A CLI command is an interesting stopgap, but on a heavily utilized OpenStack installation with automated tools operating against OpenStack, this has a high manual maintenance cost. Surely there is some better default that lies in the middle ground between keeping tokens for ever and ever and requiring a manual removal of tokens?
As a reference point, I wasn't even aware this was an issue, until one of our test deployments of grizzly using a limited IO system started acting horribly (30 second response times). After tracing the problem from nova to keystone to mysql, I found a 442,000 row token table with >440,000 expired tokens. I went and checked our havana test on a somewhat beefier system and found > 1M rows. This issue is a timebomb for any production OS install. -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1032633 Title: Keystone's token table grows unconditionally when using SQL backend. To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/keystone/+bug/1032633/+subscriptions -- ubuntu-bugs mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs
