Yes, I realize that.
I am bit curious why it ran out of disk, or rather, why I have 200GB empty
disk now, but unfortunately it seems like we may not have had monitoring
enabled on this node to tell me what happened in terms of disk usage.
I also thought that compaction was supposed to resume (try again with less
data) if it fails?
Terje
On Wed, May 4, 2011 at 3:50 AM, Jonathan Ellis <jbellis@gmail.com> wrote:
> post flusher is responsible for updating commitlog header after a
> flush; each task waits for a specific flush to complete, then does its
> thing.
>
> so when you had a flush catastrophically fail, its corresponding
> post-flush task will be stuck.
>
> On Tue, May 3, 2011 at 1:20 PM, Terje Marthinussen
> <tmarthinussen@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Just some very tiny amount of writes in the background here (some hints
> > spooled up on another node slowly coming in).
> > No new data.
> >
> > I thought there was no exceptions, but I did not look far enough back in
> the
> > log at first.
> > Going back a bit further now however, I see that about 50 hours ago:
> > ERROR [CompactionExecutor:387] 2011-05-02 01:16:01,027
> > AbstractCassandraDaemon.java (line 112) Fatal exception in thread
> > Thread[CompactionExecutor:387,1,main]
> > java.io.IOException: No space left on device
> > at java.io.RandomAccessFile.writeBytes(Native Method)
> > at java.io.RandomAccessFile.write(RandomAccessFile.java:466)
> > at
> >
> org.apache.cassandra.io.util.BufferedRandomAccessFile.flush(BufferedRandomAccessFile.java:160)
> > at
> >
> org.apache.cassandra.io.util.BufferedRandomAccessFile.reBuffer(BufferedRandomAccessFile.java:225)
> > at
> >
> org.apache.cassandra.io.util.BufferedRandomAccessFile.writeAtMost(BufferedRandomAccessFile.java:356)
> > at
> >
> org.apache.cassandra.io.util.BufferedRandomAccessFile.write(BufferedRandomAccessFile.java:335)
> > at
> > org.apache.cassandra.io.PrecompactedRow.write(PrecompactedRow.java:102)
> > at
> >
> org.apache.cassandra.io.sstable.SSTableWriter.append(SSTableWriter.java:130)
> > at
> >
> org.apache.cassandra.db.CompactionManager.doCompaction(CompactionManager.java:566)
> > at
> >
> org.apache.cassandra.db.CompactionManager$1.call(CompactionManager.java:146)
> > at
> >
> org.apache.cassandra.db.CompactionManager$1.call(CompactionManager.java:112)
> > at
> > java.util.concurrent.FutureTask$Sync.innerRun(FutureTask.java:303)
> > at java.util.concurrent.FutureTask.run(FutureTask.java:138)
> > at
> >
> java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor$Worker.runTask(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:886)
> > at
> >
> java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor$Worker.run(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:908)
> > at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:662)
> > [followed by a few more of those...]
> > and then a bunch of these:
> > ERROR [FlushWriter:123] 2011-05-02 01:21:12,690
> AbstractCassandraDaemon.java
> > (line 112) Fatal exception in thread Thread[FlushWriter:123,5,main]
> > java.lang.RuntimeException: java.lang.RuntimeException: Insufficient disk
> > space to flush 40009184 bytes
> > at
> > org.apache.cassandra.utils.WrappedRunnable.run(WrappedRunnable.java:34)
> > at
> >
> java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor$Worker.runTask(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:886)
> > at
> >
> java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor$Worker.run(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:908)
> > at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:662)
> > Caused by: java.lang.RuntimeException: Insufficient disk space to flush
> > 40009184 bytes
> > at
> >
> org.apache.cassandra.db.ColumnFamilyStore.getFlushPath(ColumnFamilyStore.java:597)
> > at
> >
> org.apache.cassandra.db.ColumnFamilyStore.createFlushWriter(ColumnFamilyStore.java:2100)
> > at
> > org.apache.cassandra.db.Memtable.writeSortedContents(Memtable.java:239)
> > at org.apache.cassandra.db.Memtable.access$400(Memtable.java:50)
> > at
> org.apache.cassandra.db.Memtable$3.runMayThrow(Memtable.java:263)
> > at
> > org.apache.cassandra.utils.WrappedRunnable.run(WrappedRunnable.java:30)
> > ... 3 more
> > Seems like compactions stopped after this (a bunch of tmp tables there
> still
> > from when those errors where generated), and I can only suspect the post
> > flusher may have stopped at the same time.
> > There is 890GB of disk for data, sstables are currently using 604G (139GB
> is
> > old tmp tables from when it ran out of disk) and "ring" tells me the load
> on
> > the node is 313GB.
> > Terje
> >
> >
> > On Wed, May 4, 2011 at 3:02 AM, Jonathan Ellis <jbellis@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> >>
> >> ... and are there any exceptions in the log?
> >>
> >> On Tue, May 3, 2011 at 1:01 PM, Jonathan Ellis <jbellis@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> >> > Does it resolve down to 0 eventually if you stop doing writes?
> >> >
> >> > On Tue, May 3, 2011 at 12:56 PM, Terje Marthinussen
> >> > <tmarthinussen@gmail.com> wrote:
> >> >> Cassandra 0.8 beta trunk from about 1 week ago:
> >> >> Pool Name Active Pending Completed
> >> >> ReadStage 0 0 5
> >> >> RequestResponseStage 0 0 87129
> >> >> MutationStage 0 0 187298
> >> >> ReadRepairStage 0 0 0
> >> >> ReplicateOnWriteStage 0 0 0
> >> >> GossipStage 0 0 1353524
> >> >> AntiEntropyStage 0 0 0
> >> >> MigrationStage 0 0 10
> >> >> MemtablePostFlusher 1 190 108
> >> >> StreamStage 0 0 0
> >> >> FlushWriter 0 0 302
> >> >> FILEUTILS-DELETE-POOL 0 0 26
> >> >> MiscStage 0 0 0
> >> >> FlushSorter 0 0 0
> >> >> InternalResponseStage 0 0 0
> >> >> HintedHandoff 1 4 7
> >> >>
> >> >> Anyone with nice theories about the pending value on the memtable
> post
> >> >> flusher?
> >> >> Regards,
> >> >> Terje
> >> >
> >> >
> >> >
> >> > --
> >> > Jonathan Ellis
> >> > Project Chair, Apache Cassandra
> >> > co-founder of DataStax, the source for professional Cassandra support
> >> > http://www.datastax.com
> >> >
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> --
> >> Jonathan Ellis
> >> Project Chair, Apache Cassandra
> >> co-founder of DataStax, the source for professional Cassandra support
> >> http://www.datastax.com
> >
> >
>
>
>
> --
> Jonathan Ellis
> Project Chair, Apache Cassandra
> co-founder of DataStax, the source for professional Cassandra support
> http://www.datastax.com
>
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