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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/YARN-3591?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=14569480#comment-14569480
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Sunil G commented on YARN-3591:
-------------------------------
If we have a new api which returns the present set of error dirs alone (w/o
full dirs)
{code}
synchronized List<String> getErrorDirs()
{code}
then could we modify LocalResourcesTrackerImpl#checkLocalizedResources in such
a way that we call *removeResource* on those localized resources whose parent
is present in ErrorDirs.
> Resource Localisation on a bad disk causes subsequent containers failure
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: YARN-3591
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/YARN-3591
> Project: Hadoop YARN
> Issue Type: Bug
> Affects Versions: 2.7.0
> Reporter: Lavkesh Lahngir
> Assignee: Lavkesh Lahngir
> Attachments: 0001-YARN-3591.1.patch, 0001-YARN-3591.patch,
> YARN-3591.2.patch, YARN-3591.3.patch, YARN-3591.4.patch
>
>
> It happens when a resource is localised on the disk, after localising that
> disk has gone bad. NM keeps paths for localised resources in memory. At the
> time of resource request isResourcePresent(rsrc) will be called which calls
> file.exists() on the localised path.
> In some cases when disk has gone bad, inodes are stilled cached and
> file.exists() returns true. But at the time of reading, file will not open.
> Note: file.exists() actually calls stat64 natively which returns true because
> it was able to find inode information from the OS.
> A proposal is to call file.list() on the parent path of the resource, which
> will call open() natively. If the disk is good it should return an array of
> paths with length at-least 1.
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