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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HDFS-3886?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=13446653#comment-13446653
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Steve Loughran commented on HDFS-3886:
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currently a kill -2 is the event sent from init.d to trigger a managed
shutdown, but it needs to complete within a bounded period, otherwise robust
init.d/ linux HA scripts will escalate to a -9; this is because they need to
reliably shut down the system.
Any change that reverts service scripts from having timeout+escalation would be
counterproductive from a service management perspective.
Now, if there were another signal handler that triggered lock up and system
save, that could be good -but that would lie outside init.d land
> Shutdown requests can possibly check for checkpoint issues (corrupted edits)
> and save a good namespace copy before closing down?
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: HDFS-3886
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HDFS-3886
> Project: Hadoop HDFS
> Issue Type: Bug
> Components: name-node
> Affects Versions: 2.0.0-alpha
> Reporter: Harsh J
> Priority: Minor
>
> HDFS-3878 sorta gives me this idea. Aside of having a method to download it
> to a different location, we can also lock up the namesystem (or deactivate
> the client rpc server) and save the namesystem before we complete up the
> shutdown.
> The init.d/shutdown scripts would have to work with this somehow though, to
> not kill -9 it when in-process. Also, the new image may be stored in a
> shutdown.chkpt directory, to not interfere in the regular dirs, but still
> allow easier recovery.
> Obviously this will still not work if all directories are broken. So maybe we
> could have some configs to tackle that as well?
> I haven't thought this through, so let me know what part is wrong to do :)
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