I agree with France, sounds like a more sensible idea and killing hosts left, 
right and centre with live vms. I now understand the reasons behind killing the 
troubled host server, however, this should be done without killing live vms 
with fully working volumes. 


Regarding having nfs and ceph storage in different clusters - sounds like a 
good idea for majority of cases, however, my setup will not allow me to do that 
just yet. I am using ceph for my root and data volumes and NFS for backup 
volumes. I do currently need the backup volumes as snapshotting with KVM is 
somewhat broken / not fully working in 4.2.1. It has been improved from version 
4.2.0 as it was completely broken. I am waiting for 4.3.0 where, hopefully, I 
would be able to keep snapshots on the primary storage (currently this feature 
is broken) which will make the snapshots with KVM usable. 


Cheers for your help guys 
----- Original Message -----

From: "France" <mailingli...@isg.si> 
To: users@cloudstack.apache.org, d...@cloudstack.apache.org 
Sent: Tuesday, 4 March, 2014 10:34:36 AM 
Subject: Re: ALARM - ACS reboots host servers!!! 

Hi Marcus and others. 

There is no need to kill of the entire hypervisor, if one of the primary 
storages fail. 
You just need to kill the VMs and probably disable SR on XenServer, 
because all other SRs and VMs have no problems. 
if you kill those, then you can safely start them elsewhere. On 
XenServer 6.2 you call destroy the VMs which lost access to NFS without 
any problems. 

If you really want to still kill the entire host and it's VMs in one go, 
I would suggest live migrating the VMs which have had not lost their 
storage off first, and then kill those VMs on a stale NFS by doing hard 
reboot. Additional time, while migrating working VMs, would even give 
some grace time for NFS to maybe recover. :-) 

Hard reboot to recover from D state of NFS client can also be avoided by 
using soft mount options. 

I run a bunch of Pacemaker/Corosync/Cman/Heartbeat/etc clusters and we 
don't just kill whole nodes but fence services from specific nodes. 
STONITH is implemented only when the node looses the quorum. 

Regards, 
F. 

On 3/3/14 5:35 PM, Marcus wrote: 
> It's the standard clustering problem. Any software that does any sort 
> of avtive clustering is going to fence nodes that have problems, or 
> should if it cares about your data. If the risk of losing a host due 
> to a storage pool outage is too great, you could perhaps look at 
> rearranging your pool-to-host correlations (certain hosts run vms from 
> certain pools) via clusters. Note that if you register a storage pool 
> with a cluster, it will register the pool with libvirt when the pool 
> is not in maintenance, which, when the storage pool goes down will 
> cause problems for the host even if no VMs from that storage are 
> running (fetching storage stats for example will cause agent threads 
> to hang if its NFS), so you'd need to put ceph in its own cluster and 
> NFS in its own cluster. 
> 
> It's far more dangerous to leave a host in an unknown/bad state. If a 
> host loses contact with one of your storage nodes, with HA, cloudstack 
> will want to start the affected VMs elsewhere. If it does so, and your 
> original host wakes up from it's NFS hang, you suddenly have a VM 
> running in two locations, corruption ensues. You might think we could 
> just stop the affected VMs, but NFS tends to make things that touch it 
> go into D state, even with 'intr' and other parameters, which affects 
> libvirt and the agent. 
> 
> We could perhaps open a feature request to disable all HA and just 
> leave things as-is, disallowing operations when there are outages. If 
> that sounds useful you can create the feature request on 
> https://issues.apache.org/jira. 
> 
> 
> On Mon, Mar 3, 2014 at 5:37 AM, Andrei Mikhailovsky <and...@arhont.com> 
> wrote: 
>> Koushik, I understand that and I will put the storage into the maintenance 
>> mode next time. However, things happen and servers crash from time to time, 
>> which is not the reason to reboot all host servers, even those which do not 
>> have any running vms with volumes on the nfs storage. The bloody agent just 
>> rebooted every single host server regardless if they were running vms with 
>> volumes on the rebooted nfs server. 95% of my vms are running from ceph and 
>> those should have never been effected in the first place. 
>> ----- Original Message ----- 
>> 
>> From: "Koushik Das" <koushik....@citrix.com> 
>> To: "<users@cloudstack.apache.org>" <users@cloudstack.apache.org> 
>> Cc: d...@cloudstack.apache.org 
>> Sent: Monday, 3 March, 2014 5:55:34 AM 
>> Subject: Re: ALARM - ACS reboots host servers!!! 
>> 
>> The primary storage needs to be put in maintenance before doing any 
>> upgrade/reboot as mentioned in the previous mails. 
>> 
>> -Koushik 
>> 
>> On 03-Mar-2014, at 6:07 AM, Marcus <shadow...@gmail.com> wrote: 
>> 
>>> Also, please note that in the bug you referenced it doesn't have a 
>>> problem with the reboot being triggered, but with the fact that reboot 
>>> never completes due to hanging NFS mount (which is why the reboot 
>>> occurs, inaccessible primary storage). 
>>> 
>>> On Sun, Mar 2, 2014 at 5:26 PM, Marcus <shadow...@gmail.com> wrote: 
>>>> Or do you mean you have multiple primary storages and this one was not 
>>>> in use and put into maintenance? 
>>>> 
>>>> On Sun, Mar 2, 2014 at 5:25 PM, Marcus <shadow...@gmail.com> wrote: 
>>>>> I'm not sure I understand. How do you expect to reboot your primary 
>>>>> storage while vms are running? It sounds like the host is being 
>>>>> fenced since it cannot contact the resources it depends on. 
>>>>> 
>>>>> On Sun, Mar 2, 2014 at 3:24 PM, Nux! <n...@li.nux.ro> wrote: 
>>>>>> On 02.03.2014 21:17, Andrei Mikhailovsky wrote: 
>>>>>>> Hello guys, 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> I've recently came across the bug CLOUDSTACK-5429 which has rebooted 
>>>>>>> all of my host servers without properly shutting down the guest vms. 
>>>>>>> I've simply upgraded and rebooted one of the nfs primary storage 
>>>>>>> servers and a few minutes later, to my horror, i've found out that all 
>>>>>>> of my host servers have been rebooted. Is it just me thinking so, or 
>>>>>>> is this bug should be fixed ASAP and should be a blocker for any new 
>>>>>>> ACS release. I mean not only does it cause downtime, but also possible 
>>>>>>> data loss and server corruption. 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Hi Andrei, 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Do you have HA enabled and did you put that primary storage in 
>>>>>> maintenance 
>>>>>> mode before rebooting it? 
>>>>>> It's my understanding that ACS relies on the shared storage to perform 
>>>>>> HA so 
>>>>>> if the storage goes it's expected to go berserk. I've noticed similar 
>>>>>> behaviour in Xenserver pools without ACS. 
>>>>>> I'd imagine a "cure" for this would be to use network distributed 
>>>>>> "filesystems" like GlusterFS or CEPH. 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Lucian 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> -- 
>>>>>> Sent from the Delta quadrant using Borg technology! 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Nux! 
>>>>>> www.nux.ro 
>> 


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