On Dec 22, 2010, at 16:20, Peter Schuller wrote: >> And the data could be more evenly balanced, obviously. However the nodes >> fails to startup because due of lacking disk space (instead of starting up >> and denies further writes it appears to try to process the [6.6G!] commit >> logs). So, I cannot perform any actions on it no more like re-balancing the >> ring or reading old data from it and rotating it somewhere else. So, what to >> do now? > > So even given deletion of obsolete sstables on start-up, it goes out > of disk just from the commit log replay of only 6 gig? Sounds like > you're very, very full.
Answer: $ time cassandra -f INFO 16:30:09,486 Heap size: 2143158272/2143158272 log4j:ERROR Failed to flush writer, java.io.IOException: No space left on device at java.io.FileOutputStream.writeBytes(Native Method) at java.io.FileOutputStream.write(FileOutputStream.java:260) at sun.nio.cs.StreamEncoder.writeBytes(StreamEncoder.java:202) at sun.nio.cs.StreamEncoder.implFlushBuffer(StreamEncoder.java:272) at sun.nio.cs.StreamEncoder.implFlush(StreamEncoder.java:276) at sun.nio.cs.StreamEncoder.flush(StreamEncoder.java:122) at java.io.OutputStreamWriter.flush(OutputStreamWriter.java:212) at org.apache.log4j.helpers.QuietWriter.flush(QuietWriter.java:59) at org.apache.log4j.WriterAppender.subAppend(WriterAppender.java:324) at org.apache.log4j.RollingFileAppender.subAppend(RollingFileAppender.java:276) at org.apache.log4j.WriterAppender.append(WriterAppender.java:162) at org.apache.log4j.AppenderSkeleton.doAppend(AppenderSkeleton.java:251) at org.apache.log4j.helpers.AppenderAttachableImpl.appendLoopOnAppenders(AppenderAttachableImpl.java:66) at org.apache.log4j.Category.callAppenders(Category.java:206) at org.apache.log4j.Category.forcedLog(Category.java:391) at org.apache.log4j.Category.log(Category.java:856) at org.slf4j.impl.Log4jLoggerAdapter.info(Log4jLoggerAdapter.java:347) at org.apache.cassandra.service.AbstractCassandraDaemon.setup(AbstractCassandraDaemon.java:73) at org.apache.cassandra.thrift.CassandraDaemon.setup(CassandraDaemon.java:55) at org.apache.cassandra.service.AbstractCassandraDaemon.activate(AbstractCassandraDaemon.java:216) at org.apache.cassandra.thrift.CassandraDaemon.main(CassandraDaemon.java:134) INFO 16:30:09,495 JNA not found. Native methods will be disabled. INFO 16:30:09,504 Loading settings from file:/home/dev/cassandra.git/conf/cassandra.yaml INFO 16:30:09,774 DiskAccessMode 'auto' determined to be mmap, indexAccessMode is mmap INFO 16:30:09,849 Creating new commitlog segment /var/lib/cassandra/commitlog/CommitLog-1293031809849.log ERROR 16:30:09,853 Exception encountered during startup. java.io.IOError: java.io.IOException: No space left on device at org.apache.cassandra.db.commitlog.CommitLogSegment.<init>(CommitLogSegment.java:59) at org.apache.cassandra.db.commitlog.CommitLog.<init>(CommitLog.java:113) at org.apache.cassandra.db.commitlog.CommitLog.<clinit>(CommitLog.java:83) at org.apache.cassandra.config.DatabaseDescriptor.<clinit>(DatabaseDescriptor.java:347) at org.apache.cassandra.service.AbstractCassandraDaemon.setup(AbstractCassandraDaemon.java:76) at org.apache.cassandra.thrift.CassandraDaemon.setup(CassandraDaemon.java:55) at org.apache.cassandra.service.AbstractCassandraDaemon.activate(AbstractCassandraDaemon.java:216) at org.apache.cassandra.thrift.CassandraDaemon.main(CassandraDaemon.java:134) Caused by: java.io.IOException: No space left on device at java.io.FileOutputStream.write(Native Method) at java.io.DataOutputStream.writeInt(DataOutputStream.java:180) at org.apache.cassandra.db.commitlog.CommitLogHeader$CommitLogHeaderSerializer.serialize(CommitLogHeader.java:157) at org.apache.cassandra.db.commitlog.CommitLogHeader.writeCommitLogHeader(CommitLogHeader.java:121) at org.apache.cassandra.db.commitlog.CommitLogSegment.writeHeader(CommitLogSegment.java:70) at org.apache.cassandra.db.commitlog.CommitLogSegment.<init>(CommitLogSegment.java:55) ... 7 more Exception encountered during startup. java.io.IOError: java.io.IOException: No space left on device at org.apache.cassandra.db.commitlog.CommitLogSegment.<init>(CommitLogSegment.java:59) at org.apache.cassandra.db.commitlog.CommitLog.<init>(CommitLog.java:113) at org.apache.cassandra.db.commitlog.CommitLog.<clinit>(CommitLog.java:83) at org.apache.cassandra.config.DatabaseDescriptor.<clinit>(DatabaseDescriptor.java:347) at org.apache.cassandra.service.AbstractCassandraDaemon.setup(AbstractCassandraDaemon.java:76) at org.apache.cassandra.thrift.CassandraDaemon.setup(CassandraDaemon.java:55) at org.apache.cassandra.service.AbstractCassandraDaemon.activate(AbstractCassandraDaemon.java:216) at org.apache.cassandra.thrift.CassandraDaemon.main(CassandraDaemon.java:134) Caused by: java.io.IOException: No space left on device at java.io.FileOutputStream.write(Native Method) at java.io.DataOutputStream.writeInt(DataOutputStream.java:180) at org.apache.cassandra.db.commitlog.CommitLogHeader$CommitLogHeaderSerializer.serialize(CommitLogHeader.java:157) at org.apache.cassandra.db.commitlog.CommitLogHeader.writeCommitLogHeader(CommitLogHeader.java:121) at org.apache.cassandra.db.commitlog.CommitLogSegment.writeHeader(CommitLogSegment.java:70) at org.apache.cassandra.db.commitlog.CommitLogSegment.<init>(CommitLogSegment.java:55) ... 7 more real 0m1.210s user 0m0.600s sys 0m0.100s So it's instantly dead. I doesn't even attempt to delete any potentially old data. sstable2json dies instantly as well! Actually 5% are still available but not accessible by non-root users (ext3). So the cassandra user literally cannot write a single byte to that volume no more. > Some potential options may be: > > * Replace the node completely with a new one with sufficient disk / > another token location (but carefully, by adding the new node first). That may not always be an option :) > It strikes me that dealing with out-of-disk conditions is probably a > good topic of an in-depth wiki page for what to do in various cases, > depending on usage. The above three suggested options may or may not Yes! :) >> BTW what precisely does the Owns column mean? > > The percentage of the token space owned by the node. Precisely meaning what? :) On my ring of 5 machines, 3 own about 1/3 and 2 (own only 5% - and one of these contains 1/3 more data than the two largest in the cluster, it's actually the on that ran out of disk space).