And to provide some further updates, I was able to get OSDs to boot by updating from 14.2.2 to 14.2.4. Unclear why this would improve things, but it at least got me running again.
> $ ceph versions
> {
> "mon": {
> "ceph version 14.2.2 (4f8fa0a0024755aae7d95567c63f11d6862d55be)
> nautilus (stable)": 3
> },
> "mgr": {
> "ceph version 14.2.2 (4f8fa0a0024755aae7d95567c63f11d6862d55be)
> nautilus (stable)": 3
> },
> "osd": {
> "ceph version 14.2.2 (4f8fa0a0024755aae7d95567c63f11d6862d55be)
> nautilus (stable)": 199,
> "ceph version 14.2.4 (75f4de193b3ea58512f204623e6c5a16e6c1e1ba)
> nautilus (stable)": 5
> },
> "mds": {
> "ceph version 14.2.2 (4f8fa0a0024755aae7d95567c63f11d6862d55be)
> nautilus (stable)": 1
> },
> "overall": {
> "ceph version 14.2.2 (4f8fa0a0024755aae7d95567c63f11d6862d55be)
> nautilus (stable)": 206,
> "ceph version 14.2.4 (75f4de193b3ea58512f204623e6c5a16e6c1e1ba)
> nautilus (stable)": 5
> }
> }
Reed
> On Sep 18, 2019, at 10:12 AM, Reed Dier <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> To answer the question, if it is safe to disable the module and delete the
> pool, the answer is no.
>
> After disabling the diskprediction_local module, I then proceeded to remove
> the pool created by the module, device_health_metrics.
>
> This is where things went south quickly,
>
> Ceph health showed:
>> Module 'devicehealth' has failed: [errno 2] Failed to operate write op for
>> oid SAMSUNG_$MODEL_$SERIAL
>
> That module apparently can't be disabled:
>> $ ceph mgr module disable devicehealth
>> Error EINVAL: module 'devicehealth' cannot be disabled (always-on)
>
> Then 5 osd's went down, crashing with:
>> -12> 2019-09-18 10:53:00.299 7f95940ac700 5 osd.5 pg_epoch: 176304
>> pg[17.3d1( v 176297'568491 lc 176269'568471 (175914'565388,176297'568491]
>> local-lis/les=176302/176303 n=107092 ec=11397/11397 lis/c 176302/172990
>> les/c/f 176303/172991/107766 176304/176304/176304) [5,81,162] r=0 lpr=176304
>> pi=[172990,176304)/1 crt=176297'568491 lcod 0'0 mlcod 0'0 peering m=17
>> mbc={}] enter Started/Primary/Peering/WaitUpThru
>> -11> 2019-09-18 10:53:00.303 7f959fd6f700 2 osd.5 176304 ms_handle_reset
>> con 0x564078474d00 session 0x56407878ea00
>> -10> 2019-09-18 10:53:00.303 7f95b10e6700 10 monclient:
>> handle_auth_request added challenge on 0x564077ac1b00
>> -9> 2019-09-18 10:53:00.307 7f95b10e6700 10 monclient:
>> handle_auth_request added challenge on 0x564077ac3180
>> -8> 2019-09-18 10:53:00.307 7f95b10e6700 10 monclient:
>> handle_auth_request added challenge on 0x564077ac3600
>> -7> 2019-09-18 10:53:00.307 7f95950ae700 -1
>> bluestore(/var/lib/ceph/osd/ceph-5) _txc_add_transaction error (39)
>> Directory not empty not handled on operation 21 (op 1, counting from 0)
>> -6> 2019-09-18 10:53:00.307 7f95950ae700 0 _dump_transaction
>> transaction dump:
>> {
>> "ops": [
>> {
>> "op_num": 0,
>> "op_name": "remove",
>> "collection": "30.0_head",
>> "oid": "#30:00000000::::head#"
>> },
>> {
>> "op_num": 1,
>> "op_name": "rmcoll",
>> "collection": "30.0_head"
>> }
>> ]
>> }
>> -5> 2019-09-18 10:53:00.311 7f95948ad700 5 osd.5 pg_epoch: 176304
>> pg[17.353( v 176300'586919 lc 176207'586887 (175912'583861,176300'586919]
>> local-lis/les=176302/176303 n=107009 ec=11397/11397 lis/c 176302/176285
>> les/c/f 176303/176286/107766 176304/176304/176304) [5,167,137] r=0
>> lpr=176304 pi=[176285,176304)/1 crt=176300'586919 lcod 0'0 mlcod 0'0 peering
>> m=32 mbc={}] exit Started/Primary/Peering/GetLog 0.023847 2 0.000123
>> -4> 2019-09-18 10:53:00.311 7f95948ad700 5 osd.5 pg_epoch: 176304
>> pg[17.353( v 176300'586919 lc 176207'586887 (175912'583861,176300'586919]
>> local-lis/les=176302/176303 n=107009 ec=11397/11397 lis/c 176302/176285
>> les/c/f 176303/176286/107766 176304/176304/176304) [5,167,137] r=0
>> lpr=176304 pi=[176285,176304)/1 crt=176300'586919 lcod 0'0 mlcod 0'0 peering
>> m=32 mbc={}] enter Started/Primary/Peering/GetMissing
>> -3> 2019-09-18 10:53:00.311 7f95948ad700 5 osd.5 pg_epoch: 176304
>> pg[17.353( v 176300'586919 lc 176207'586887 (175912'583861,176300'586919]
>> local-lis/les=176302/176303 n=107009 ec=11397/11397 lis/c 176302/176285
>> les/c/f 176303/176286/107766 176304/176304/176304) [5,167,137] r=0
>> lpr=176304 pi=[176285,176304)/1 crt=176300'586919 lcod 0'0 mlcod 0'0 peering
>> m=32 mbc={}] exit Started/Primary/Peering/GetMissing 0.000019 0 0.000000
>> -2> 2019-09-18 10:53:00.311 7f95948ad700 5 osd.5 pg_epoch: 176304
>> pg[17.353( v 176300'586919 lc 176207'586887 (175912'583861,176300'586919]
>> local-lis/les=176302/176303 n=107009 ec=11397/11397 lis/c 176302/176285
>> les/c/f 176303/176286/107766 176304/176304/176304) [5,167,137] r=0
>> lpr=176304 pi=[176285,176304)/1 crt=176300'586919 lcod 0'0 mlcod 0'0 peering
>> m=32 mbc={}] enter Started/Primary/Peering/WaitUpThru
>> -1> 2019-09-18 10:53:00.315 7f95950ae700 -1
>> /build/ceph-14.2.2/src/os/bluestore/BlueStore.cc <http://bluestore.cc/>: In
>> function 'void BlueStore::_txc_add_transaction(BlueStore::TransContext*,
>> ObjectStore::Transaction*)' thread 7f95950ae700 time 2019-09-18
>> 10:53:00.312755
>> /build/ceph-14.2.2/src/os/bluestore/BlueStore.cc <http://bluestore.cc/>:
>> 11208: ceph_abort_msg("unexpected error")
>
>
> Of the 5 OSD's now down, 3 of them are the serving OSD's for pg 30.0 (that
> has now been erased),
>
>> OSD_DOWN 5 osds down
>> osd.5 is down
>> osd.12 is down
>> osd.128 is down
>> osd.183 is down
>> osd.190 is down
>
>
> But 190 and 5 were never acting members for that PG, so I have no clue why
> they are implicated.
>
>
> I re-enabled the module, and that cleared the health error about
> devicehealth, which doesn't matter to me, but that also didn't solve the
> issue of the down OSDs, so I am hoping there is a way to mark this PG as
> lost, or something like that, so as to not have to rebuilt the entire OSD.
>
> Any help is appreciated.
>
> Reed
>
>> On Sep 12, 2019, at 5:22 PM, Reed Dier <[email protected]
>> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>
>> Trying to narrow down a strange issue where the single PG for the
>> device_health_metrics that was created when I enabled the
>> 'diskprediction_local' module in the ceph-mgr. But I never see any
>> inconsistent objects in the PG.
>>
>>> $ ceph health detail
>>> OSD_SCRUB_ERRORS 1 scrub errors
>>> PG_DAMAGED Possible data damage: 1 pg inconsistent
>>> pg 30.0 is active+clean+inconsistent, acting [128,12,183]
>>
>>> $ rados list-inconsistent-pg device_health_metrics
>>> ["30.0"]
>>
>>> $ rados list-inconsistent-obj 30.0 | jq
>>> {
>>> "epoch": 172979,
>>> "inconsistents": []
>>> }
>>
>> This is the log message from osd.128 most recently during the last deep scrub
>>> 2019-09-12 18:07:19.436 7f977744a700 -1 log_channel(cluster) log [ERR] :
>>> 30.0 deep-scrub : stat mismatch, got 237/238 objects, 0/0 clones, 237/238
>>> dirty, 237/238 omap, 0/0 pinned, 0/0 hit_set_archive, 0/0 whiteouts, 0/0
>>> bytes, 0/0 manifest objects, 0/0 hit_set_archive bytes.
>>
>> Here is a pg query on the one PG:
>> https://pastebin.com/bnzVKd6t <https://pastebin.com/bnzVKd6t>
>>
>> The data I have collected hasn't been useful at all, and I don't
>> particularly care if I lose it, so would it be feasible (ie no bad effects)
>> to just disable the disk prediction module, delete the pool, and then start
>> over and it will create a new pool for itself?
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Reed
>
>
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