hi,

Thanks to Vijay Bellur for helping with the re-write of the draft I sent him 
:-).

Present:
Split-brains of files happen in afr today due to 2 primary reasons:

1. Split-brains due to network partition or network split-brains

2. Split-brains due to servers in a replicated group being offline at different 
points in time without self-heal happening in the common period of time when 
the servers were online. For further discussion, this is referred to as 
split-brain over time.

To prevent the occurence of split-brains, we have the following quorum 
implementations in place:

a> Client quorum - Driven by afr (client) and writes are allowed when majority 
of bricks in a replica group are online. Majority is by default N/2 + 1, where 
N is the replication factor for files in a volume.

b> Server quorum - Driven by glusterd (server) and writes are allowed when 
majority of peers are online. Majority by default is N/2 + 1, where N is the 
number of peers in a trusted storage pool.

Both a> and b> primarily safeguard network split-brains. The protection of 
these quorum implementations for split-brain over time scenarios is not very 
high.
Let us consider how replica 3 and replica 2 can be protected against 
split-brains.

Replica 3:
Client quorum is quite effective in this case as writes are only allowed when 
at least 2 of 3 bricks that form a replica group is seen by afr/client. A 
recent fix for a corner case race in client quorum, 
(http://review.gluster.org/7600) makes it very robust. This patch is now part 
of master and release-3.5. We plan to backport it to release-3.4 too.

Replica 2:
Majority for client quorum in a deployment with 2 bricks per replica group is 
2.  Hence availability becomes a problem with replica 2 when either of the 
bricks is offline. To provide better avaialbility for replica-2, the first 
brick in a replica set is provided higher weight and quorum is met as long as 
the first brick is online. If the first brick is offline, then quorum is lost. 

Let us consider the following cases with B1 and B2 forming a replicated set:
                            B1                    B2                Quorum
                        Online                  Online                Met
                        Online                  Offline                 Met
                        Offline                   Offline                Not Met
                        Offline                   Offline                Not Met

Though better availability is provided by client quorum in replica 2 scenarios, 
it is not very optimal and hence an improvement in behavior seems desirable.
Future:

Our  focus in afr going forward would be to solve three problems to provide 
better protection  against split-brains and resolving them:

1. Better protection for split-brain over time.
2. Policy based split-brain resolution.
3. Provide better availability with client quorum and replica 2.

For 1, implementation of outcasting logic will address the problem:
   - An outcast is a copy of a file on which writes have been performed only 
when quorum is met.
   - When a brick goes down and comes back up self-heal daemon will go and mark 
the affected files on the brick that just came back up as outcasts. The outcast 
marking can be implemented even before the brick is declared available to 
regular clients. Once a copy of a file is marked as needing self-heal (or as an 
outcast), writes from clients will not land on that copy till self-heal is 
completed and the outcast tag is removed.

For 2,  we plan to provide commands that can heal based on user configurable 
policies. Examples of policies would be:
 - Pick up the largest file as the winner for resolving a self-heal
-  Choose brick foo as the winner for resolving split-brains
-  Pick up the file with the latest version as the winner (when versioning for 
files is available).

For 3, we are planning to introduce arbiter bricks that can be used to 
determine quorum. The arbiter bricks will be dummy bricks that host only files 
that will be updated from multiple clients. This will be achieved by bringing 
about variable replication count for configurable class of files within a 
volume.
 In the case of a replicated volume with one arbiter brick per replica group, 
certain files that are prone to split-brain will be in 3 bricks (2 data bricks 
+ 1 arbiter brick).  All other files will be present in the regular data 
bricks. For example, when oVirt VM disks are hosted on a replica 2 volume, 
sanlock is used by oVirt for arbitration. sanloclk lease files will be written 
by all clients and VM disks are written by only a single client at any given 
point of time. In this scenario, we can place sanlock lease files on 2 data + 1 
arbiter bricks. The VM disk files will only be present on the 2 data bricks. 
Client quorum is now determined by looking at 3 bricks instead of 2 and we have 
better protection when network split-brains happen.
 
 A combination of 1. and 3. does seem like a solid foundation to prevent 
split-brains in use cases where there are multiple contending writers to the 
same file even with a replica 2 scenario.

Look forward to your thoughts and comments on the future proposal.

Pranith 
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