I don't understand why there's such a complicated process to recover when I
can just look at both files, decide which one I need and delete another one.
On Thu, Sep 11, 2014 at 7:56 AM, Pranith Kumar Karampuri
pkara...@redhat.com wrote:
On 09/11/2014 09:29 AM, Ilya Ivanov wrote:
Right
pkara...@redhat.com wrote:
On 09/11/2014 11:37 AM, Ilya Ivanov wrote:
I don't understand why there's such a complicated process to recover when
I can just look at both files, decide which one I need and delete another
one.
If the file needs to be deleted the whole file needs to be copied
Any insight?
On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 8:35 AM, Ilya Ivanov bearw...@gmail.com wrote:
What's a gfid split-brain and how is it different from normal
split-brain?
I accessed the file with stat, but heal info still shows Number of
entries: 1
[root@gluster1 gluster]# getfattr -d -m. -e hex gv01
Right... I deleted it and now all appears to be fine.
Still, could you please elaborate on gfid split-brain?
On Thu, Sep 11, 2014 at 5:32 AM, Pranith Kumar Karampuri
pkara...@redhat.com wrote:
On 09/11/2014 12:16 AM, Ilya Ivanov wrote:
Any insight?
Was the other file's gfid d3def9e1
trusted.gfid=0x0001
trusted.glusterfs.dht=0x0001
trusted.glusterfs.volume-id=0x31a2c4c486ca4344b838d2c2e6c716c1
On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 8:19 AM, Pranith Kumar Karampuri pkara...@redhat.com
wrote:
On 09/09/2014 11:35 AM, Ilya Ivanov wrote:
Ahh
/gluster/gv01/
Number of entries: 0
Is it normal? Why the number of entries isn't reset to 0?
And why wouldn't the file show up in split-brain before, anyway?
On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 7:46 AM, Pranith Kumar Karampuri pkara...@redhat.com
wrote:
On 09/09/2014 01:54 AM, Ilya Ivanov wrote:
Hello