >>> >> > _______________________________________________
>> >>> >> > ceph-users mailing list
>> >>> >> > [email protected]
>> >>> >> > http://lists.ceph.com/listinfo.cgi/ceph-users-ceph.com
>> >>> >
>> >>> >
>> >>> >
>> >>> >
>> >>> > --
>> >>> > Mami Hayashida
>> >>> > Research Computing Associate
>> >>> >
>> >>> > Research Computing Infrastructure
>> >>> > University of Kentucky Information Technology Services
>> >>> > 301 Rose Street | 102 James F. Hardymon Building
>> >>> > Lexington, KY 40506-0495
>> >>> > [email protected]
>> >>> > (859)323-7521
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> --
>> >> Mami Hayashida
>> >> Research Computing Associate
>> >>
>> >> Research Computing Infrastructure
>> >> University of Kentucky Information Technology Services
>> >> 301 Rose Street | 102 James F. Hardymon Building
>> >> Lexington, KY 40506-0495
>> >> [email protected]
>> >> (859)323-7521
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > --
>> > Mami Hayashida
>> > Research Computing Associate
>> >
>> > Research Computing Infrastructure
>> > University of Kentucky Information Technology Services
>> > 301 Rose Street | 102 James F. Hardymon Building
>> > Lexington, KY 40506-0495
>> > [email protected]
>> > (859)323-7521
>>
>
>
>
> --
> *Mami Hayashida*
>
> *Research Computing Associate*
> Research Computing Infrastructure
> University of Kentucky Information Technology Services
> 301 Rose Street | 102 James F. Hardymon Building
> Lexington, KY 40506-0495
> [email protected]
> (859)323-7521
>
--
*Mami Hayashida*
*Research Computing Associate*
Research Computing Infrastructure
University of Kentucky Information Technology Services
301 Rose Street | 102 James F. Hardymon Building
Lexington, KY 40506-0495
[email protected]
(859)323-7521
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