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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-5713?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=12708661#action_12708661
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Raghu Angadi commented on HADOOP-5713:
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> One possible fix would be to allow clients to exclude known bad data nodes
> when allocating new blocks.
I don't think that is a good approach. On a bigger cluster Client may not know
the correct exclude list.
It is very important for HDFS writes to handle failures on partial set of
datanodes (like this one). We should fix the real underlying problem.
> File write fails after data node goes down
> ------------------------------------------
>
> Key: HADOOP-5713
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-5713
> Project: Hadoop Core
> Issue Type: Bug
> Components: dfs
> Reporter: Alban Chevignard
> Attachments: failed_write.patch
>
>
> If a data node goes down while a file is being written do HDFS, the write
> fails with the following errors:
> {noformat}
> 09/04/20 17:15:39 INFO dfs.DFSClient: Exception in createBlockOutputStream
> java.io.IOException:
> Bad connect ack with firstBadLink 192.168.0.66:50010
> 09/04/20 17:15:39 INFO dfs.DFSClient: Abandoning block
> blk_-6792221430152215651_1003
> 09/04/20 17:15:45 INFO dfs.DFSClient: Exception in createBlockOutputStream
> java.io.IOException:
> Bad connect ack with firstBadLink 192.168.0.66:50010
> 09/04/20 17:15:45 INFO dfs.DFSClient: Abandoning block
> blk_-1056044503329698571_1003
> 09/04/20 17:15:51 INFO dfs.DFSClient: Exception in createBlockOutputStream
> java.io.IOException:
> Bad connect ack with firstBadLink 192.168.0.66:50010
> 09/04/20 17:15:51 INFO dfs.DFSClient: Abandoning block
> blk_-1144491637577072681_1003
> 09/04/20 17:15:57 INFO dfs.DFSClient: Exception in createBlockOutputStream
> java.io.IOException:
> Bad connect ack with firstBadLink 192.168.0.66:50010
> 09/04/20 17:15:57 INFO dfs.DFSClient: Abandoning block
> blk_6574618270268421892_1003
> 09/04/20 17:16:03 WARN dfs.DFSClient: DataStreamer Exception:
> java.io.IOException:
> Unable to create new block.
> at
> org.apache.hadoop.dfs.DFSClient$DFSOutputStream.nextBlockOutputStream(DFSClient.java:2387)
> at
> org.apache.hadoop.dfs.DFSClient$DFSOutputStream.access$1800(DFSClient.java:1746)
> at
> org.apache.hadoop.dfs.DFSClient$DFSOutputStream$DataStreamer.run(DFSClient.java:1924)
> 09/04/20 17:16:03 WARN dfs.DFSClient: Error Recovery for block
> blk_6574618270268421892_1003 bad datanode[1]
> {noformat}
> The tests were done with the following configuration:
> * Hadoop version 0.18.3
> * 3 data nodes with replication count of 2
> * 1 GB file write
> * 1 data node taken down during write
> This issue seems to be caused by the fact that there is a delay between the
> time a data node goes down and the time it is marked as dead by the name
> node. This delay is unavoidable, but the name node should not keep allocating
> new blocks to data nodes that are known to be down by the client. Even by
> adjusting {{heartbeat.recheck.interval}}, there is still a window during
> which this issue can occur.
> One possible fix would be to allow clients to exclude known bad data nodes
> when allocating new blocks. See {{failed_write.patch}} for an example.
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