On Tue, Oct 11, 2016 at 11:52 AM, Abeer Mahendroo <abe...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi all. > > We had a strange issue with Gluster 3.8.4 under RHEL 7.2. > > > > Initially, the partition storing the Gluster bricks ran out of space. We > tried recovering after expanding the underlying partition. Eventually we > decided to ‘reset’ Gluster, create the volume again from scratch. I tried > purging gluster by running something like: > > > > > > yum remove –y ‘glusterfs*’ > > rm -rf /var/lib/glusterd > > rm –rf /etc/gluster* > > > > Reinstalling gluster: > > > > yum install –y glusterfs-server > > systemctl start glusterd > > > > Now a simple peer probe operation crashes the daemon: > > > > $ gluster peer probe <any-valid-hostname> > > > > Connection failed. Please check if gluster daemon is operational. > This typically indicates that glusterd is not running. Could you check if glusterd instance is running on this node? If not any error message on glusterd log file? > > > > > Looks like there is something I missed in the filesystem. > > > > > > On a clean gluster install on another host, > > > > $ gluster peer probe <any-valid-hostname> > > > > peer probe: failed: Probe returned with Transport endpoint is not connected > Same question here, is glusterd running on the host which you are trying to probe? Are the firewalld/iptables rules clean? > > Which is expected. > > > > So somehow my clean install is not clean any more. This host I can > rebuild, but would be good to know the issue if this occurs on a host that > cannot easily be rebuilt. > > _______________________________________________ > Gluster-users mailing list > Gluster-users@gluster.org > http://www.gluster.org/mailman/listinfo/gluster-users > -- --Atin
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