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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HBASE-15019?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
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Matteo Bertozzi updated HBASE-15019:
------------------------------------
    Attachment: HBASE-15030-v0.patch

assuming we are going with the RS doing the recover lease the patch may look 
like v0. I'll have to do some tests and maybe see if I can write a unit test, 
otherwise the replication it test with the monkey killing the datanode 
HBASE-14261 may be enough.
in any case the patch should look like v0. 

the current way to see if we need lease recovery used by WALFactory seems to be 
looking at the exception message, maybe we should expose and use something like 
FSHDFSUtils.isFileClosed()?

> Replication stuck when HDFS is restarted
> ----------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: HBASE-15019
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HBASE-15019
>             Project: HBase
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: Replication, wal
>    Affects Versions: 2.0.0, 1.2.0, 1.1.2, 1.0.3, 0.98.16.1
>            Reporter: Matteo Bertozzi
>            Assignee: Matteo Bertozzi
>
> RS is normally working and writing on the WAL.
> HDFS is killed and restarted, and the RS try to do a roll.
> The close fail, but the roll succeed (because hdfs is now up) and everything 
> works.
> {noformat}
> 2015-12-11 21:52:28,058 ERROR 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.regionserver.wal.ProtobufLogWriter: Got IOException 
> while writing trailer
> java.io.IOException: All datanodes 10.51.30.152:50010 are bad. Aborting...
>   at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSOutputStream$DataStreamer.setupPipelineForAppendOrRecovery(DFSOutputStream.java:1147)
>   at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSOutputStream$DataStreamer.processDatanodeError(DFSOutputStream.java:945)
>   at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSOutputStream$DataStreamer.run(DFSOutputStream.java:496)
> 2015-12-11 21:52:28,059 ERROR 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.regionserver.wal.FSHLog: Failed close of HLog writer
> java.io.IOException: All datanodes 10.51.30.152:50010 are bad. Aborting...
>   at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSOutputStream$DataStreamer.setupPipelineForAppendOrRecovery(DFSOutputStream.java:1147)
>   at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSOutputStream$DataStreamer.processDatanodeError(DFSOutputStream.java:945)
>   at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSOutputStream$DataStreamer.run(DFSOutputStream.java:496)
> 2015-12-11 21:52:28,059 WARN org.apache.hadoop.hbase.regionserver.wal.FSHLog: 
> Riding over HLog close failure! error count=1
> {noformat}
> The problem is on the replication side. that log we rolled and we were not 
> able to close
> is waiting for a lease recovery.
> {noformat}
> 2015-12-11 21:16:31,909 ERROR 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.regionserver.wal.HLogFactory: Can't open after 267 
> attempts and 301124ms 
> {noformat}
> the WALFactory notify us about that, but there is nothing on the RS side that 
> perform the WAL recovery.
> {noformat}
> 2015-12-11 21:11:30,921 WARN 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.regionserver.wal.HLogFactory: Lease should have 
> recovered. This is not expected. Will retry
> java.io.IOException: Cannot obtain block length for 
> LocatedBlock{BP-1547065147-10.51.30.152-1446756937665:blk_1073801614_61243; 
> getBlockSize()=83; corrupt=false; offset=0; locs=[10.51.30.154:50010, 
> 10.51.30.152:50010, 10.51.30.155:50010]}
>   at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSInputStream.readBlockLength(DFSInputStream.java:358)
>   at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSInputStream.fetchLocatedBlocksAndGetLastBlockLength(DFSInputStream.java:300)
>   at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSInputStream.openInfo(DFSInputStream.java:237)
>   at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSInputStream.<init>(DFSInputStream.java:230)
>   at org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DFSClient.open(DFSClient.java:1448)
>   at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DistributedFileSystem$3.doCall(DistributedFileSystem.java:301)
>   at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DistributedFileSystem$3.doCall(DistributedFileSystem.java:297)
>   at 
> org.apache.hadoop.fs.FileSystemLinkResolver.resolve(FileSystemLinkResolver.java:81)
>   at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hdfs.DistributedFileSystem.open(DistributedFileSystem.java:297)
>   at org.apache.hadoop.fs.FilterFileSystem.open(FilterFileSystem.java:161)
>   at org.apache.hadoop.fs.FileSystem.open(FileSystem.java:766)
>   at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.regionserver.wal.HLogFactory.createReader(HLogFactory.java:116)
>   at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.regionserver.wal.HLogFactory.createReader(HLogFactory.java:89)
>   at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.regionserver.wal.HLogFactory.createReader(HLogFactory.java:77)
>   at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.replication.regionserver.ReplicationHLogReaderManager.openReader(ReplicationHLogReaderManager.java:68)
>   at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.replication.regionserver.ReplicationSource.openReader(ReplicationSource.java:508)
>   at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.replication.regionserver.ReplicationSource.run(ReplicationSource.java:321)
> {noformat}
> the only way to trigger a WAL recovery is to restart and force the master to 
> trigger the lease recovery on WAL split. 
> but there is a case where restarting will not help. If the RS keeps going 
> rolling and flushing the unclosed WAL will be moved in the archive, and at 
> that point the master will never try to do a lease recovery on it. 
> since we know that the RS is still going, should we try to recover the lease 
> on the RS side?
> is it better/safer to trigger an abort on the RS, so we have only the master 
> doing lease recovery?



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