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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HBASE-18137?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
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Vincent Poon updated HBASE-18137:
---------------------------------
    Attachment: HBASE-18137.branch-1.v2.patch

Fix flapping test

> Replication gets stuck for empty WALs
> -------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: HBASE-18137
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HBASE-18137
>             Project: HBase
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: Replication
>    Affects Versions: 1.3.1
>            Reporter: Ashu Pachauri
>            Assignee: Vincent Poon
>            Priority: Critical
>             Fix For: 2.0.0, 1.4.0, 1.3.2, 1.1.11, 1.2.7
>
>         Attachments: HBASE-18137.branch-1.3.v1.patch, 
> HBASE-18137.branch-1.3.v2.patch, HBASE-18137.branch-1.3.v3.patch, 
> HBASE-18137.branch-1.v1.patch, HBASE-18137.branch-1.v2.patch
>
>
> Replication assumes that only the last WAL of a recovered queue can be empty. 
> But, intermittent DFS issues may cause empty WALs being created (without the 
> PWAL magic), and a roll of WAL to happen without a regionserver crash. This 
> will cause recovered queues to have empty WALs in the middle. This cause 
> replication to get stuck:
> {code}
> TRACE regionserver.ReplicationSource: Opening log <wal_file>
> WARN regionserver.ReplicationSource: <peer_cluster_id>-<recovered_queue> Got: 
> java.io.EOFException
>       at java.io.DataInputStream.readFully(DataInputStream.java:197)
>       at java.io.DataInputStream.readFully(DataInputStream.java:169)
>       at org.apache.hadoop.io.SequenceFile$Reader.init(SequenceFile.java:1915)
>       at 
> org.apache.hadoop.io.SequenceFile$Reader.initialize(SequenceFile.java:1880)
>       at 
> org.apache.hadoop.io.SequenceFile$Reader.<init>(SequenceFile.java:1829)
>       at 
> org.apache.hadoop.io.SequenceFile$Reader.<init>(SequenceFile.java:1843)
>       at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.regionserver.wal.SequenceFileLogReader$WALReader.<init>(SequenceFileLogReader.java:70)
>       at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.regionserver.wal.SequenceFileLogReader.reset(SequenceFileLogReader.java:168)
>       at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.regionserver.wal.SequenceFileLogReader.initReader(SequenceFileLogReader.java:177)
>       at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.regionserver.wal.ReaderBase.init(ReaderBase.java:66)
>       at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.wal.WALFactory.createReader(WALFactory.java:312)
>       at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.wal.WALFactory.createReader(WALFactory.java:276)
>       at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.wal.WALFactory.createReader(WALFactory.java:264)
>       at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.wal.WALFactory.createReader(WALFactory.java:423)
>       at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.replication.regionserver.ReplicationWALReaderManager.openReader(ReplicationWALReaderManager.java:70)
>       at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.replication.regionserver.ReplicationSource$ReplicationSourceWorkerThread.openReader(ReplicationSource.java:830)
>       at 
> org.apache.hadoop.hbase.replication.regionserver.ReplicationSource$ReplicationSourceWorkerThread.run(ReplicationSource.java:572)
> {code}
> The WAL in question was completely empty but there were other WALs in the 
> recovered queue which were newer and non-empty.



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