Hi Erlend,

The zookeeper configuration supplied will likely fill up your disk with
zookeeper synch data, because the parameters that control the cleanup of
that data are not properly set up for long-term execution.

Graeme Seaton would be the best resource for using Zookeeper properly; he's
on this list and I've cc'd him directly as well.

Karl


On Tue, Sep 16, 2014 at 5:06 AM, Erlend Garåsen <[email protected]>
wrote:

> On 16.09.14 10:53, lalit jangra wrote:
>
>> Hi Erlend,
>>
>> Can you please elaborate on how you have configured zookeeper based
>> synchronization, is it in stand alone mode or clustered mode? How many
>> zookeeper nodes are you running for each of node and how many agents are
>> you running?
>>
>
> I'm not very familiar with Zookeeper, so I have just followed the examples
> inside the multiprocess-zk-example folder, i.e.:
> $MCF_HOME/../runzookeeper.sh > /dev/null 2>&1 &
>         # Reading global properties:
>         $MCF_HOME/../setglobalproperties.sh > /dev/null 2>&1 &
>         # Starting Agent process:
>         $MCF_HOME/processes/executecommand.sh
> org.apache.manifoldcf.agents.AgentRun \
>         1>>$LOGDIR/mcf_agent.stdout.log 2>>$LOGDIR/mcf_agent.stderr.log &
> pid=$!
>
> The above lines are from my startup script. I see now that I haven't
> specified "-Dorg.apache.manifoldcf.processid=A", I'm not sure this is
> important, but I can of course try to include that into my script and
> restart everything.
>
> So to the question about how many zookeeper nodes I'm using, the answer is
> one. The same applies to the number of running agents.
>
> Erlend
>

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